East 13th Street Homesteaders' Coalition v. Wright

217 A.D.2d 31, 635 N.Y.S.2d 958, 1995 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12717
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 7, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 217 A.D.2d 31 (East 13th Street Homesteaders' Coalition v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
East 13th Street Homesteaders' Coalition v. Wright, 217 A.D.2d 31, 635 N.Y.S.2d 958, 1995 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12717 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Tom, J.

Respondents appeal from an order of the Supreme Court which annulled certain Peremptory Vacate Orders issued by the City of New York Department of Buildings (DOB) due to the dangerous and hazardous conditions of three City-abandoned apartment buildings inhabited by petitioners.

This action was commenced in or about October 1994 by petitioners, who were occupying, without permission, five New York City-owned buildings designated as 535, 537, 539, 541 and 545 East 13th Street, New York, New York1 (the buildings will be referred to individually by their street address numbers). The complaint, which interposed numerous causes of action, was in response to the City’s attempt to remove the petitioners so that the City could implement a Federally subsidized plan to rehabilitate the buildings and create 41 low-income housing units. The petitioners, asserting that they acquired ownership of the abandoned structures by way of adverse possession, also [33]*33sought a preliminary injunction precluding the City from using self-help to remove them (see generally, Paulino v Wright, 210 AD2d 171, Lv dismissed 85 NY2d 858).

On February 10, 1995, the IAS Court issued a temporary restraining order enjoining respondents from using self-help to eject petitioners from the subject building and directing a hearing on the preliminary injunction motion.

The respondents maintain that as a result of the IAS Court’s order, an inspection of the buildings was made in order to aid respondents in preparing for the preliminary injunction hearing. DOB and New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) personnel thereafter determined that two of the buildings (541 and 545) were in such a hazardous condition as to constitute an imminent danger to the occupants’ health and safety as to require complete evacuation. The inspectors also found the first floor of a third building (539) in the same condition and, thereafter, issued the Vacate Orders dated April 20, 1995.

At that juncture, the IAS Court had already commenced the preliminary injunction hearing and petitioners made an application, during the course of that hearing, for an order annulling the Vacate Orders. The IAS Court commenced an immediate hearing (literally, a hearing within the hearing) to review the propriety of the Vacate Orders and, on April 26, 1995, Justice Wilk entered an order annulling the Vacate Orders and directing the City to immediately present a plan for the making of the necessary repairs to the buildings while the petitioners remained in occupancy.

The City subsequently sought to appeal the order as of right and invoked its automatic statutory stay, and petitioners moved to dismiss the appeal and vacate the automatic stay. Respondents then cross-moved for leave to appeal in the event we determined that Justice Wilk’s order was not appealable as of right.

By order dated May 25, 1995, this Court, inter alia, granted respondents leave to appeal and denied petitioners’ motion to vacate the automatic stay exercised by the respondents which, in effect, permitted the execution of the Vacate Orders. By order dated June 22,1995, this Court granted petitioners’ motion for renewal of the May 25, 1995 order to the extent of directing the municipal respondents to seal the buildings once they were vacated and to keep them sealed pending final disposition by the Supreme Court. As a result, petitioners were ejected [34]*34from the subject buildings on May 30, 1995 and those buildings were sealed.2

The focus of this appeal is whether the condition of the three buildings in question posed an imminent danger to the safety and life of the occupants.

Testimony educed at the hearing revealed that on April 12, 1995, a group of HPD and DOB staffers, including engineers Andrew Hanna from HPD and George Gabourel from DOB and Chief Inspector Thomas O’Flaherty of the DOB, entered and inspected buildings 537, 539, 541 and 545, during which time they took approximately 150 photographs and four hours of video recordings. The pictures, did not show all areas of the buildings and the inspectors had instructions not to enter certain individual apartments.

Mr. Hanna’s engineering report, which was entered into evidence, noted that in 539, he observed that: partition walls had been removed throughout the building; sheetrock had been improperly installed and was not secured to the walls and ceilings; joists had been removed from the basement ceiling and replaced with undersized beams which were resting on deteriorating masonry pockets (the point where joists connect to the bearing wall); other basement joists were completely deteriorated, and the ceiling was in danger of collapsing; the public hall stairs were unstable and leaning and many treads were missing; the bricks and mortar on the parapet wall were severely deteriorated and in danger of collapsing; and cracks and loose mortar were visible at various locations on the exterior walls.

The DOB report, compiled by DOB engineer Gabourel, states that: undersized beams replaced joists; that interior stairs were "leaning to right” with treads pulling away from the wall; that other stairs were "leaning and sagging”; that a "sagging and spongy” floor in a third-floor apartment was caused by the removal of a relieving wall; and that a wood-burning stove with a flue to the roof was present, constituting a fire hazard.

Mr. Hanna’s observations with regard to 541 were that: "the building is in imminent danger of collapsing”; the east exterior [35]*35wall is buckled inward in some areas and outward in others, which condition is extremely dangerous and marks the initial stage of collapse; floor joists between certain floors had been cut to provide access and as a result, the joists were inadequately supported; terra cotta bricks are loose throughout the basement ceiling, with obvious water leakage; wood lintels are completely deteriorated and unable to support the surrounding bricks; and the parapet wall is deteriorated and in danger of collapse. Mr. Hanna recommended the building be evacuated as soon as possible.

The DOB report prepared by Mr. Gabourel states, inter alia, that: the west side parapet is leaning over a floor onto the roof; the west side of the building has structural cracks throughout the top three floors; there are vertical cracks at the north interior stair and throughout the east wall; and that a fourth floor apartment has a floor which is spongy and is two to three inches lower than the hallway floor.

With regard to 545, Mr. Hanna noted that: the upper front portion of the exterior brick wall is structurally unstable with a horizontal deflection of approximately eight inches; the west side parapet wall is bulging inward; walls were removed in the third-floor rear apartment and improper shoring was installed; and a platform on the ground floor-rear of the building is in danger of collapsing.

Mr. Gabourel’s report remarked that: the entire front wall is out of plumb approximately 12 to 18 inches and evidences severe cracking; a sidewalk shed was placed in front of the building to protect the public from a dangerous condition on the fifth floor; there is severe sagging adjacent to the interior stair line; stairs were sagging and defective at all levels; and the building appears "rearwards” because of the removal of interior relieving walls.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 A.D.2d 31, 635 N.Y.S.2d 958, 1995 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 12717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-13th-street-homesteaders-coalition-v-wright-nyappdiv-1995.