Apartment Hotel Owners Ass'n v. City of New York

133 Misc. 881
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 133 Misc. 881 (Apartment Hotel Owners Ass'n v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apartment Hotel Owners Ass'n v. City of New York, 133 Misc. 881 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1929).

Opinion

Bijur, J.

Plaintiff is a membership corporation composed of thirty-seven owners of what it calls “ apartment hotels.” By the complaint, which has been held sufficient by the Appellate Division (224 App. Div. 717), it asks to enjoin the city of New York from enforcing against these buildings the provisions of the Tenement House Law. As the buildings are not wholly alike, either in construction or operation, it is impossible to try the issues as though but a single one were involved. Necessarily the evidence has been of a general nature, with a view of ascertaining an average or typical condition. Consequently my conclusions cannot be expressed in other than general terms. Whatever the result of the suit I assume that it cannot be regarded as an adjudication of the status of any particular building. The controversy concerns immediately the question whether the buildings of plaintiff’s members come within the definition of a tenement house as set forth in subdivisions 1 and H of section 2 of article 1 of the Tenement House Law, reading as follows: “ 1. A [882]*882‘ tenement house ’ is any house or building, or portion thereof, which is either rented, leased, let or hired out, to be occupied, or is occupied, in whole or in part, as the home or residence of three families or more living independently of each other, and doing their cooking upon the premises, and includes apartment houses, flat houses and all other houses so occupied (as amd. by Laws of 1912, chap. 13). * * * 11. * * * Wherever the words ‘is occupied’ are used in this chapter, applying to any building, such words shall be construed as if followed by the words ‘ or is intended, arranged or designed to be occupied ’ ” (as amd. by Laws of 1917, chap. 806). Defendant’s contention is that the presence of “ serving pantries ” as constructed and used in the private apartments brings the buildings within the definition. The apartments consist generally of one, two and three rooms, and in those of more than one room there is a compartment or small room called a “ serving pantry,” running in size up to about eight by twelve feet, which contains a sink, an ice box, shelves or cupboard, and an electric outlet into which can be inserted the ordinary portable electric plug. In very many instances electric ranges of varying dimensions have been installed in these pantries and they are being used by the guests with the knowledge of the owners of the buildings for the preparation of meals with more or less regularity. This use varies from the preparation of breakfasts only or light lunches to the cooking, in some cases at least, of all the meals for a family of four. The owners of some of the buildings suggested the possibility of so using the pantries in their advertisements. There is no doubt that the buildings have generous and frequently elaborate accommodation for serving meals to the occupants in large public dining rooms with ample kitchen and pantry accommodations. In some buildings no cooking is permitted in the private apartments. But generally, guests whenever they see fit, avail of the “ serving pantries ” to cook their own food. I come then to the question whether the guests or tenants live, as phrased in the statute, “ independently of each other,” and more particularly whether they are “ doing their cooking upon the premises.” I think it quite probable that one of the purposes of prescribing that the families must be “ living independently of each other ” was to differentiate between families in the strict sense of the word, i. e., married couples and their own children, and combined “ families ” composed, for instance, of such couples and their married children and grandchildren or other relatives. In other words, I think that the intention was to describe “ households ” rather than families. But plaintiff contends in substance that its guests do not live independent of each other, because of the enjoyment of many common facilities. It is quite [883]*883apparent that strictly speaking no one in the city of New York lives independently of anybody else. All enjoy the benefits and protection of the several city departmental agencies and of various public utilities. The same is true both of hotels and apartment houses. There are to-day so many common conveniences, such as elevators, interior telephones, heating, lighting, window cleaning and the like that no occupants can be said, strictly speaking, to live independently of the others. It seems to me to be clear that the added description “ doing their cooking on the premises ” was intended to clarify the first phrase and to emphasize its content as signifying households. This thought is clearly expressed in People v. Shkilky (201 App. Div. 55, 57): “ A building is not a ‘ tenement house ’ within the statutory definition unless the occupants live independently of each other. Persons may be said to live in premises when they maintain their family life there. This includes cooking as well as sleeping, and I think they cannot be said to live independently unless they cook in their own apartments as distinguished from a kitchen used in common.” In regard to the element of cooking, plaintiff stresses the fact that the statute does not say “ cooking ” nor any cooking,” but “ their cooking.” He fails to take into account, however, the fact that the statute also does not say “ all their cooking.” Of course, it never was intended in the definition to suggest that any family or household must cook all its meals on the premises, or even to define the exact extent to which such cooking must go. Necessarily that would vary according to the individual means, wants and tastes of each family. While, perhaps, the “ serving pantries ” now in question were not designed for the preparation of elaborate meals for many persons simultaneously, there can be prepared therein meals quite as extensive in number of dishes and content as were cooked in many of the tenement houses of thirty or forty years ago. Furthermore, the very design of these apartment hotels ” indicates that they are intended to accommodate small families. If the facilities of the “ pantry ” or ldtchenette are more limited than those of the cook stove of old, it is evident that the demands upon it have diminished proportionately. The definition in the Tenement House Law does not aim at measurement by yardstick or cubic content. The so-called serving pantries were either designed or made apt for the preparation of meals by and for the occupants of the several apartments, and they are so used in a fairly large proportion of cases. Moreover, one of the general arguments of plaintiff’s counsel is to the effect that the buildings of the plaintiff’s members fill a present want felt by small families which, under present labor conditions, are disinclined to ordinary housekeeping; that what they desire now is [884]*884apartments where they may enjoy the dual advantage of meals from a general kitchen when desired and of “ light housekeeping ” whenever they prefer to eat in their own apartments; in other words, the very accommodations offered by plaintiff’s members fill an immediate want of tenants. If that be so, then in a literal sense the cooking done in these apartments is, as to the occupants, " their cooking.” This is emphasized by the unwillingness of plaintiff’s members to accept the city’s proposal to be satisfied with a discontinuance of the conveniences for cooking, as, for example, by removing the electric outlet. The refusal indicates that the accommodation for cooking sought to be treated by plaintiff in argument as negligible is in reality important and intrinsic in the very scheme of the buildings.

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Bluebook (online)
133 Misc. 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apartment-hotel-owners-assn-v-city-of-new-york-nysupct-1929.