De Koven v. 780 West End Realty Co.

48 Misc. 2d 951, 266 N.Y.S.2d 463, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1327
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedNovember 21, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 Misc. 2d 951 (De Koven v. 780 West End Realty Co.) 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
De Koven v. 780 West End Realty Co., 48 Misc. 2d 951, 266 N.Y.S.2d 463, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1327 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Robert V. Santangelo, J.

Felice De Koven, individually and on behalf of 32 other tenants of the premises 780 West End Avenue, Manhattan, brought suit against the landlord, 780 West End Realty Co., and the mortgagee, Kings County Savings Bank, pursuant to article 7-A of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law.

The landlord, 780 West End Realty Co., instituted summary proceedings for nonpayment of rent against the following 24 tenants of said premises:

Gertrude Klein ....................Index No. 87088
Francis Lubin.....................Index No. 87076
William Berkowitz.................Index No. 87077
Allan Pospisil.....................Index No. 87078
Gretel Tannhauser.................Index No. 87079
Robert Bernstein ................ .Index No. 87080
Naomi Weiss......................Index No. 87081
Alice Adamczyk....................Index No. 87082
Mortimer Goldberg.................Index No. 87083
Leo Rostal ........................Index No. 87084
Martha Jacks......................Index No. 87085
Sol Gidseg.........................Index No. 87086
Audrey Hemenway.................Index No. 87087
Alexander Lory....................Index No. 87089
Fannie Landsman and Hyman Gelfand .........................Index No. 87075
Joseph Morgens ...................Index No. 87074
Nathan Grossner...................Index No. 87073
Saul Krupp .......................Index No. 87072
Charles DeKoven..................Index No. 87071
Max Fortgang.....................Index No. 87070
John S. Blumberg..................Index No. 87069
Charlotte Schwartz.................Index No. 87068
Georgiana Donnelly and Frances Ileeran .........................Index No. 87065
Rose Brown.......................Index No. 87067

A stipulation was entered into between the parties wherein the tenants consented to judgment in favor of the landlord in all the nonpayment proceedings, the attorney for the tenants to [953]*953hold the rent in escrow, with a promise on the part of the landlord not to execute on those judgments until the final determination of the article 7-A proceeding. If the court decided in favor of the landlord in the article 7-A proceeding, then the escrow money would be turned over to the landlord’s attorney; if resolved in favor of the tenants, then the money would be used pursuant to the court’s direction.

The proceeding brought by 33 of 61 tenants residing at 780 West End Avenue in the Borough of Manhattan pursuant to the recently enacted article 7-A of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, prays for an order directing the deposit of rents into court for the purpose of remedying alleged conditions dangerous to life, health or safety.

Section 770 provides that “ One-third or more of the tenants occupying a multiple dwelling located in the city of New York may maintain a special proceeding as provided in this article, upon the ground that there exists in such multiple dwellings or in any part thereof a lack of heat or of running water or of light or of electricity or of adequate sewage disposal facilities, or any other condition dangerous to life, health or safety, which has existed for five days, or an infestation by rodents, or any combination of such conditions.”

Petitioners specify that assaults, robberies and burglaries were committed in the building, 780 West End Avenue, as a proximate result of the respondent landlord’s failure to provide adequate protection for the residents of the multiple dwelling. More particularly, petitioners claim that the landlord’s failure to provide round-the-clock doorman service seven days a week constitutes a proximate and continuing danger to the life, health and safety of the tenants.

The court finds from the evidence presented:

1. There were sufficient incidents of crime to instill fear in the minds of these tenants, causing an unsafe feeling as to their persons and property.

2. During the past year assaults upon tenants, burglaries and larcenies have increased.

3. Police protection in the area was and still is inadequate, adding to the insecurity of the tenants. Accordingly, the court has no hesitancy in suggesting that the additional services of a doorman would lessen the number of crimes occurring within and around the building.

The question which this court must face, however, is whether section 770 of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, which gives one third or more of the tenants of a multiple dwell[954]*954ing the right to bring the proceeding if a “ condition dangerous to life, health or safety” exists, includes absence of a doorman as a “ condition dangerous to life, health or safety ’ ’.

The court is of the opinion that incidents of crime, perpetrated by third parties within the premises, impose no obligation upon the landlord to provide doorman service, especially where there has been no contractual obligation or obligation imposed by statute to provide the same.

Criminal activity in the area of a multiple dwelling or within the premises itself was never contemplated by the Legislature under the provisions of article 7-A.

An examination of the legislative findings and intent reveals that the primary reason for which article 7-A was enacted was to provide additional remedies for enforcement of existing rights. Article 7-A is part of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, a procedural statute, not a substantive act ■such as the Multiple Dwelling Law, and as such it neither created new substantive rights on behalf of tenants nor imposed additional obligations upon a landlord.

The intent of the Legislature is further clarified by examining the enumerated conditions which article 7-A prescribes as dangerous to life, health or safety: they are lack of heat, running water or of light or of electricity or of adequate sewage disposal facilities or an infestation by rodents. Each of these enumerated conditions is the responsibility of a landlord under the Multiple Dwelling Law and each is the proximate cause of injury to the tenants. The lack of doorman service is neither. No obligation to provide such services is prescribed by the Multiple Dwelling Law or any regulation of the Rent Commission. Moreover, failure to provide such service is not the proximate cause of injury to tenants in the case of a crime perpetrated upon them by the intervening act of a person not in the employ of or agent of the landlord.

The question whether doormen should be furnished is a grave matter for the Legislature. Indeed, the last Legislature passed laws to protect tenants from the high rise in the crime rate.

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48 Misc. 2d 951, 266 N.Y.S.2d 463, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-koven-v-780-west-end-realty-co-nycivct-1965.