GOLDEN APPLE HOLDINGS, LLC VS. ESTATE OF CARIDAD PEREZ (LT-012202-19, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 22, 2020
DocketA-1533-19T3
StatusUnpublished

This text of GOLDEN APPLE HOLDINGS, LLC VS. ESTATE OF CARIDAD PEREZ (LT-012202-19, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) (GOLDEN APPLE HOLDINGS, LLC VS. ESTATE OF CARIDAD PEREZ (LT-012202-19, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GOLDEN APPLE HOLDINGS, LLC VS. ESTATE OF CARIDAD PEREZ (LT-012202-19, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), (N.J. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1533-19T3

GOLDEN APPLE HOLDINGS, LLC,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

ESTATE OF CARIDAD PEREZ,

Defendant,

and

MAGALY LYDECKER,

Defendant/Intervenor-Appellant. ________________________________

Argued telephonically April 30, 2020 – Decided June 22, 2020

Before Judges Fisher, Accurso and Gilson.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law Division, Hudson County, Docket No. LT-012202-19.

John V. Salierno argued the cause for appellant.

Alison C. Ingenito argued the cause for respondent. PER CURIAM

This appeal presents a question of whether an occupant of an apartment is

a functional tenant protected under the Anti-Eviction Act (the Act), N.J.S.A.

2A:18-61.1 to -61.12. The occupant, Magaly Lydecker, appeals from a

judgment of possession and a warrant of removal entered following a bench trial

during which the trial judge concluded that she was not a functional tenant. We

reverse and remand for a new trial before a new judge because the trial judge

made inadequate findings of fact and misapplied the governing law.

I.

We derive the facts from the record developed at a one-day bench trial

held in the Law Division, Special Civil Part, on December 3, 2019. In October

2019, the landlord, Golden Apple Holdings, LLC (the Landlord), filed a

summary dispossession action seeking to evict Lydecker and her adult son from

an apartment in a building in West New York.

Two witnesses testified at trial. The Landlord called the project manager

for the apartment building, and Lydecker testified concerning her residence in

the apartment.

A certificate of registration, which was admitted into evidence,

established that the Landlord purchased the building in February 2018. At that

A-1533-19T3 2 time the apartment at issue was already occupied and the project manager

explained that he became involved with the building in January 2019. The

Landlord submitted a February 1999 lease, which a prior landlord had signed

with Caridad Perez (the Lease). The Lease was month-to-month and it did not

have a provision addressing what happen if the tenant died.

The Landlord asserted that in January 2019, Lydecker informed it that her

mother, Perez, had died in June 2018. Thereafter, in January and February 2019,

the Landlord sent several notices to the apartment. The notices were addressed

to "The Estate of Caridad Perez and Unauthorized Occupants" and directed the

occupants to cease violating the Lease and to vacate the apartment.

The Landlord took the position that because Perez was no longer living in

the apartment, Lydecker and her son were unauthorized occupants of the

apartment and they were violating the Lease by occupying it without Perez. In

support of that position, the Landlord relied on paragraph 4 of the Lease, which

states:

USE OF PROPERTY. The Tenant may use the apartment only as a private residence and only the persons named below may reside in the Premises with Tenant: Daughter – Magaly Lydecker.

No other persons will be permitted to reside in the Premises without the Landlord's written consent. Any change in the persons who are residing at the

A-1533-19T3 3 premises must be reported to Landlord in writing immediately. Tenant is responsible for compliance with this agreement. If any person resides at the premises who is not authorized by Landlord to reside at the Premises, Landlord may cancel this Lease, and Tenant must vacate the Premises within five . . . days of cancellation.

The Landlord contended that the phrase "reside in the [p]remises with

[t]enant" meant that Lydecker and her son could only stay in the apartment with

Perez, and when Perez died they became unauthorized occupants. In addition,

the Landlord relied on paragraph 14 of the Lease, which states that the tenant

could not sublease the apartment without the Landlord's prior written consent.

The Landlord did not rely on any other provision of the Lease and did not

contend that the rent for the apartment had not been paid on a timely basis.

Lydecker testified that she had lived in the apartment since before 1999.

She explained that her son was born in 1995 and that they had lived in the

apartment continuously since his birth. She also explained that following her

mother's death in June 2018, she had paid the monthly rent for the apartment,

though counsel acknowledged that rent had not been paid for one month. She

went on to testify that each month from July 2018 she would send a money order

to the Landlord.

A-1533-19T3 4 The project manager testified that the Landlord does not retain physical

copies of checks or money orders. Instead, the Landlord keeps a record of

payments received in a computer database and the money orders are shredded

after they clear. That record, which was attached to the complaint, showed that

the rent for the apartment had been paid consistently through January 2019, at

which point the Landlord stopped cashing the money orders. The Landlord

produced copies of two money orders sent in December 2018 and January 2019.

Those copies, however, did not include a copy of the back.

During her testimony, Lydecker stated that she would sign the back of the

money orders and put her name on the front of the money orders. She

acknowledged that the copies produced by the Landlord did not show her name

on the front of the two money orders. In addition, the project manager testified

that the Landlord had filed an action for non-payment of rent against Lydecker

in June 2019, but that action had been dismissed.

Based on that testimony, the trial judge found that the controlling lease

was the February 1999 Lease signed by Perez. The judge then construed the

Lease to require Lydecker to vacate the apartment because Perez died. With

very little analysis, the judge concluded that Lydecker was not a functional

tenant. In that regard, the judge reasoned that there was no proof that the

A-1533-19T3 5 Landlord consciously accepted rent payments from Lydecker after Perez had

passed away.

On the record, the judge stated that she was granting a judgment of

possession to the Landlord. No judgment, however, was included in the record

submitted to us. Instead, the record only includes a warrant of removal ordering

Lydecker and her son to vacate the apartment by December 16, 2019. After

Lydecker appealed, we granted a stay of the judgment of possession and warrant

pending this appeal.

II.

On appeal, Lydecker makes five arguments. She contends: (1) the trial

court erred in admitting the Lease as a business record; (2) the trial court erred

by not joining Lydecker and her son as indispensable parties; (3) the notices to

cease and quit were defective; (4) the Landlord waived its right to evict

Lydecker by dismissing the action that was filed in June 2019 for non-payment

of rent and demanding rent in the October 2019 action; and (5) the trial court

erred in its analysis of whether Lydecker is a functional tenant.

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GOLDEN APPLE HOLDINGS, LLC VS. ESTATE OF CARIDAD PEREZ (LT-012202-19, HUDSON COUNTY AND STATEWIDE), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-apple-holdings-llc-vs-estate-of-caridad-perez-lt-012202-19-njsuperctappdiv-2020.