Board of Directors of Hunt Club at Coram Homeowners Ass'n, Inc. v. Hebb

22 Misc. 3d 584
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 3d 584 (Board of Directors of Hunt Club at Coram Homeowners Ass'n, Inc. v. Hebb) 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
Board of Directors of Hunt Club at Coram Homeowners Ass'n, Inc. v. Hebb, 22 Misc. 3d 584 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas F. Whelan, J.

It is ordered that this motion (No. 001) by the plaintiff for summary judgment dismissing all affirmative defenses asserted in the answer of defendant, Carole Ann Hebb, and in favor of the plaintiff on its complaint and for the appointment of a referee to compute is considered under CPLR 3212 and Real Property Law § 339-aa and is denied.

The plaintiff commenced this action to foreclose a lien for unpaid assessments and other charges which the plaintiff has asserted against the residential real property of defendant, Carole Ann Hebb. According to the complaint served and filed herein, the defendant’s residential real property is situated within the residential development managed by the plaintiff under the terms of duly recorded declaration and bylaws. The plaintiff alleges that defendant Hebb failed to pay monthly assessments for annual charges due the plaintiff and failed to pay a special assessment totaling $869 for restoration of a portion of a common area which Hebb allegedly altered in violation of the plaintiffs bylaws and/or house rules.

The answer served and filed herein by defendant Hebb contains the following two affirmative defenses: (1) that the notice of lien filed by the plaintiff with the office of the Suffolk County Clerk is invalid due to the plaintiffs failure to verify same as required by Real Property Law § 339-z; and (2) that the asserted lien is invalid in that it includes the $869 assessment for restoration, which is not a charge to which the plaintiffs lien may attach.

[586]*586By the instant motion, the plaintiff seeks an order awarding it summary judgment on its complaint against answering defendant Hebb. To succeed on any such motion, the plaintiff must establish that defendant Hebb’s affirmative defenses are without merit and that Hebb failed to pay duly issued assessments due the plaintiff under the terms of its filed declarations and bylaws. In this regard, the plaintiff claims that its failure to verify its notice of lien is a harmless defect and that its inclusion of the $869 restoration fee as part of the amount due under the lien does not constitute a defense to the plaintiffs claims for foreclosure. Defendant Hebb opposes the plaintiffs motion by relying on her two pleaded affirmative defenses, both of which are, according to Hebb, meritorious.

The plaintiffs asserted lien for unpaid common and other charges which the members of the plaintiff homeowners’ association agreed to pay upon their purchase of a home within the boundaries of the plaintiffs residential development is a creature of New York’s Condominium Act (hereinafter Act). Codified as article 9-B of the Real Property Law, the Condominium Act provides a lien for unpaid common charges in favor of a board of managers of a condominium complex established in accordance with the Act or any incorporated association likewise established (see Real Property Law §§ 339-v, 339-z). Common charges are defined as “each unit’s proportionate share of the common expenses” (see Real Property Law § 339-e [2]). Common expenses are defined as “expenses of operation of the property” and “all sums designated common expenses by or pursuant to the provisions of this article, the declaration or the by laws” (see Real Property Law § 339-e [4]).

Perfection of the lien for unpaid common and other charges contemplated by Real Property Law § 339-z is governed by Real Property Law § 339-aa. The first sentence thereof provides that the lien is effective from and after the filing in the office of the recording officer in which the declaration is filed a verified notice of lien stating, among other things, the name and address of the property, the liber and page of the recorded declaration, the name of the record owner of the subject unit and the amount and purpose for which due.

Here it is not disputed that the plaintiffs lien was not “verified” as required by Real Property Law § 339-aa. Rather, the plaintiff’s notice of lien as filed in the office of the Suffolk County Clerk was acknowledged by an agent of the plaintiff. Defendant Hebb claims that the failure of the plaintiff to have [587]*587filed a verified notice of lien renders said lien unenforceable by way of foreclosure. In response, the plaintiff claims that the absence of a verification of the notice of lien does not defeat the plaintiffs right to foreclose by reason of the following: (1) the plaintiffs notice of lien is not subject to the verification requirements of Real Property Law § 339-aa because the plaintiff is not a condominium but rather a homeowners’ association and the lien is for “assessments” not common charges; (2) the Suffolk County Clerk recorded said notice of lien; and (3) many unverified liens have been successfully foreclosed upon in court actions commenced in this and other counties.

Neither side has offered any case authorities in support of their respective positions and the court has found none decided under Real Property Law § 339-d et seq. on the verification issue in dispute herein. The court nevertheless rejects as unmeritorious the plaintiffs claim that its filing of an unverified notice of lien gave rise to an enforceable lien which is subject to foreclosure in this action.

The plaintiffs claim that its notice of lien is not subject to the verification requirements of Real Property Law § 339-aa because the plaintiff is not a condominium but rather a homeowners’ association is in conflict with the provisions of Real Property Law § 339-v (1) (a). Pursuant thereto, an incorporated body, such as the plaintiff, may act in the place and stead of the board of managers referred to throughout article 9-B of the Real Property Law. In addition, the plaintiffs claim that its lien is not one arising under Real Property Law § 339-z because it is not one for unpaid common charges but rather is one for assessments is in conflict with the definitions of common charges and common expenses set forth at Real Property Law § 339-e (2) and (4). Finally, the plaintiffs claim that neither its lien nor its notice thereof is subject to Real Property Law article 9-B is belied by the terms of said notice of lien. Review of said notice reveals that it clearly and unequivocally denotes the plaintiffs lien as one arising under Real Property Law § 339-z. The plaintiffs attempt to disavow the Condominium Act as controlling not only its lien, but this action, is thus rejected as unmeritorious.

The plaintiffs further claim that the recording of its unverified lien by the Suffolk County Clerk rendered the absence of a verification inconsequential is equally lacking in merit. It is well established that the recording of a document by a recording officer is a ministerial act which has no effect upon the validity or [588]*588propriety of the document recorded or of the accuracy of its terms (see Matter of MERSCORP, Inc. v Romaine, 8 NY3d 90 [2006]). The plaintiffs further assertion that the unverified nature of its notice of lien does not render it unenforceable in this action because many unverified liens have been foreclosed upon is clearly an unavailing contention.

Under these circumstances, the court finds that a notice of lien filed pursuant to Real Property Law § 339-aa that is not verified as required by said statute does not give rise to an effective lien that is subject to enforcement in a foreclosure action where, as here, an objection to the unverified nature of said notice of lien has been properly asserted.

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Related

Board of Directors of Hunt Club At Coram Homeowners Ass'n v. Hebb
72 A.D.3d 997 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2010)
Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. v. Levin
63 A.D.3d 890 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 3d 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-directors-of-hunt-club-at-coram-homeowners-assn-inc-v-hebb-nysupct-2008.