Campo Corp. v. City Rent & Rehabilitation Administration

49 Misc. 2d 840, 268 N.Y.S.2d 474, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2154
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1966
StatusPublished

This text of 49 Misc. 2d 840 (Campo Corp. v. City Rent & Rehabilitation Administration) 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
Campo Corp. v. City Rent & Rehabilitation Administration, 49 Misc. 2d 840, 268 N.Y.S.2d 474, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2154 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Saul S. Streit, J.

This is a motion, in a proceeding pursuant to article 78 of the CPLR, for an order directing respondents, the City Rent and Rehabilitation Administration and the City Rent Administrator, to make a finding that a vacancy rate of 5% or more exists in housing accommodations in the City of New York renting for (a) $200 to $224 per month, (b) $250 to $299 per month, and (c) over $300 per month. In addition, petitioner seeks to compel respondents to schedule a public hearing as a precedent to the making of an order decontrolling housing accommodations in the aforesaid rent ranges.

The petition alleges: (1) that petitioner is the owner of seven buildings containing housing accommodations subject to control under the New York City Rent and Rehabilitation Law; (2) that Local Law No. 20 of the Local Laws of 1962 of New York City provides for abolition of rent controls after a public hearing ‘ ‘ Whenever the city rent agency shall find, after making such studies and investigations as it deems necessary for such purpose, that the percentage of vacancies in all or any particular class of housing accommodations in the city is five per centum or more ” (§ Y51-12.0); (3) that a survey of vacancies in the City of New York, made by the United States Census Bureau in February or March, 1965, pursuant to a contract with the city and delivered to the city in July or August, 1965, disclosed vacancies of more than 5% in housing accommodations renting (a) from $200 to $224 per month, (b) from $250 to $299 per month and (c) for more than $300 per month; (4) that a letter was written on petitioner’s behalf on October 8,1965 to the City Rent Administration, demanding that the latter find that the vacancies in said rent ranges exceed 5% and requesting that a public hearing be held and rent controls abolished for accommodations in those rent ranges; (5) that the Rent Administration replied by letter dated November 22, 1965, in which it stated that the petitioner’s letter assumed that the rent ranges referred to constituted classes ” of housing accommodations within the [842]*842meaning of Local Law No. 20 (§ Y51-12.0), whereas the Administrator, whose function it is to determine what constitutes a ‘ ‘ class ’ ’ of housing accommodations, had not yet made such a determination because there were not yet available to him sufficient data or expert analysis to enable him to do so or to determine whether there is in fact a 5% vacancy rate for any “particular class” of housing accommodations; and (6) that the refusal of respondents to make the requested finding or schedule a public hearing was arbitrary, unreasonable and capricious and that no good reason exists for delaying the making of the desired finding and the holding of a public hearing as a precedent to the abolition of rent controls in the rent ranges previously referred to.

Respondents cross-move for an order dismissing the petition for failure to set forth a good cause of action; for failure of petitioner to exhaust available administrative remedies; and for failure of petitioner to set forth facts showing that it is in any way aggrieved. Respondents also seek summary judgment in their favor.

Prior to the transfer of rent control from the State to the city, the State statute (L. 1946, ch. 274, § 12, subd. 1) provided that “ Whenever the commission shall find that, in any municipality specified by the commission * * * the percentage of vacancies in all or any particular class of housing accommodations is five per centum or more * * * the controls imposed upon rents * * * with respect to any particular class of housing accommodations * * * shall be * * * abolished ’ ’, after the holding of a public hearing. The only pertinent difference between this language of the State statute and that of its successor, section Y51-12.0 of Local Law No. 20 is that the latter, after the word “ find ” adds “ after making such studies and investigations as it deems necessary for such purpose ”.

In Matter of Hotel Assn. of N. Y. City v. Weaver (3 N Y 2d 206) the petitioner contended that hotels were a “particular class ” of housing accommodations within the meaning of the State statute referred to above, and that, therefore, the refusal of the State Rent Administrator to find that a vacancy rate of more than 5% existed for hotels and to conduct a public hearing preparatory to a decontrol of hotels was arbitrary and capricious. The Administrator contended that “for purposes of decontrol, the word class refers not to the particular type or nature of the accommodation, e.g., hotels, but to accommodations in the general housing market which fall in the same rental [843]*843level regardless of the fact that the accommodation happens to be in a particular type of building ” (p. 211). The Court of Appeals rejected petitioner’s claim. It pointed out (p. 211) that there was no statutory provision specifying that hotels shall constitute a “ class of housing accommodations ” and that the State statute authorized the Rent Commission to make such classifications and differentiations “as in the judgment of the commission are necessary or proper in order to effectuate the purposes of this act ”. (A similar provision is to be found in § Y51-5.0, subd. i.) The court declared that the issue before it was not (pp. 212-213) “what the ‘ pi-opcr ’ interpretation of ‘ class ’ is, nor whether ‘ class ’ could or has been interpreted to mean hotels, but whether the interpretation of the word ‘ class ’ adopted by the commission is arbitrary or capricious.” The holding was that the commission’s determination was reasonable and founded upon a rational basis, its classification being-well suited to the purposes of the rent law.

This decision of our highest court is clear and decisive authority for the proposition that the interpretation of what constitutes a “particular class” for purposes of the State vacancy decontrol statute was a matter to be determined by the Rent Commission “as in the judgment of the commission are necessary or proper” (p. 211). The same principle applies to section Y51-12.0, the successor of the State statute, especially since the provisions of the State statute relied upon by the Court of Appeals are also contained in Local Law No. 20 (§ Y51-5.0, subd. g, par. [1]; subd. i). It is to be noted that, as in the case of the State statute, there is no provision in Local Law No. 20 or in the regulations defining- or specifying what shall constitute a “particular class” for the purposes of the statute dealing with decontrol where vacancies in a particular class exceed 5%.

There has, as far as appears, never been any determination by the State or city rent authorities that housing accommodations renting for $200 to $224 per month, $250 to $299 per month, and more than $300 per month constitute separate “ particular classes ” within the meaning- of the vacancy decontrol statutes.

Petitioner proceeds upon the assumption that respondents, by engaging the United States Census Bureau to make a survey as to vacancies in 15 different rent ranges, including the three rent ranges which are the subject of this proceeding, thereby determined that the 15 rent ranges as to which the vacancy survey was sought were the 1 ‘ particular classes” of housing accommodations referred to in section Y51-12.0, as the bases [844]*844for decontrols in the case of vacancies of 5% or more. Tjhis is, on its very face, an unwarranted assumption, and no facts are set forth in the petition to support it.

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49 Misc. 2d 840, 268 N.Y.S.2d 474, 1966 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campo-corp-v-city-rent-rehabilitation-administration-nysupct-1966.