Forest Hills No. 1 Co. v. Schimmel

110 Misc. 2d 429, 440 N.Y.S.2d 471, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3104
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJanuary 12, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 110 Misc. 2d 429 (Forest Hills No. 1 Co. v. Schimmel) 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
Forest Hills No. 1 Co. v. Schimmel, 110 Misc. 2d 429, 440 N.Y.S.2d 471, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3104 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John A. Milano, J.

The significant issues raised herein as they relate to a garden apartment complex are apparently ones of first impression.

ISSUES

Is there a breach of the warranty of habitability where there exists conditions in the common environmental areas of a garden apartment complex that are detrimental to tenants’ life, health or safety, or frustrate the uses for which tenants reasonably intended to make of their premises?

Is the subject garden apartment complex a de facto multiple dwelling and the landlords’ failure to register the premises as a multiple dwelling, a bar to the recovery of rent?

[430]*430STATEMENT OF FACTS

Forest Hills No. 1 Co. is the owner of record of 70 middle-class garden apartments and Gale Realty Company is the owner of record of 120 garden apartments located in Forest Hills, Queens. The 190 garden apartments owned by the said landlords comprise one large development in the vicinity of 108th Street to 110th Street, between 63rd Road and 64th Road, and is known in the aggregate as Forest Hills Park Gardens. The Park Gardens garden apartments were erected on or about 1948-1949 as a group of 95 two-story attached units (a unit as used herein comprised of two apartments with separate interior doors, one apartment located on the ground floor and the other on the second floor). In the front of each unit, prior to construction, there were patches of lawn with various shrubs. Eight boilers supply heat for the 190 apartments. Gale has 5 boilers supplying heat to its 120 apartments and Forest Hills, 3 boilers supplying heat to its 70 apartments. There are also 8 separate sewer and water lines servicing the 190 apartments, and gas is supplied by means of 8 gas lines. Electricity is supplied to the entire Park Gardens by Con Edison by means of separate electrical lines leading to each apartment. The entire 190-apartment development was operated, managed and treated in all respects as one development, albeit two different record owners. The premises are subject to the Rent Stabilization Law notwithstanding that certificates of occupancy were issued for portions thereof as one- or two-family dwellings (Administrative Code of City of New York, § YY51-3.1, added Sept. 25, 1969). The tenant Schimmel took occupancy in 1953, about 26 years ago, prior to landlord’s ownership of the Park Garden and after full completion of the Park Garden complex. At that time, Schimmel was attracted to the subject garden apartment by its countrified atmosphere, which included lawns, playgrounds, sandboxes, swings, slides, shrubs and a quiet environment. Schimmel had a two-year-old child who used the various recreational facilities and played on the lawn and backyard areas. At the time Schimmel rented his apartment he was given a tour of the development and introduced to the various facilities and the countrified qualities of the garden apartments by [431]*431the predecessor landlord and was told that the garden apartment, especially with the use of the backyards, was “like having one’s own home”. Schimmel rented his garden apartment after this tour of the Park Garden complex and after these representations by the said predecessor landlord. On April 15, 1977, Schimmel renewed his tenancy by signing a lease agreement where landlord continued to represent that the common areas, that formed a part of the countrified atmosphere of a garden apartment complex would be maintained in a fashion that would be fit for tenants’ use, be habitable and not be subject to conditions that would be dangerous, hazardous or detrimental to the life, health or safety of the tenant, and these provisions and covenants were contained in his lease. Sevos took occupancy on or about February 15,1979. She moved in pursuant to a lease agreement. Prior to leasing the subject garden apartment Sevos had resided in suburban River-dale, in a three-family house fronted with lawns. Before leasing the subject apartment, she had reviewed several apartments. She rejected a brownstone in Brooklyn where the front lawn was too small. She had also visited some garden apartments in Queens owned by Carol Management. At the time Sevos rented the subject apartment, she was given a tour of the Park Garden development by the superintendent Tony Gonzalez. She was shown the nice shrubbery, trees, sidewalks, metal fences enclosing the lawns fronting the various garden apartment units and clotheslines, and was advised that the neighborhood was quiet and that regular “block” parties occurred. On the basis of this tour Sevos leased the subject garden apartment. Indeed Robert Handler of Elmore Management, the agent responsible for the rentals admitted that a tenant has “got to be blind not to see the surroundings”. In paragraph 12 of Sevos’ lease, landlord again warranted as in the Schimmel agreement, that the public common areas would be fit for the uses intended by the tenant and would be habitable and free from conditions that would be inimical to tenant’s life, health or safety.

On or about the latter part of July and the first part of August, 1978, landlords commenced construction to convert the 190 garden apartments (or 95 units) to one- and [432]*432two-family homes. Work was commenced even though landlords had not obtained an order from the conciliation and appeals board permitting their withdrawal of the garden apartments from the rental market. In fact, at this time no application had even been filed. The construction and conversion work included the following: the removal of all windows, except steel casement windows; the excavation of all basements to create new and full basements; the installation of new gas-fed hot water heating units in each unit; a revamp of the entire electric system; the installation of new sewer lines, involving substantial excavation as these new lines were installed below ground; demolition of garages; the remodeling of kitchens; remodeling of bathrooms. Although the contractors and workmen used some manual tools, it was admitted that in many instances pneumatic drills (e.g., installing the electric lines) backhoes, trucks and conveyor belts were utilized. The work commenced as early as 7:00 a.m. and normally ended at 5:00 p.m. from Monday to Friday. Work was also done on certain Saturdays commencing at 7:00 a.m. In summary, after construction commenced, the said landscape at the development, in many areas, appeared ravished covered with mounds of dirt and debris, and holes. In one situation, an area was deemed hazardous by the Department of Buildings which issued an order to terminate activities and shore and brace the area that had the cave-in. The mountains of dirt were as high as 13 feet in many areas and averaged 10 feet. The lawns and grass were dug up. Toilet bowls, bathtubs, wooden cartons, concrete sewer pipe, glass, window panes, tree limbs, dislocated shrubbery, broken fences, broken garbage cans and heavy machinery covered the lawns and playground areas in the entire development, especially in Schimmel’s backyard and Sevos’ front lawn. The holes were, on the average, approximately 3Vz feet wide by 5 feet deep. The existence of these conditions was depicted in the numerous photographs that were submitted as evidence. These conditions were also confirmed by the testimony of several witnesses. The existence of these conditions and the constant construction work seriously and negatively impacted on tenants’ habitability and frustrated the uses for which tenants [433]*433reasonably intended to make of the premises when they initially leased the garden apartments.

THE LAW

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Bluebook (online)
110 Misc. 2d 429, 440 N.Y.S.2d 471, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forest-hills-no-1-co-v-schimmel-nycivct-1981.