Chan v. Kormendi

118 Misc. 2d 1026, 462 N.Y.S.2d 943, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3437
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJanuary 31, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 118 Misc. 2d 1026 (Chan v. Kormendi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chan v. Kormendi, 118 Misc. 2d 1026, 462 N.Y.S.2d 943, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3437 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John A. Milano, J.

issue:

Is a landlord precluded from collecting rent from a tenant who occupies a legal apartment in a two-family house presently occupied by three families because of the provisions of section 325 of the Multiple Dwelling Law?

facts:

Petitioners and respondents, by their attorneys, submit an agreed statement of facts. Petitioner landlord in this nonpayment proceeding sued the tenant for rent arrears for the period September, 1982 through January, 1983 for a monthly rental of $620 for a total of $3,100. The premises are a legally constituted two-family house with a certificate of occupancy issued to that effect. There are presently three families residing in the subject premises. The tenant respondent occupies one of the legal apartments covered by the certificate of occupancy. The illegal apartment occupied by one of the other tenants and not covered by the [1027]*1027certificate of occupancy was in existence prior to the landlord purchasing the said premises. The owner resides in the City of New York. No application has been made by the landlord to file plans to convert the said two-family house to a legal three-family multiple dwelling. The landlord is unable to obtain a multiple dwelling registration because the building department will only issue a registration number based on the “legal” occupancy of the building, in this case a two-family house. The parties wish the court to decide whether the landlord is precluded from collecting the rent from the tenant who occupies the legal apartment in said two-family house presently occupied by three families because of the provisions of section 325 of the Multiple Dwelling Law. If the question is answered in the negative, then the court is to award a final judgment in the sum of $3,100 in favor of the landlord. If the question is answered in the affirmative then the court is to dismiss the petition without prejudice. The preceding question is answered by this court in the negative.

STATUTORY AND CASE LAW

background:

Tenants who receive heat, hot water, space facilities and other services from the providing landlord, must expect to pay rent. But no matter how fair or logical the above axiom, this court is presently confronted with a perplexing problem not truly contemplated by, nor adequately responded to by existing statutes, administrative regulations or rules of law.

The statutory definition of multiple dwelling includes not only actual existing use of a dwelling occupied by “three or more families living independently of each other” (Multiple Dwelling Law, § 4, subd 7) but also the intended use or design (Multiple Dwelling Law, §4, subd 1).

Section 325 of the Multiple Dwelling Law requires every owner of a multiple dwelling and every agent or other person having control of such a dwelling to file the required statement of ownership, etc., with the appropriate department. It also provides that in any city over one million which, by local law, requires the registration of owners of multiple dwellings and which prescribes penal[1028]*1028ties, remedies and sanctions to be imposed for the violation of such local registration requirements, no rent shall be received by the said owner who fails to comply with such registration requirements until he complies with such requirements.

Section 2900.21 (f) of the Civil Court Rules of the City of New York (22 NYCRR) provides in pertinent part that in every summary proceeding to recover possession of real property pursuant to RPAPL 711, the petitioner must allege either “(1) that the premises are not a multiple dwelling, or, (2) that the premises are a multiple dwelling and pursuant to the Administrative Code, article 41, there is a currently effective registration statement on file”.

The above allegations are deemed to be required under section 325 of the Multiple Dwelling Law and subdivision b of section D26-41.21 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York which provides in pertinent part that an owner who fails to file such a statement of registration “shall be denied the right to recover possession of the premises for non-payment of rent during the period of noncompliance, and shall, in the discretion of the court, suffer a stay of proceedings to recover rents, during such period.” (Emphasis added.)

In 1974, the Appellate Term, Second Department, in the case of Corbin v Harris (92 Misc 2d 480), held that failure of the landlord to register the premises as a multiple dwelling precluded the maintenance of an action for nonpayment of rent (Multiple Dwelling Law, § 325, subd 2) and that the labeling of the rent action as one for use and occupancy would not evade the statutory provision. The premises were a legal two-family frame dwelling in Brooklyn, occupied by three families contrary to the certificate of occupancy. The tenant lived in the “illegal apartment” and not in any of the two other apartments legally covered under the existing certificate of occupancy. A violation from the Department of Buildings had been issued to the defendants for converting the premises into an illegal three-family dwelling which directed the landlords to “ ‘restore the premises to lawful occupancy’ ” (p 481).

And, in an analogous situation, a petitioner owner of commercial lofts leased to artists as living-work quarters, [1029]*1029was not relieved of the penalties imposed for failing to register the buildings as multiple dwellings and obtaining proper residential certificates of occupancy including the denial of the right to collect rent or recover possession of the premises for nonpayment of rent (Multiple Dwelling Law, §§ 302, 325, subd 2; Administrative Code, § D2641.21, subd b), since the harsh penalties were necessary in order to ensure compliance and discourage landlords who would ignore building restrictions from offering illegal apartments to unsuspecting tenants. (Lipkis v Pikus, 96 Misc 2d 581, affd 99 Misc 2d 518, affd 72 AD2d 697, app dsmd 51 NY2d 874.) And in the case of Mandel v Pitkowsky (102 Misc 2d 478, affd 76 AD2d 807), the court held that since the commercial dwelling had been continuously occupied since 1968 for residential purposes by at least three loft tenants living independently of each other, such building constituted a “de facto” multiple dwelling (Multiple Dwelling Law, § 4, subd 7) and, therefore, the failure of the petitioner in a holdover summary proceeding to allege the information required by the relevant Civil Court rule with respect to the filing of a registration statement (22 NYCRR 2900.21 [f]) mandated dismissal of the petition on jurisdictional grounds.

CONTENTION AND ARGUMENT:

Is this court, then, on the basis of the above precedents, obliged to dismiss the instant petition on jurisdictional and procedural grounds, knowing full well that in the final analysis, the end result can only be regarded as blatantly unfair and grossly inequitable to the petitioners by permitting the respondent, who occupies a legal apartment and receives full services, to unjustly enrich himself? The court is aware that the application of such a precedent to the facts at hand might pose catastrophic consequences not only for these petitioners but for all owners of private homes in Queens County and elsewhere in the City of New York.

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Bluebook (online)
118 Misc. 2d 1026, 462 N.Y.S.2d 943, 1983 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chan-v-kormendi-nycivct-1983.