Atlas V 110 LLC v. Broadway 111 Owners Corp.

2024 NY Slip Op 32531(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, New York County
DecidedJuly 23, 2024
DocketIndex No. 150535/2024
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 32531(U) (Atlas V 110 LLC v. Broadway 111 Owners Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas V 110 LLC v. Broadway 111 Owners Corp., 2024 NY Slip Op 32531(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Atlas V 110 LLC v Broadway 111 Owners Corp. 2024 NY Slip Op 32531(U) July 23, 2024 Supreme Court, New York County Docket Number: Index No. 150535/2024 Judge: Shahabuddeen Abid Ally Cases posted with a "30000" identifier, i.e., 2013 NY Slip Op 30001(U), are republished from various New York State and local government sources, including the New York State Unified Court System's eCourts Service. This opinion is uncorrected and not selected for official publication. INDEX NO. 150535/2024 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 25 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 07/23/2024

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK NEW YORK COUNTY

PRESENT: HON. SHAHABUDDEEN ABID ALLY PART16TR Justice

ATLAS V 110 LLC, INDEX NO. 150535/2024

MOTION DATE 4/8/2024 Petitioner, MOTION SEQ. NO. 001

-against-

BROADWAY 111 OWNERS CORP., DECISION & ORDER Respondent.

The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number, were read on this motion (Seq. No. 1) to/for RPAPL § 881 (LICENSE FOR ACCESS): 1-8, 11, 13-23

In this proceeding, petitioner ATLAS V 110 LLC ("Petitioner") seeks a court-ordered li- cense, pursuant to RPAPL § 881, to access the property of respondent BROADWAY 111 OWNERS CORP. ("Respondent") to install certain protective measures so that Petitioner can complete le- gally required fac;ade restoration work on its own premises. Petitioner initiated this proceeding

by Verified Petition and Order to Show Cause filed on January 19, 2024. The Court signed the Order to Show Cause on January 24, 2024, setting a return date of March 5, 2024. On February 21, 2024, Respondent filed an Answer and opposition to the motion. On April 2, 2024, the parties appeared before the Court via Microsoft Teams. During that appearance, Petitioner requested permission to file a reply, which request the Court granted. Petitioner filed its reply on April 8,

2024. 1 For the reasons discussed below, Petitioner is granted its requested license upon the terms set forth below.

Petitioner's property, located at 601 West 110th Street, provides low-income and student housing. Respondent's adjoining property, which also appears to provide residential housing, is

1 By email dated April 8, 2024, Respondent's counsel informed the Court that it would not be seeking leave to file a surreply.

150535/2024 Atlas V 110 LLC v. Broadway 111 Owners Corp. Page 1 of 16 Mot. Seq. No. 1

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located at 600 West 111 th Street and designated in the Tax Map of New York County as Block 01894, Lot 1002.

Petitioner alleges that it is required to complete restoration of the fac;ade of its premises

under the New York City Fac;ade Inspection and Safety Program ("FISP"), formerly known as

Local Law 11. It also alleges that Respondent has refused to voluntarily agree to a license permit-

ting Petitioner access to Respondent's property to install measures designed to protect the prop- erty and its tenants from harm during the pendency of the FISP work and to make use of Re-

spondent's airspace to perform the work. Accordingly, via this proceeding, Petitioner seeks a li- cense that provides it with permission to:

(a) conduct a photographic pre-constructions survey ... ; (b) erect over- head protection on or about Respondent's property, including the rear yard of Respondent's property ... , in accordance with the plans (the "Plans"); (c) utilize a controlled access zone ... in the north and north- west areas as depicted in the Plans; and (d) erect suspending and/or hang- ing scaffolding from Petitioner's [property], which requires access to the airspace of Respondent's [p ]roperty.

(0kt. No. 1 at 2) Petitioner anticipates that the FISP work will require approximately three months

to complete, but it requests a license for six months to guard against any weather-related or other

unavoidable delays.

Respondent does not dispute that Petitioner's planned FISP work is legally required or

that, in order to complete the work, Petitioner must be given access to Respondent's property,

including its airspace, to implement the proposed protective measures and to perform the work.

Nor does Respondent dispute the appropriateness of the proposed protective measures or ac-

cess-indeed, the parties had negotiated and agreed in principle upon the scope and contours of

each. According to Respondent, the disputes that do exist between the parties preventing them from entering a voluntary license agreement concern only fees, insurance, and indemnity. Specif- ically, Respondent claims that it is entitled to payment of a significant monthly license fee from Petitioner and that Petitioner should be required to maintain project-specific insurance, post a significant bond to secure payment to Respondent, provide broad indemnity to Respondent, and reimburse Respondent for its legal and professional fees incurred in connection with this pro- ceeding.

Accordingly, the Court addresses only these areas of dispute below.

150535/2024 Atlas V 110 LLC v. Broadway 111 Owners Corp. Page 2 of 16 Mot. Seq. No.1

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A. License Fee

Respondent argues that any license granted to Petitioner should be conditioned on it pay- ing a monthly license fee of $8,600. Respondent arrives at this number by adding together the

license fees allegedly imposed by courts in RPAPL § 881 proceedings in which one of the follow- ing circumstances existed: (1) the respondent suffered temporary loss of enjoyment of a small portion of its property; (2) a pipe scaffolding was erected on the roof of the property or on the adjacent sidewalks; or (3) the petitioner made use of the respondent's airspace to complete its

project. In cases where a temporary loss of enjoyment existed, Respondent claims that courts have imposed (and have been affirmed on appeal) license-fee awards of $2,000 to $2,800 per month. With respect to pipe scaffolding, Respondent claims that courts have awarded between $1,500

and $2,500 per month where the scaffolding was erected on the sidewalk in front of the property and $500 per month where the scaffolding was erected on the roof. Finally, Respondent claims that courts have awarded license fees of $3,500 per month where a petitioner sought to erect sus-

pended scaffolding in the respondent's airspace.

According to Respondent, all three of these circumstances will exist here if Petitioner is

granted its requested license. Specifically, Respondent points to the small portion of its rear court- yard that will be inaccessible to tenants during the project as a result of the controlled-access zone ("CAZ") to be constructed there; the scaffolding that will be erected over Respondent's driveway to protect the garbage dumpsters and shed areas there; and the suspended scaffolding that Peti- tioner will install within Respondent's airspace to perform the restoration work on Petitioner's

premises. Thus, Respondent adds together the fee-award ranges (or some approximation thereof2) from the cases it relies on to arrive at the total license fee of $8,600 that it says should be imposed on Petitioner.

Petitioner objects to the imposition of any license fee, let alone a fee of $8,600 per month. Petitioner argues that, in considering whether to award a license fee, courts distinguish between whether the work in aid of which the license is sought is mandatory or elective and decline to award fees where it is mandatory, like here. Further, Petitioner urges that Respondent has failed

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Bluebook (online)
2024 NY Slip Op 32531(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-v-110-llc-v-broadway-111-owners-corp-nysupctnewyork-2024.