Gunder v. 164 East Seventy-second Street Corp.

246 A.D. 139, 283 N.Y.S. 681, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8687

This text of 246 A.D. 139 (Gunder v. 164 East Seventy-second Street Corp.) 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.

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Gunder v. 164 East Seventy-second Street Corp., 246 A.D. 139, 283 N.Y.S. 681, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8687 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The defendant owns and operates a co-operative apartment house. Plaintiff in 1925 purchased certain shares of stock in the defendant corporation and at the same time entered into a lease of an apartment in said building. In 1926 a new lease was made, at a rental of one dollar a year, payable in advance, plus the lessee’s proportion of the taxes and other current expenses, payable as and when fixed by the board of directors of the defendant. In May, 1932, plaintiff was in arrears $1,558.41 under said lease, and defendant commenced summary proceedings to dispossess plaintiff and for judgment for said arrears as unpaid rent. Plaintiff answered in said proceeding, alleging that the rent fixed by the lease was one dollar a year, which had been paid, and that the other payments provided for in the lease for maintenance and operating expenses, were contributions to be made in her capacity as stockholder-owner, and that for failure to pay the same the summary proceeding would not he. A final order was entered in said proceeding for the removal of plaintiff from the premises, but because of defect in the landlord’s papers, judgment for the rent was disallowed. Said final order was affirmed by the Appellate Term and leave to appeal to thffi court was denied.

Subsequently, plaintiff commenced this action for reformation of the lease, for an accounting, and for an injunction restraining issuance of the dispossess warrant. Upon plaintiff’s furnishing an undertaking in an amount fixed by the court, an injunction pendente lite was issued. In the proceedings subsequently had in the action, including an appeal to this court from an order striking out the cause of action for an accounting as insufficient, which was affirmed (242 App. Div. 602), plaintiff has filed additional undertakings for the payment of any damages suffered by defendant by reason of a continuance of the injunction. In October, 1935, the action was tried, resulting in a judgment entered October 21, 1935, dismissing the complaint and vacating the injunction pendente lite. Up to the time of the trial, plaintiff had posted security in the sum of $9,250 for arrears of rent accrued during the course of the litigation.

[141]*141Having appealed from said judgment, plaintiff moved in this court on November 1, 1935, for a stay of execution pending the appeal upon furnishing security in such amount as the court might deem sufficient. By order entered November 8, 1935, said motion was granted on condition that appellant file a surety company bond in the sum of $6,500, in addition to the security heretofore furnished, conditioned to pay all costs and damages to which defendant may be entitled by reason of the judgment appealed from in the event that said judgment or any part thereof is affirmed or the appeal dismissed. Said order, if the condition were complied with, would prevent the vacating of the injunction pendente lite until the determination of the appeal. Plaintiff has not comphed with said condition and, consequently, no stay by virtue of said order is in force. The present motion, therefore, though in form one to continue a stay of the operation of the judgment, is actually a new motion for a stay.

The ground upon which this application is made is that on October 31, 1935, plaintiff presented in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division, her petition to be afforded an opportunity to effect a composition or an extension of time to pay her debts, under section 74 of the Bankruptcy Act

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246 A.D. 139, 283 N.Y.S. 681, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunder-v-164-east-seventy-second-street-corp-nyappdiv-1935.