Bonner v. Park Lake Housing Development Fund Corp.

70 Misc. 2d 325, 333 N.Y.S.2d 277, 1972 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1842
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1972
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 Misc. 2d 325 (Bonner v. Park Lake Housing Development Fund Corp.) 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
Bonner v. Park Lake Housing Development Fund Corp., 70 Misc. 2d 325, 333 N.Y.S.2d 277, 1972 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1842 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1972).

Opinion

Bebtbam Habített, J.

Once again the question is raised whether an ostensible “private” corporation is so saturated with governmental incidents as to be limited in its practices by constitution! due process. Here, the eviction of a tenant from a housing project is disputed.

Park Lake Housing Development Fund Corporation is a nonprofit corporation that has purchased and is rehabilitating and operating certain low-income multiple apartment buildings in Hempstead, New York, under a Federal program set forth in section 236 of the National Housing Act (H. S. Code, tit. 12, § 1715z-l). It has brought summary dispossess proceedings in the District Court of Nassau County against four parents residing as month-to-month tenants in the project, on the grounds that each family is violating a Hempstead Village Ordinance against overcrowding.

No opportunity for a hearing was provided before Park Lake elected to terminate the tenancies and commence the eviction [327]*327proceedings. In this article 78 CPLR. proceeding, the families challenge the procedures followed as arbitrary and violative of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

The Federal section 236 program authorizes certain private entities, such as Park Lake, to obtain FHA-insured mortgages to the extent of 100% of the value of the property up to a certain maximum per unit and then governmental subsidies to reduce interest payments.' The Federal Housing Authority makes periodic paymets to the lending institution on behalf of nonprofit sponsors which effectively reduce interest payable by the sponsor to as low as one per cent, instead of at the current market rate.

By Federal statute, rent supplements are available to tenants whose maximum rent chargeable (25% of income) is below the fair market rental, but not to more than 20% of the families in the project. No tenant may have income above 135% of the prevailing local public housing guidelines. (See U. S. Code, tit. 12, § 17151 et seq; National Housing and Development Law Project, Guide to Federal Housing, Redevelopment and Planning Programs, Part I, § C, pp. 3735-61.)

Significantly, the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development oversees each section 236 project, and each nonprofit mortgagor is subject to such regulation or supervision as to rents, charges and methods of operation ’ ’ as the Secretary deems necessary to effectuate the act. (Code of Fed. Reg., tit. 24, § 236.10, subd. [a].) Federal guidelines are imposed on rental charges, mortgage eligibility, project facilities, selection of tenants, occupancy requirements, and the form of leases executed by tenants receiving rent supplements. (See Code of Fed. Reg., tit. 24, § 236.1 et seq.)

Accordingly, a nonprofit sponsor such as Park Lake exists only as a creature of governmental policy. In the most practical sense, the Federal Government is providing the housing through a transactional form which involves a ‘1 private nonprofit corporation ’ The sponsor may even obtain local real estate tax abatement.

The United States Supreme Court has laid down the rule that constitutional restrictions apply where the State has sufficiently ‘ ‘ insinuated itself into a position of interdependence with an erstwhile ‘ ‘ private project ”. (Burton v. Wilmington Parking Auth., 365 U. S. 715, 725.)

In McQueen v. Druker (438 F. 2d 781) a subsidized project of a “ private landlord under section 221 (subd. [d], par. [3] ; U. S. Code, tit. 12, § 17151, subd. [d], par. [3]) (the predecessor of § 236) of the National Housing Act was held to be State [328]*328action. The court found that, in such a project, government exercises significant operational surveillance ” over the function of the landlord, and said (supra, pp. 784-785): When a specific governmental function is carried out by heavily subsidized private firms or individuals whose freedom of decision-making has, by contract and the reserved governmental power of continuing oversight, been circumscribed substantially more than that generally accorded an independent contractor, the coloration of state action fairly attaches ”. The entire question of State presence in nominally private entities is discussed in detail in Matter of Ryan v. Hofstra Univ. (67 Misc 2d 651). (See, also, Colon v. Tompkins Sq. Neighbors, 294 F. Supp. 134; R. Burke, I. M. Heyman, Federally Assisted Housing and the Private Sector, 25 Bus. Lawyer 381, 392 [Jan., 1970].)

The same result is required in this case by the New York Court of Appeals in Matter of Fuller v. Urstadt (28 N Y 2d 315). There, the Court of Appeals overturned evictions from a project operated by a limited profit housing company under the so-called Mitchell-Lama Act (Private Housing Finance Law, §§ 10 to 37). The State Division of Housing had leased a number of apartments from the housing company, a ‘ ‘ State-aided but otherwise private project ”, in order to sublease them with rent subsidies to low-income families, which included the litigants. The court held (supra, p. 318) that these families, before eviction, were entitled “to a hearing which need consist of no more than an opportunity to deny or explain ’

Significant to this case, which reversed both the Appellate Division, Second Department, and the Supreme Court at Special Term, is the court’s unequivocal statement in extension of its holding that:1 ‘ Even where direct State operation is not involved but only supportive or interrelated State action, arbitrariness is forbidden. Thus it was held in Burton v. Wilmington Parking Auth. (365 U. S. 715, 725) that where the State ‘ has so far insinuated itself into a position of interdependence ’ with a program or project, the program or project ‘ cannot be considered to have been so “ purely private ” as to fall without the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment. ’ Providing low rental housing for persons with low income is a State concern (see N. Y. Const., art. XVIII; Private Housing Finance Law, §§ 11, 41). The project owner received tax exemption, and its activities were, pursuant to statute, overseen by the State. The conclusion of State involvement is all the greater where the State’s rental, which to begin with was under a State-established ceiling, was decreased by an additional tax exemption because the subleasing program is treated for such purposes as public housing [329]*329(§ 33, subd. 2 ; § 44-a, subd. 1). Moreover, as noted, the sublease is granted or "withheld by the State, the State sets the petitioners’ rental and makes up the difference in State funds between the petitioners’ rental and the State’s. The ingredients of State action are remarkable and multiple, indeed overwhelming ” (supra, pp. 318-319).

Substantially the same governmental “ ingredients ” are present in Park Lake’s "operation. That the source of involvement is at the Federal rather than State level does not render the involvement any the less governmental. The significant presence of public funds and comprehensive regulation by governmental agencies in the project is the determining factor requiring fundamental fairness to the persons intended to be benefitted.

Therefore, the same procedural safeguards held applicable in Matter of Fuller v.

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

Related

Metalsky v. Mercy Haven Inc.
156 Misc. 2d 558 (New York Supreme Court, 1993)
Henry Knox Sherrill Corporation v. Randall
358 A.2d 154 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1975)
Henry Knox Sherrill Corp. v. Randall
33 Conn. Supp. 15 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1975)
Appel v. Beyer
39 Cal. App. Supp. 3d 7 (Appellate Division of the Superior Court of California, 1974)
Anderson v. Denny
365 F. Supp. 1254 (W.D. Virginia, 1973)
Sherman v. Kopach
75 Misc. 2d 18 (New York Supreme Court, 1973)
Tompkins Square Neighbors, Inc. v. Zaragoza
73 Misc. 2d 126 (Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 Misc. 2d 325, 333 N.Y.S.2d 277, 1972 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonner-v-park-lake-housing-development-fund-corp-nysupct-1972.