Amanuensis, Ltd. v. Brown

65 Misc. 2d 15, 318 N.Y.S.2d 11, 1971 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1889
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJanuary 29, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 65 Misc. 2d 15 (Amanuensis, Ltd. v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amanuensis, Ltd. v. Brown, 65 Misc. 2d 15, 318 N.Y.S.2d 11, 1971 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1889 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1971).

Opinion

Leonard H. Sandler, J.

At a time when the basic fairness and reasonableness of the rules of law regulating relations between landlords and residential tenants are under cogent and persuasive challenge, these nonpayment proceedings against three tenants raise questions of grave importance concerning the capacity of our courts to adapt older doctrines to the requirements of fair treatment for tenants living today in multiple dwellings, and most especially fair treatment for those who are poor and without resources.

[16]*16The most urgent question is whether this court is required to issue warrants of eviction for nonpayment at the instance of a landlord who has flagrantly and systematically refused to operate the building from which it derives rent in accordance with the minimum standards of decency prescribed by the Multiple Dwelling Law and the Housing Maintenance Code. Differently phrased, the question is whether there is fixed in the law of this State so firmly that this court is bound to follow it a system of values that regards the right of the. landlord to receive rent as infinitely more important than, and wholly independent of, either his obligation to obey the law or the corresponding right of the tenant to live in a decent apartment maintained in substantial compliance with the law.

A second important question involves the constitutionality of that part of section 302-a of the Multiple Dwelling Law that requires a tenant to deposit in court that rent demanded by a landlord in a nonpayment proceeding before he can interpose the statutory defense that a rent-impairing violation had continued for 6 months.

Finally, the tenants sought by a post-trial motion to conform the pleadings to the proof to secure damages on the ground ■ that the. landlord had failed to maintain adequate security against criminal acts — and that thé failure contributed to numerous crimes against them for which, it is urged, the landlord is responsible on tort principles. The issue sought to be presented is important — and the facts before me present a substantial basis for the claim. (See Kline v. 1500 Massachusetts Ave. Apt. Corp., 439 F. 2d 477.) However, I have determined that the posttrial motion should be denied without prejudice to the claims being presented in a new pleading. The landlord is entitled to meet this substantial issue after adequate notice prior to trial.

The significant facts are not in serious dispute. On or about April 15, 1969, the present owners of 310 West 18th Street (the previous mortgagees) acquired the premises. At that time, and for several years previously, there existed numerous Housing Code violations recorded against the property. The new owners did nothing, or virtually nothing, to correct these violations.

One of the landlord’s principals testified that their plan was to persuade the tenants to leave the building by offering relocation payments, and thereafter to remodel the building. He admitted that the landlord had no plans to correct the violations if all of the tenants did not leave.

The conclusion is inescapable, and I so find, that the landlord’s design was and is to force the tenants to leave by permitting the [17]*17violations to continue and the living conditions to become increasingly onerous.

Thus, there has persisted from the date of acquisition until trial a host of record violations. One is a rent-impairing violation affecting the entire building; several others are rent-impairing violations affecting individual apartments (though not the apartments of these tenants); and there are some 90 other violations varying in importance and extent, but the cumulative effect of which is to reduce significantly the habitability of the apartments of the tenants. The efforts of code enforcement agencies have been to no avail.

In addition, the evidence strongly suggests that the landlord tried to ‘‘ persuade ’ ’ the tenants to leave by total indifference to the requirements of security against criminal acts. Thus although the lock on the building’s front entrance was broken, the landlord took no steps to repair it for many months. When illegal intruders moved into abandoned rooms, and it became apparent that these included drug addicts with a high potential for crime, the landlord took no action to remove them. Each of these tenants was the victim of several crimes.

I find: (1) that the landlord operated this building in willful disregard of its obligations under the Multiple Dwelling Law and the Housing Code, and that the quality of living for the tenants was significantly impaired as a result; (2) that the code enforcement procedures proved wholly ineffective to induce compliance with the law by this landlord; and (3) that one objective of this landlord’s behavior was to coerce the tenants to abandon their apartments.

At the trial, the tenants acknowledged that they had not paid rent for some time. Two principal defenses were interposed.

First, it was claimed that the landlord had breached a warranty of fitness for use and a warranty of quiet enjoyment, which defenses I interpret as raising the question presented at the outset of this opinion.

Second, it was alleged that a rent-impairing violation under section 302-a of the Multiple Dwelling Law affecting each of the tenants had lasted for 6 months. Since two of the tenants did not deposit the rent demanded by the landlord into court, as required by paragraph c of subdivision 2 of section 302-a, this defense requires the court to consider the constitutionality of that requirement.

In addition, the tenants sought damages for breach of the warranty of fitness for use, or habitability.

In considering whether this court is compelled to sustain the right to rent of a landlord who operates a residential building [18]*18in systematic violation of the law, I am of course aware of the general view that this issue has been definitively resolved in favor of the landlord by controlling appellate decisions. After a careful analysis of the leading cases I am persuaded that they leave this court ample discretion to achieve decent and fair results in accordance with present day realities, and I intend to exercise that discretion.

The leading cases in this area are Davar Holdings v. Cohen (255 App. Div. 445, rearg. den. 256 App. Div. 806, affd. 280 N. Y. 828) and Emigrant Ind. Sav. Bank v. 108 West 49th St. Corp. (255 App. Div. 570, affd. 280 N. Y. 791), both First Department cases decided within a few months of each other. Considering the tremendous influence these decisions have had on the day-by-day disposition of landlord and tenant matters in the trial courts of this State, it is surely notable that neither of them confronted the Appellate Division with anything approaching the critical problems of fairness and social policy presented by the case before me — problems common to many present day landlord and tenant cases.

In the Davar case (supra) described in the opinion as one of first impression, the lease required the tenant to comply with the requirements of law, and he failed to have the apartment painted. When a violation was issued against the premises because it had not been painted, the landlord undertook to have the painting done himself, but his painter was barred from the apartment by the tenant. Thereafter the tenant had the apartment painted at his own expense and sought to deduct that expense from his rent.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Misc. 2d 15, 318 N.Y.S.2d 11, 1971 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amanuensis-ltd-v-brown-nycivct-1971.