Ganson v. Goldfader

148 Misc. 2d 608, 561 N.Y.S.2d 366, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 515
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 Misc. 2d 608 (Ganson v. Goldfader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ganson v. Goldfader, 148 Misc. 2d 608, 561 N.Y.S.2d 366, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 515 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

[609]*609OPINION OF THE COURT

David B. Saxe, J.

It seems that residents of New York City spend significant time and energy trying to acquire the right to purchase newly converted cooperative and condominium units at insider prices. Over the years, legal disputes have arisen regarding whether estates, relatives, and life partners of tenants of record have the legal right to purchase. This action presents another variation of such disputes.

This action is brought by plaintiff Lisa Ganson (Ganson) to determine her right to share in the purchase of a cooperative apartment. The following motions are consolidated for determination: (1) defendant Haralyn Goldfader’s (Goldfader) motion for summary judgment (No. 001); (2) the summary judgment motion of defendants Jump Associates and Douglas Elliman-Gibbons & Ives, Inc. (Douglas-Elliman) (No. 002); and (3) Ganson’s cross motion for summary judgment or, alternatively, for injunctive relief barring the sale of the apartment by Goldfader.

Ganson and Goldfader, as friends and roommates, shared a rent-stabilized apartment located at 235 East 57th Street from July 1982 until Ganson moved out in April 1986, leaving Goldfader in occupancy. Both women appeared as cotenants on the original lease, and through several renewals, until the lease was renewed in Goldfader’s name alone in June 1987.

In March 1985 the tenants of 235 East 57th Street received the "red herring” offering plan for the cooperative conversion of the building. Ganson and Goldfader signed a "no-buy pledge” in August 1985. The plan was accepted for filing in June 1986, and declared effective in September 1987. Goldfader purchased the shares in the apartment in November 1987 as the sole tenant of record.

Ganson contends that she had a right to join in the purchase of the co-op pursuant to an agreement between herself and Goldfader to share in the purchase of the apartment if the conversion came to pass. She believes that Goldfader defrauded her of her right to purchase by hiding from Ganson the fact of the conversion, and by having Ganson deleted as tenant of record when the rent-stabilized lease was renewed, thereby thwarting Ganson’s opportunity to be considered a tenant in occupancy entitled to purchase the apartment. Ganson brings this action for a declaration of rights, and other equitable and injunctive relief, including a claim for the [610]*610imposition of a constructive trust. She also sues the sponsor Jump Associates and the building’s general managing agent, Douglas-Elliman, for their alleged negligence in failing to notify Ganson of the lease renewal, and in allowing the new lease to be made out in the name of Goldfader to the exclusion of Ganson.

Only bona fide tenants in occupancy on the date the Attorney-General accepts the plan for filing are afforded the exclusive right to purchase their apartments upon the conversion of a residential apartment building to a cooperative status (General Business Law § 352-eeee [2] [d] [ix]). The " 'time of the offering’ ”, i.e., the date of acceptance by the Attorney-General, is thus considered the "critical date” to determine who has the right to purchase (McSpadden v Dawson, 117 AD2d 453, 457).

A great deal of the parties’ attention in these motions has been focused on events which happened long after the offering plan was accepted for filing. Consequently, the arguments concerning the effect of the lease renewal on Ganson’s right to purchase are, for the most part, irrelevant.

Goldfader has claimed, without contradiction, that the plan was accepted for filing in June 1986. Therefore, Ganson’s right to join in the purchase, if any, must be measured as of that time, and not later.

It has been said that the term " 'tenant in occupancy’ ” implies actual use and possession by the would-be purchaser at the time of the offering (De Kovessey v Coronet Props. Co., 69 NY2d 448, 457). However, in Manolovici v 136 E. 64th St. Assocs. (70 NY2d 785), the Court of Appeals clarified the definition of a " 'tenant in occupancy’ ” to include a tenant of record of a rent-stabilized apartment who, although he lived elsewhere at the time of the offering, nevertheless maintained a "sufficient nexus with the apartment as of the critical date to qualify as a tenant in occupancy entitled to participate on an equal basis” in the purchase of the apartment with the actual occupant of the apartment (supra, at 787). In fact, courts have agreed that the matter should not be dependent on whose name appears on the lease, but "should turn on a practical analysis of the relationship of the competing parties” (McSpadden v Dawson, supra, at 457). Since Ganson was still listed as a tenant of record of the apartment in June 1986, it is necessary to review her connections with the apartment as of that time to determine whether she had any right to join in the purchase of the apartment.

[611]*611By June 1986, it is agreed, Ganson had moved out of the apartment, and had not resided there for about two months. During this time she continued to pay 25%, rather than 50%, of the rent, making her payments, as always, directly to the landlord. In July 1986, Ganson found a roommate for Goldfader, one Susan Leonard, who therefore occupied the apartment pursuant to a written agreement with Ganson. The agreement recognized that no formal sublet had been authorized by the landlord, so that Leonard occupied the premises on a temporary basis, as a "roommate”. Leonard acknowledged in the agreement that she had no right to purchase the apartment if the building converted to cooperative ownership. Payment of the one half of the rent was thereafter made by Leonard to Ganson, who then paid the landlord, until April 1987, when Leonard commenced payment of a newly negotiated share of the rent directly to Goldfader. Ganson’s name was taken off of the utility accounts, and she informed the landlord and management that Leonard would "also” be residing in the apartment as "an additional person” on a temporary basis.

In order to solidify her continuing legal relationship with the apartment, Ganson insists that the agreement with Leonard amounted to a sublet of the apartment. A sublessor of a rent-stabilized apartment may retain his or her rights to purchase into the cooperative if the sublease provides for a reservation of an interest in some portion of the remaining term (McSpadden v Dawson, supra). Also, under the terms of the offering plan a bona fide tenant of record "shall be presumed to be a bona fide tenant-in-occupancy even though the tenant has sublet his or her dwelling unit or the dwelling unit is not the tenant’s primary residence.”

The agreement between Ganson and Leonard made in contravention of the procedure outlined in Real Property Law § 226-b (2) (b) is not a valid sublease. The communications between Ganson and the landlord and managing agent reveal no formal request to sublet, as is required, and, in fact, suggest that Leonard was to be accepted as a third occupant of the premises, rather than replacement for Ganson. This fact, however, does not necessarily injure Ganson’s case.

The focus of this court’s inquiry is on whether Ganson retained a sufficient connection to the apartment including the legal right to occupy, so as to qualify as a tenant in occupancy (Manolovici v 136 E. 64th St. Assocs., supra, at 787).

[612]*612In Manolovici (supra)

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Bluebook (online)
148 Misc. 2d 608, 561 N.Y.S.2d 366, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ganson-v-goldfader-nysupct-1990.