Bartman v. Shenker

5 Misc. 3d 856
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 2004
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 5 Misc. 3d 856 (Bartman v. Shenker) 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
Bartman v. Shenker, 5 Misc. 3d 856 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sherry Klein Heitler, J.

Plaintiffs William Bartman and Art Resources Transfer, Inc. (ART) filed a complaint against defendants Gregg L. Shenker and Onbar, LLC alleging that defendants discriminated against Bartman and ART (Bartman’s employer) on the basis of Bart-man’s physical disability,1 creating a hostile environment, and retaliating against ART as a result of Bartman’s request that defendants accommodate his disability. Defendants now move to dismiss the complaint.

Defendant Onbar owned 210 11th Avenue in New York and defendant Shenker was employed by a managing agent engaged by Onbar. ART leased office space in the building from 1998 to December 2003. Bartman was ART’s executive director. The parties agree that the building has two means of entry: a front entrance without any form of handicap access (such as a ramp or handrail), and a side entrance equipped with a handrailing. The parties also agree that, in September 1999, Bartman reported to Shenker that he had fallen on the steps leading up to the front entrance and requested that a handrailing be installed there to prevent other such mishaps. Shenker informed him that this would not be possible due to the design of the front steps and entryway. Bartman, however, alleges that he commissioned the drafting of workable designs for the installation of a handrail and showed them to Shenker, who rejected all such proposals. Shenker denies having seen such designs.

Bartman alleges that he also asked for a permanent ramp to be installed at the front entrance, but his request was refused. According to Shenker, such a ramp was not feasible because it would have obstructed the door to the boiler room and would have covered a metal grating located next to the side entrance. [858]*858Bartman asserts that a ramp was, in fact, feasible, because the boiler room was always accessed through the lobby and the metal grating in question was later cemented over.

Bartman began using his own portable ramp to remedy the situation. Shenker claims Onbar accommodated Bartman by allowing him to store the ramp in the lobby, but Bartman claims Onbar acquiesced in storing the ramp there only because other tenants were constantly asking to borrow it for their own disabled visitors. Shenker also claims that the building was handicapped-accessible via the side entrance, which was equipped with a handrail, and that other tenants regularly used that entrance. Bartman, however, alleges that the side entrance was locked and used only for trash removal, not for public access. Additionally, Bartman asserts that this entrance led to a freight elevator that remained inoperable for years, making it impossible for him to access the rest of the building from the side entrance. This claim contrasts with defendants’ assertion that both entrances led to elevators that provided access to the entire building.

Shenker alleges that neither Bartman nor anyone at ART complained of the building’s alleged inaccessibility to the handicapped after Bartman’s September 1999 complaint. Bartman claims that, every six months throughout ART’s five-year tenancy, he filed complaints with the New York City Fire Marshal and the New York City Department of Buildings and Safety. Bartman claims that when investigators visited the building in response to those complaints, Shenker told them that the building was in “as is” condition in order to avoid being fined.

Shenker alleges that ART violated its obligations under its lease, in that it was in arrears as to rent and had installed air-conditioners in violation of Onbar’s policy. Plaintiffs maintain that defendants lodged these complaints against ART as a means of retaliating for Bartman’s complaints concerning the building’s inaccessibility. Specifically, plaintiffs allege that ART always presented its rental payments on time but defendants held the payments and deposited them late to create the illusion that ART was in arrears. Plaintiffs also claim that defendants singled out ART for its violation of the air-conditioner prohibition, in that many other tenants had installed similar air-conditioning units but had not been asked to remove them. Defendants have denied this allegation and have submitted a copy of a photograph of the building which purportedly reveals [859]*859that the only three air-conditioners visible on the two sides of the building in the photograph belonged to ART.

With regard to damages, Bartman alleges that his repeated falls on the marble steps of the building’s front entryway caused him to lose “most of his ability to use his prosthesis,” such that he has become “almost entirely wheelchair dependent.” Plaintiffs also allege that defendants’ refusal to render the building handicapped-accessible resulted in ART’s loss of its executive director’s valuable time when he was unable to enter the building, required them to hire an extra employee to assist Bart-man in entering the building, and forced them to vacate the building in 2003. Additionally, Bartman alleges continuing damages insofar as he has ongoing business relationships that require him to visit tenants in the building.

ART’s Standing To Assert Claims of Disability Discrimination

Plaintiffs’ first and seventh claims allege that ART was injured as a result of defendants’ violations of the Administrative Code of the City of New York. Plaintiffs’ third and eighth claims allege that ART was injured as a result of defendants’ violations of the New York State Executive Law (Human Rights Law). Defendants assert that these claims brought on ART’s behalf must be dismissed because ART does not have standing to assert such claims under the Executive Law or the Administrative Code.

Executive Law § 296 (2) (a) provides:

“It shall be an unlawful discriminatory practice for any person, being the owner, lessee, proprietor, manager, superintendent, agent or employee of any place of public accommodation . . . because of . . . disability . . . directly or indirectly, to refuse, withhold from or deny to such person any of the accommodations, advantages, facilities or privileges thereof.” (Emphasis supplied.)

Executive Law § 292 (1) defines a “person,” for purposes of the Human Rights Law, as “one or more individuals, partnerships, associations, corporations, legal representatives, trustees, trustees in bankruptcy, or receivers.” However, “the plain language of the New York State Human Rights Law clearly indicates that it only prohibits discrimination against individuals who are themselves disabled.”2 (Abdel-Khalek v Ernst & Young LLP, 1999 WL 190790, *9, 1999 US Dist LEXIS 2369, *25-26 [SD NY, [860]*860Mar. 5, 1999]; see also Lugo v St. Nicholas Assoc., 2 Misc 3d 212, 218 [Sup Ct, NY County 2003]; Dunn v Fishbein, 123 AD2d 659, 660-661 [2d Dept 1986].) Because the statute “gives no indication that it was intended to provide a cause of action for disability association discrimination” (Abdel-Khalek, supra, 1999 WL 190790, *9, 1999 US Dist LEXIS 2369, *26-27), plaintiff ART’s claims under the Executive Law must be dismissed (id.; see also Lugo, supra, 2 Misc 3d at 218).

However, Administrative Code § 8-107 (20) explicitly grants standing to sue to those who have been discriminated against by virtue of their association with a disabled individual:

“Relationship or association.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Misc. 3d 856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartman-v-shenker-nysupct-2004.