Grimmer v. . Tenement House Department

97 N.E. 884, 204 N.Y. 370, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 777
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 97 N.E. 884 (Grimmer v. . Tenement House Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grimmer v. . Tenement House Department, 97 N.E. 884, 204 N.Y. 370, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 777 (N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

The plaintiff is seeking to prevent the defendants from enforcing against his building the provisions of the Tenement House Act applicable to the city of New York. He urges that the latter is an apartment house or apartment hotel subject to the provisions of the Building Code and not a tenement house subject to the provisions of said first-mentioned act. If *374 his contention in this respect is wrong then concededly his building violates the law and this action cannot be maintained.

Thus we have presented the important and difficult question whether for purposes of supervision and regulation in the city of New York a class of modern residential buildings popularly and somewhat indefinitely known as apartment houses, and perhaps fairly typified by plaintiff’s building, may be and have been distinguished from the buildings covered by the much older term and designation of tenement houses. The importance of the question is found, if nowhere else, in the more detailed, rigorous and punitive nature of the provisions which by the Tenement House Act are made applicable to whatever buildings are to be classified as tenement houses. Its perplexity is evidenced somewhat at least by the circumstance that in this case in elaborate and most carefully considered opinions the learned referee and Appellate Division have reached diametrically opposing conclusions.

The disposition of the question whether plaintiff’s building is a tenement house involves an examination of legislation and legislative definitions.

So early as 1867 the necessity of compelling greedy and indifferent landlords, especially in New York city, to observe reasonable regulations of safety, health and decency for the benefit of tenants who were frequently too dependent or ignorant themselves to exact such conditions, led to the passage of “ An act for the regulation of tenement and lodging houses in the cities of New York and Brooklyn.” (Ohap. 908.)

Chapter 334 of the Laws of 1901, known as “An act in relation to tenement houses in the cities of the first class, ” extended and perfected theretofore existing enactments for the supervision of such tenement houses in the interest of public welfare. It substantially continued the definition of a tenement house as first employed in the act of *375 1867, providing (§ 2, subd. 1) : “A tenement house is any house or building, or portion thereof, which is rented, leased, let or hired out, to be occupied, or is occupied as the home or residence of three f amilies or more living independently of each other, and doing their cooking upon the premises, or by more than two families upon any floor, so living and cooking, but having a common right in the halls, stairways, yards, water closets or privies, or some of them.” Section 95 of said act further provided: “In every tenement house hereafter erected there shall be a separate water closet in a separate compartment within each apartment, provided that where there are apartments consisting of but one or two rooms, there shall be at least one water closet for every three rooms.”

Section 647 of the revised charter of the city of New York (Laws of 1897, chap. 378) authorized the municipal assembly of that city “to establish and from time to time to amend a code of ordinances, to be known as the ‘building code,’ providing for all matters concerning, affecting, or relating to the construction, alteration, or removal of buildings or structures erected or to be erected in the City of New York.” Pursuant to such power in 1899 the municipal assembly did adopt an ordinance known as the “ Building Code.”

In the meantime there had come into common existence and use in the city of New York what was widely and popularly known as the apartment house, intended like the tenement house to accommodate many unrelated tenants. It may be admitted that the older term tenement house in its broadest and most generic meaning as a dwelling or place of habitation would include this newer class of buildings, and that at times a very narrow margin or perhaps no margin at all would separate what was labeled an apartment house from one which was marked by the other designation. Nevertheless, dealing with types, both in popular conception and by judicial decision, the two classes of buildings were distinguished and differentiated. *376 Without going too much into detail it may be stated that the .typical modem apartment house was regarded as possessing more pretentious architectural finish, more expensive and elaborate construction and conveniences than were possessed by the average tenement house. And it may be added as a proper sequence to this view that naturally they would be inhabited by a class of tenants who would be more independent and better able to exact proper living conditions without the help of such drastic provisions as are found in the Tenement House Act. (Kitching v. Brown, 180 N. Y. 414.)

Influenced as it may be assumed by these views when the municipal-assembly framed the Building Code above provided for it left the supervision and regulation of apartment houses with the building department rather than the tenement house department, and to this end it gave a specific definition to such buildings which ran as follows: “ An apartment house shall be taken to mean and include every building which shall be intended or designated for, or used as, the home of three or more families or households, living independently of each other, and in which every such family or household shall have provided for it a kitchen, set bath tub and water closet, separate and apart from any other. Any such building hereafter erected shall not cover any greater percentage of a lot -than is lawful to be covered by a tenement' house, and the requirements for light and ventilation for a tenement house shall also apply to an apartment house.”

Considering simply the indispensable requisites in the definitions we perceive that an apartment house differs from a tenement house in three important particulars. Each family or household must have a separate water closet and set bath tub, the latter not being at all required in the tenement house and the former only in certain cases. It also must have a separate room or “kitchen,” presum-' ably fox preparing and cooking food, whereas in the case *377 of the tenement house these operations may he conducted in a room also used for sleeping, living or any other purpose.

These seem to he distinguishing features of substance. The description of plaintiff’s building shows how far the apartment house is liable to be developed beyond the essential requirements specified in this definition.

Chapter 466 of the Laws of 1901 (Section 407) provided: “ The building code which shall be in force in the city of Hew York on the first day of January, 1902, and all then existing provisions of law fixing the penalties for violation of said Code, and all then existing laws affecting or relating to the construction * * * of buildings * * * within the city of Hew York are hereby declared to be binding and in force * * * except,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
97 N.E. 884, 204 N.Y. 370, 1912 N.Y. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimmer-v-tenement-house-department-ny-1912.