Hirsch v. Weiner

116 Misc. 312
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 116 Misc. 312 (Hirsch v. Weiner) 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
Hirsch v. Weiner, 116 Misc. 312 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Kelby, J.

Thirty-four actions were brought against as many tenants living in premises 2104 and 2114 Catón avenue, in the borough of Brooklyn, city of New York. All of these actions were tried together as one, and separate judgments rendered. Each of the actions was brought to recover five months’ rent, viz., for the months of October, November and December, 1920, and January and February, 1921. The amount of rent reserved in written leases, executed by the several parties herein, is claimed to be the reasonable rental value of the several apartments.

In the particular action tried, the one arising under the tenancy of Morris Weiner, it appeared that a written lease was executed by the landlords and Weiner on July 20, 1920, for one year from October 1, 1920, to September 30, 1921. The majority of the other written leases with the other tenants were executed for the same term in the month of August, 1920, [314]*314All of them therefore were executed prior to the housing hills passed at the special legislative session of September, 1920, and which became law September 27, 1920.

The answer of the tenant in the case at bar. simply sets up the affirmative defense under the statute that the amount of rent sued for was unjust and unreasonable, and that the agreement under which the same was sought to be recovered is oppressive.” The answer also sets up as a separate defense “ that the premises were unfit for the purposes for which demised.” No mention of this latter so-called defense appears elsewhere iñ the record, and no attention will be accorded to it in this court.

At the opening of the trial it was stipulated that the rent of the tenant’s apartment had been increased over the rent as it existed one year prior to the agreement under which rent is now sought to be recovered.

The plaintiffs then undertook the burden under chapter 944, Laws of 1920, of showing that the amount of rent sued for was reasonable. The plaintiffs offered and the trial judge admitted opinion evidence of real estate experts as to the present market and rental value of the premises. And the plaintiffs further undertook to prove their operating expenses of the premises during the past year as shown by the bill of particulars.

What is a reasonable rent? And what factors are to be considered in determining the reasonableness of rent? Questions of law arise under the new statutes which many of the trial justices decide in different ways. Some trial justices allow income on actual money invested only; some on the landlord’s equity; some say that they never make allowances for depreciation; others that they never allow legal expenses; ordinary repairs are spread over a period of years [315]*315by some justices, while others add repairs to capital account.

The statutes could easily have been made more definite and certain, but we have to deal with them as they are, and endeavor to lay down some general principles by which they should be interpreted. The facts in the present case will aid in elucidating a general rule.

It appears that the present landlords purchased the property in February, 1920, for ‘the sum of $196,000 and that the total gross rental at the time of purchase was $27,000. The assessed valuation for 1920 was $192,000. The property was assessed for the year 1921 at $245,000, but it appears this assessment has been reduced to $215,000. The value of the lots it appears is $25,000.

The premises 2104 Catón avenue contains sixteen apartments and seventy rooms and has upon it a first mortgage of $36,000 at five and one-half per cent, and a second mortgage of $27,750 at six per cent. The premises 2114 Catón avenue contains twenty-three apartments and one hundred and eight rooms and has a first mortgage of $52,500 at six per cent, and a second mortgage of $36,000 at six per cent. Plaintiffs claim an estimated charge for renewing mortgages of $1,000. Taxes for the year were $4,876.80. Water rates $456.86. Yearly insurance $380.48. Janitor’s services $1,375. Coal bill $4,888.80. Gas and electric bills $236.12. The yearly repairs claimed by the landlords and supported by proof were $4,423.31. A claim of $1,725.45 for services in collecting rents and for supervising the property was also made, the rents being collected in this case by the husband of one of the owners. There was also a claim for loss of rents of $292.25, which is not supported by the proof.

The evidence supports a finding that the fair market [316]*316value of the premises at the time of the commencement of the action was $215,000 and the value of the land $25,000, leaving the value of the buildings $190,000.

It is the appellant’s contention that the landlords are entitled to a fair return only on the amount of cash actually paid as part consideration for the premises, viz: $49,750, and not upon the fair market value of the premises prevailing at the time for which rent is sought to be recovered, nor even upon the full consideration of $196,000. This contention is clearly unsound. The amount of cash paid by an owner when purchasing cannot help to determine the amount he should have as his net rental. If this were so, an owner whose property came to him by will or gift in any form would not be entitled to any net return and could charge as rent only enough to pay the expenses. And under such a rule an owner whose property was free and clear, though he may have borrowed from his bank or elsewhere every dollar he paid for it, would be entitled to, and would obtain, a larger net return than if he had mortgaged the property for a part or the whole of its cost. If a house were purchased for $10,000 and the purchaser paid $1,000 in cash and gave back a purchase money mortgage for $9,000, he is still obligated to pay the $9,000. If appellant’s theory were correct the buyer would only be entitled to as net income for rent, a fair percentage, say at most ten per cent on the $1,000, or $100 a year, as net rent for a $10,000 property.

We think it matters not, in determining the reasonableness of a rent charge, whether the property is mortgaged. Its rental value is in no way affected thereby. This is the recognized rule. People ex rel. Fitchburgh R. Co. v. Haren, 19 N. Y. St. Repr. 818; 3 N. Y. Supp. 86. If this were not the rule, there would [317]*317be discrimination, and the reasonable rental of one property would be larger than that of another though the properties and their operating expenses were identical.. Take this as an illustration: Two houses exactly alike and adjoining each other, both free and clear and under same ownership and with the same amount of. operating expense; each should yield the same return and there should be no difference in their rental value; but if the owner placed a mortgage on one of the houses the rental value of that one would be lessened, while the rental value of the other one would remain as it had been. This would be the. result if the fair and reasonable net rents allowable were in excess of six per cent or of the rate of interest carried by the mortgage.

And the higher the rate of interest paid on the mortgage the greater would be the amount of the reasonable rent charge. This may be demonstrated: Assume property worth $5,000 free and clear, reasonable net return ten per cent, or $500; operating expense $500; the reasonable gross rentals, upon this hypothesis, would be $1,000 — the total of the expenses and the reasonable net return.

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Bluebook (online)
116 Misc. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hirsch-v-weiner-nysupct-1921.