Audthan v. Nick & Duke

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 25, 2024
Docket30
StatusPublished

This text of Audthan v. Nick & Duke (Audthan v. Nick & Duke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Audthan v. Nick & Duke, (N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 30 Audthan LLC, Appellant-Respondent, v. Nick & Duke, LLC, Respondent-Appellant.

Elan R. Dobbs, for appellant-respondent. Jeffrey Turkel, for respondent-appellant.

WILSON, Chief Judge:

Nick & Duke, LLC (N&D) owns 182-188 Eleventh Avenue in Manhattan. The

property includes a Single Room Occupancy (SRO) hotel occupied by some rent-stabilized

tenants. Audthan LLC is a real estate developer. In 2013, N&D and Audthan entered into

an agreement to replace the SRO with a mixed-used residential and commercial building

for a 40-year lease term. Both parties understood that an approval of a “cure” agreement

with the New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD)

-1- -2- No. 30

would be required for the project to go forward and incorporated terms relating to that

approval into the agreement. This is where things fell apart. Both parties agree that the

ground lease has been terminated, but disagree as to whose fault it was, when the

termination occurred, and what damages, if any, are available to whom.

Although the litigation is nearly a decade old, this case comes to us on Audthan’s

appeal and N&D’s cross-appeal from the Appellate Division’s affirmance of Supreme

Court’s order dismissing parts of the first and third causes of action of Audthan’s third

amended complaint and rejection of N&D’s motion to dismiss the remaining portions of

that complaint.1 We now hold that the portion of the first cause of action seeking to recover

damages for breach of contract on the theory of repudiation was erroneously dismissed.

To the extent preserved, N&D’s arguments do not entitle it to dismissal of the complaint

at the pleading stage, except, as the lower courts held, as to its claim for attorneys’ fees in

count three.

I.

In May 2013, N&D and Audthan entered into a 40-year term lease with an option

to renew at Audthan’s sole discretion for another 48 years. Audthan undertook to construct

a 58,000 square foot luxury residential and commercial property that would revert to N&D

1 At the pleading stage, we take all allegations in the complaint as true for the purpose of this appeal, and also rely on documents attached to or referenced in the complaint (see Leon v Martinez, 84 NY2d 83, 87-88 [1994]; Rovello v Orofino Realty Co., Inc., 40 NY2d 633, 635 [1976]).

-2- -3- No. 30

at the end of the lease term. Pursuant to a 2009 finding of harassment from a prior lessee,

HPD imposed a restrictive declaration on the property site barring any further development

or the issuance of any building permits unless and until N&D cured the harassment finding

by, among other things, creating 15,000 permanent square feet of low-income housing on

the site.2

The harassment cure was specified in the ground lease between N&D and Audthan.

Section 14.01 of the lease required Audthan to obtain a cure agreement from HPD for the

harassment finding and to develop the 15,000 square feet of low-income housing HPD

required. Because no building permit could issue until a cure agreement with HPD was

signed, the lease obligated N&D to cooperate with Audthan “in good faith” at Audthan’s

expense “in executing any agreements, certifications, filings or similar documents as are

consistent with the provisions of th[e] Lease or otherwise reasonably acceptable to [N&D]

in order to effectuate the HPD Cure.”

The lease contemplated that Audthan would develop a building divided into three

separate condominiums: one would contain the 15,000 square feet of low-income housing

units and be deeded to a non-profit that would operate and take legal title to the permanent

low-income housing on the property necessary for a cure; and Audthan would retain

physical possession of the two remaining condominiums until the lease term ended, at

2 Section 93-90 (d) of the New York City Zoning Resolution similarly provides that where there is an existing harassment finding on a property located in the Special West Chelsea District (applicable here), that property cannot be developed until the harassment is “cured.”

-3- -4- No. 30

which point N&D would regain possession of those, but not the space allocated to the low-

income housing units.

Additionally, both parties agreed to the following provision found in section 33.09

of the lease:

“Whenever Lessor’s or Lessee’s consent or approval is required under the terms of this Ground Lease, such consent or approval shall not be unreasonably withheld, conditioned, or delayed unless otherwise specified herein. Each of Lessor and Lessee hereby waives to the fullest extent permitted by law any right to damages (actual, incidental or consequential) based upon either party’s actual or allegedly wrongful withholding, conditioning or delaying any consent or approval under or in connection with this Ground Lease. Such party’s sole remedy for any wrongfully withheld, conditioned or delayed consent or approval shall be the right to seek injunctive relief.”

In 2015, while Audthan was negotiating a cure agreement with HPD, it had taken

over possession of the subject property, including the SRO, and was renting residences at

the SRO hotel to new occupants. During that time, some of the SRO occupants to whom

Audthan rented residences brought wrongful eviction cases against Audthan pursuant to

Rent Stabilization Code (RSC) §§ 2520.6 (j) and 2522.5 (a) (2). 3 In four adjudicated cases,

Audthan was found to have wrongfully evicted tenants from the SRO hotel. 4 As a result

of those adjudications, the tenants were granted rent-stabilized status.

3 RSC § 2520.6 (j) states that an SRO occupant can become a rent-stabilized tenant by requesting “a lease of six months or more pursuant to section 2522.5 (a) (2) of this Title.” Section 2522.5 (a) (2) provides that an SRO occupant can also become a rent-stabilized tenant by requesting a lease “at any time during [their] occupancy.” 4 In Guira v Audthan LLC (48 Misc 3d 1217 [A] [Civ Ct, NY County 2015]), the court found Audthan had unlawfully evicted the tenant, noting Audthan’s actions were “geared to evading their obligations under the Rent Stabilization Code.” In Ouattara v Audthan

-4- -5- No. 30

In December 2015, Audthan and HPD finalized a proposed cure agreement (PCA).

HPD notified the parties that it had approved the PCA but would not execute it until the

agreement received N&D’s signature. The PCA stated that Audthan would gut renovate

the SRO hotel to provide the low-income housing required to effectuate the cure and allow

Audthan to develop the property. The PCA allocated 14,825 square feet to low-income

housing to adhere to the lease provisions and stated that the square footage was “exclusive

of the so-called Non-Relocating Units.” The “Non-Relocating Units” were four occupied

rent-stabilized units in the SRO hotel that would not count towards the low-income housing

requirement. The four occupied rent-stabilized units allocated in the PCA were not the

same four units that the courts had created because of Audthan’s unlawful actions. 5

LLC (49 Misc 3d 1206 [a] [Civ Ct, NY County 2015]), the tenant sued Audthan to be restored as a permanent rent-stabilized tenant.

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Audthan v. Nick & Duke, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/audthan-v-nick-duke-ny-2024.