Chillo v. Lopez
This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 50338(U) (Chillo v. Lopez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court Of The City Of New York, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Chillo v Lopez |
| 2024 NY Slip Op 50338(U) |
| Decided on March 29, 2024 |
| Civil Court Of The City Of New York, Kings County |
| Basu, J. |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports. |
Decided on March 29, 2024
Teresa Chillo, Petitioner,
against Norma Lopez and Faycal Yahiaoui, Respondents. |
Index No. LT-325774-23/KI
Attorneys for Petitioner
Edelman Schwartz PLLC
848 McDonald Ave, 2nd Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11218
(212) 710-0264
Attorneys for Respondent
The Legal Aid Society
111 Livingston Street, 7th Floor
Brooklyn, New York 11201
(718) 237-2000 Shantonu J. Basu, J.
As required by CPLR § 2219(a), the following is a recitation of the papers considered in the review of motion sequence 2 and motion sequence 3. For the reasons stated below motion sequence 3 is granted and motion sequence 2 is denied as moot.
PAPERS NUMBEREDOrder to Show Cause, Affirmation 1, NYSCEF # 10 (seq 2)
Order to Show Cause, Affirmation, Affidavit & Exhibits 2, NYSCEF # 13-24 (seq 3)
This is a nonpayment proceeding concerning an alleged rent-stabilized apartment. After Respondent-Lopez failed to answer, Petitioner obtained a default judgment and warrant.
Thereafter, Lopez moved by a pro se order to show cause to vacate her default (motion [*2]sequence 1).
On January 30, 2024, the return date of Lopez's order to show cause, the parties entered into stipulation that kept the judgment and warrant in place but stayed execution of the warrant to March 15, 2024 for Respondent-Lopez to pay the arrears. The stipulation was translated to Respondent-Lopez, signed by the Official Court Interpreter and allocuted by the Honorable Donoghue. Additionally, as a result of this stipulation, a new party, Respondent-Yahiaoui, was added to the proceeding.
On March 19, 2024, Respondent-Lopez retained counsel. Counsel for Lopez has now moved the court to vacate the January 30, 2024 pro se stipulation. For the reasons stated below, the court grants this motion.
LEGAL ANALYSIS
a. The legal standards for vacatur of pro se stipulations
Stipulations are favored by courts and will not lightly be cast aside. Generally, only where there is cause sufficient to invalidate a contract, such as fraud, collusion, mistake or accident, will a party be relieved from the consequences of a stipulation made during litigation (Hallock v State of NY, 64 NY2d 224 [1984]).
However, the housing court's discretion to vacate a stipulation exceeds that applicable to invalidating a contract (Knickerbocker Village v Doe, NYLJ, Jan. 5, 1994 at 21, col 2 [App Term 1st Dept 1994] ["While the cases mention as examples of such good cause collusion, mistake, accident, fraud, surprise . . . the discretion of a court is not that closely confined"]).
Furthermore, a court may vacate a stipulation where it appears that a party has "inadvertently, unadvisably or improvidently entered into an agreement which will take the case out of the due and ordinary course of proceeding in the action and works to his prejudice" (Matter of Frutiger, 29 NY2d 143, 149-150 [1971]).
Housing court judges have consistently followed this guidance (see e.g. 57 Elmhurst, LLC v Williams, 65 Misc 3d 1221[A], 2019 NY Slip Op 51778[U] [Civ Ct Queens County 2019] [finding the respondent "improvidently waived potentially meritorious defenses without the benefit of counsel and exercises its discretion to vacate the June 4, 2019 stipulation, judgment, and warrant"]).
As the Honorable Ibrahim observed in Diego Beekman Mut. Hous. Assoc. HDFC v McClain, the housing court:
"possesses the discretionary power to relieve parties from the consequences of a stipulation if it appears that the stipulation was entered into inadvisably or that it would be inequitable to hold the parties to it. The discretion of a court is not that closely confined [to the grounds commonly cited] and an unjust stipulation should be vacated when the parties may be returned to their former status. [W]hile lack of representation is not sufficient in and of itself to vacate a stipulation, a party's lack of representation at the time of entry into the stipulation is a significant factor to be considered in determining whether good cause exists to vacate the stipulation.
New York courts routinely vacate stipulations signed by pro se tenants who fail to realize and to assert viable defenses to their landlords' claims"
(Diego Beekman Mut. Hous. Assoc. HDFC v McClain, 63 Misc 3d 1218[A], 2019 NY Slip Op 50580[U] [Civ Ct Bronx County 2019] [citations and internal quotation marks omitted]).
The McClain court collects several appellate cases from the First Department affirming [*3]the vacatur of stipulations where an unrepresented tenant improvidently enters into a stipulation. However, the Second Department's holdings accord with those of the First Department and apply the same standard (see e.g. 125 Ct. St., LLC v Nicholson, 214 AD3d 723, 727 [2d Dept 2023]).
b. Did Respondent improvidently enter into the stipulation?
The question now becomes whether Respondent-Lopez entered into the instant stipulation improvidently.
At oral argument the court emphasized that unrepresented parties can intelligently waive defenses. Typical stipulations executed by pro se tenants in housing court will inevitably waive some defenses in exchange for some benefit. The most common example of this is where a tenant waives an abatement claim in exchange for time to pay outstanding arrears.
Thus, it is not the waiver of defenses that exposes a stipulation to a subsequent motion for vacatur. Rather courts must evaluate whether the unrepresented party waived a defense improvidently.
In this analysis, the court is primarily concerned with situations where a tenant waives a latent defense. A lack of repairs is something that even a relatively unsophisticated tenant can raise without the benefit of counsel, and thus this defense can be intelligently waived by an unrepresented litigant.
Other defenses, for example the failure to register with DHCR or the failure to plead the correct regulatory status of an apartment, are more technical and more subtle. Waiver of these defenses, if done so improvidently, may result in a stipulation being set aside (cf. Rossmill Assoc., LP v Watanabe, — NYS3d —, 2024 NY Slip Op 24048 [Civ Ct NY County 2024] [denying a motion to vacate because the respondent did not improvidently waive an overcharge defense since this defense was carefully explained to the respondent]).
In the instant case, buried among other arguments, Respondent-Lopez's counsel points out that the petition is defective. The court agrees. The petition is obviously defective—but only to the trained eye.
The petition alleges that the apartment is not a multiple dwelling.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
2024 NY Slip Op 50338(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chillo-v-lopez-nycivctkings-2024.