Board of Managers of the Sailmaker v. Laddomada

53 Misc. 3d 1103, 38 N.Y.S.3d 760
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 3, 2016
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Misc. 3d 1103 (Board of Managers of the Sailmaker v. Laddomada) 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 Managers of the Sailmaker v. Laddomada, 53 Misc. 3d 1103, 38 N.Y.S.3d 760 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

[1104]*1104OPINION OF THE COURT

Lizbeth González, J.

Plaintiff The Board of Managers of the Sailmaker at City-Island Condominium moves pursuant to CPLR 3212 (b) for an order granting summary judgment against defendants Paul Laddomada, Maura Mandrano and Schofield Marina LLC, striking the defendants’ answer and scheduling a damages hearing. Defendants cross-move for a stay pending arbitration.

The Sailmaker at City Island Condominium is located at 170-190 Schofield Street on the east coast of City Island, abutting City Island Harbor in Long Island Sound. The Condominium consists of 34 residential apartments designated as residential units; 40 boat slips designated as marina units; 18 parking spaces designated as parking units located inside the first level of the residential building; and a lower level parking lot adjacent to the marina. Defendants Laddomada and Man-drano hold title to two residential units and four parking units numbered 4, 7, 11 and 12. Defendant Schofield Marina LLC, which is solely owned by Mandrano and Laddomada, holds title to the 40 marina units.

It is undisputed that Superstorm Sandy damaged the marina’s seawall, boathouse, docks, gangways and bridges. By decision and order dated September 2, 2014, the New York City (NYC) Environmental Control Board fined the condominium $1,200 for the defendants’ storage of miscellaneous construction debris and $800 for the crane they stored on the lower level parking lot. Defendants maintain that plaintiff is responsible for the marina’s repair and commenced an arbitration proceeding before the American Arbitration Association in July 2015, approximately one year after the underlying action was filed in August 2014. A series of conferences with the parties over the course of several months resulted in defendants’ removal — at the court’s direction — of the crane, two junked cars and extensive debris proliferating in the lower level parking lot. Although this resolved a central issue, the parties are unable to reach agreement as to their remaining contentions.

The defendants’ cross motion for a stay pending arbitration is denied since the issues before this court are distinct. Here, the Board seeks (1) a declaratory judgment that defendants acted contrary to the condominium’s governing documents by constructing a storage room at the first level parking garage and appropriating the lower parking level for the marina’s exclusive use; (2) a permanent injunction requiring defendants [1105]*1105to empty the storage room, pay related fines, restore the lower parking level and remove their property therefrom; (3) money damages based on the diminished value of the condo units; and (4) costs and fees.

Pertinent Provisions

Condominiums are governed by Real Property Law article 9-B, commonly known as the Condominium Act, which sets forth the statutes applicable to condominiums, a hybrid form of real property ownership created by statute. (Board of Mgrs. of Vil. View Condominium v Forman, 78 AD3d 627 [2d Dept 2010].) Pursuant to the Condominium Act, each unit owner holds a real property interest in his or her unit (Real Property Law § 339-g), an exclusive possessory interest in that unit (Real Property Law § 339-h) and an undivided interest in the condominium common elements as set forth in its declaration (Real Property Law § 339-i).

Here, article VI, § 6.1 of the condominium declaration provides that the common elements of the condominium consist of the entire property including (1) general common elements (the land, improvements other than the buildings and all apparatus, installations and facilities); (2) boatel common elements (the residential building); (3) marina common elements (other than the slip-units); and (4) parking common elements (other than the parking units).

Article VI, § 6.7 provides that the “elements shall remain undivided” and no unit owner or other person may divide them unless expressly permitted by article XIX1 and bylaws § 5.5.2

Article XVI, § 17.1 states that “any provision of the Declaration may be added to, amended, modified or deleted by the vote of at least eighty percent (80%) in number and in Common Interest of all Unit Owners, taken in accordance with the ByLaws.” No amendment is effective until it is recorded with the City Register. Any such amendment “shall be executed by the Condominium Board as attorney-in-fact for the Unit Owners, coupled with an interest.”

[1106]*1106Article XVI, § 17.3 provides that if an amendment to the declaration on behalf of the unit owners or condominium Board requires the approval of a specified percentage of unit owners,. (1) an original executed certification of the secretary or an assistant secretary of the condominium must be attached to the amendment, (2) certifying that the requisite number and percentage of unit owners approved the amendment at a duly constituted meeting, (3) describing the number and percentage of unit owners so consenting, and (4) stating the date and time of the meeting.

Section 4.7 (f) of the condominium bylaws provides that each unit owner is entitled to cast one vote for each .0001% of any common interest appurtenant to such owner’s unit. The parties agree that the cumulative vote of all unit owners equals one.

Garage Enclosure

Article VII, § 7.3 of the condominium declaration provides that parking units may only be used for the noncommercial parking of a private motor vehicle.

Defendants acknowledge that they converted their four parking units into a floor-to-ceiling storage structure within the first level parking garage. In Cohen v Board of Mgrs. of 22 Perry St. Condominium (278 AD2d 147 [1st Dept 2000]), the First Department upheld the authority of the Board of Managers to grant a one-year license, terminable by either party, to enclose a portion of the hallway space in exchange for a fee proportional to the percentage allocated to the utilized common element. That is not the case here, where the defendants wrongfully converted their parking units to a private enclosure. On June 25, 2014, the NYC Environmental Control Board issued a violation for work without a permit that resulted in the aforementioned $1,200 fine. Defendants’ use of their parking units is contrary to both the condominium declaration and the building code.

Plaintiff’s motion for a permanent injunction is accordingly granted to the following extent. Defendants are ordered to restore their four parking units to their lawful use forthwith; remove the storage enclosure; arrange for a re-inspection by the City; and pay all related costs and fines.

Lower Level Parking Lot

At issue are the parking common elements. Dr. Enrique Davis, the president of plaintiff Board of Managers, asserts by affidavit that the defendants “appropriated the lower parking [1107]*1107lot, which constitutes a portion of the Common Elements of the Condominium” without plaintiff’s consent and in continuing violation of the condominium’s governing documents. The value of the condominium units is allegedly diminished because access to the lower level parking lot was denied; locks were placed at its access gates; unsightly storage areas were created; debris was strewn throughout; a crane and two junked cars were parked at the premises; and necessary repairs remain outstanding. Some of these conditions remain and some were corrected only recently.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Board of Managers v. Forman
78 A.D.3d 627 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2010)
Cohen v. Board of Managers of 22 Perry Street Condominium
278 A.D.2d 147 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Misc. 3d 1103, 38 N.Y.S.3d 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-managers-of-the-sailmaker-v-laddomada-nysupct-2016.