Hispanic AIDS Forum v. Bruno

16 Misc. 3d 960, 2007 NY Slip Op 27284, 238 N.Y.L.J. 28, 839 N.Y.S.2d 691, 2007 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4843
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 2007
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Misc. 3d 960 (Hispanic AIDS Forum v. Bruno) 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
Hispanic AIDS Forum v. Bruno, 16 Misc. 3d 960, 2007 NY Slip Op 27284, 238 N.Y.L.J. 28, 839 N.Y.S.2d 691, 2007 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4843 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Doris Ling-Cohan, J.

History of the Case

This action, which was commenced in 2001, arose from defendants’ refusal to renew plaintiff’s commercial lease to suite 306, on the third floor of the Bruson Building, an office building that defendants own, located at 74-09 37th Avenue, in Jackson Heights, Queens. Plaintiff Hispanic AIDS Forum is a nonprofit organization whose treatment and education services seek to reduce HIV transmission and secure necessary support services for Latinos in New York City who are affected by HFV/ AIDS. Plaintiff alleges that defendants’ refusal was based on the presence in the building of, and the use of a third-floor rest room by, those of plaintiffs clients who are transgender.

By decision and order, dated October 8, 2003, Justice Shafer granted in part, and denied in part, defendants’ motion to dismiss the first amended complaint. Justice Shafer held that, at all relevant times, the New York State and New York City Human Rights Laws, Executive Law § 290 et seq. and title 8 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York, respectively, barred discrimination against transgender persons and protected plaintiff from discrimination because of plaintiffs association with transgender persons; accordingly, plaintiff’s first and second causes of action, which alleged discrimination on the basis of sex and gender, were not dismissed. The October 8, 2003 order by Justice Shafer dismissed plaintiff’s third and fourth causes of action, which alleged discrimination because of disability, on the ground that plaintiff had failed to specify the disability that its transgender clients suffer.

Defendants appealed the October 8, 2003 order. By decision, dated March 29, 2005, the Appellate Division, First Department, reversed Justice Shafer’s order as to plaintiffs first two causes of action, and dismissed the complaint. (Hispanic AIDS Forum v Estate of Bruno, 16 AD3d 294 [1st Dept 2005].) The Appellate Division did not disturb Justice Shafer’s holdings as to the reach of the Human Rights Laws (holdings that are the law of the case here), but it found that plaintiff had failed to al[962]*962lege any discriminatory treatment, inasmuch as “the only discernible claim set forth in the complaint is that plaintiffs transgender clients were prohibited from using the restrooms not in conformance with their biological sex, as were all tenants.” (Id. at 299.) Adopting the reasoning of the Minnesota Supreme Court’s decision in Goins v West Group (635 NW2d 717 [Minn 2001]), the Court held that such a prohibition does not constitute discrimination. However, the Court also found that “plaintiff makes vague allusions to a connection between defendants’ refusal to renew the lease and plaintiffs refusal to prohibit its transgender clients from using the building’s common areas, including the main entrance.” (Hispanic AIDS Forum, 16 AD3d at 299.) Accordingly, the Court granted plaintiff leave to replead “if plaintiff chooses to pursue those assertions with an adequate degree of specificity” (id.). Plaintiff served, but then withdrew, a second amended complaint. Plaintiff then served a third amended complaint, which defendants now move to dismiss, pursuant to CPLR 3211 (a) (3), (5) and (7).

The Third Amended Complaint

The third amended complaint alleges the following. In March 1991, plaintiff entered into a two-year lease, subsequently renewed, for space in the building. By 1995, plaintiff determined that it needed additional office space. Accordingly, in March and December 1995, plaintiff and defendants negotiated and entered into leases for, respectively, suite 306 and suite 305, on the third floor of the building. In March 2000, the parties negotiated a new five-year lease for suite 306 and agreed that plaintiff would vacate suite 305 by July 31, 2000. Shortly thereafter, however, other tenants on the third floor of the building began to complain to defendants’ office manager that men, who were dressed as women, were using the women’s rest room on the third floor. In late May, defendants’ office manager, nonparty Dorothy Novotny, told plaintiffs executive director, Heriberto Sanchez Soto, that defendants would not sign the lease, because of the complaints about “those people using the bathrooms,” and that Sanchez Soto needed to speak with defendants’ property manager, nonparty Jeff Henry. When Sanchez Soto called Henry, the latter stated that “those people who think that they are women . . . cannot use the bathrooms. We need to agree that they do not use the bathrooms if you’re going to get the lease” (third amended complaint 11 40, amended notice of motion, exhibit A). Henry subsequently told plaintiffs attorney, [963]*963Leon Quintero, that plaintiff could not allow its transgender clients (all of whom appear to have been biological males transitioning to women) to use the women’s rest room; that the rest rooms in the building were to be used only by plaintiff and its employees; that plaintiffs clientele was undesirable and bad for the image of the building; and that defendants could not have them in the building. In a subsequent conversation with Quintero, Novotny reiterated that only plaintiffs staff and employees were to use the rest rooms in the building. Plaintiff rejected that condition, both because its clients needed to be able to use a rest room when they were in the building, and because the customers and clients of other tenants in the building were not barred from using the rest rooms. Defendants thereupon commenced an eviction proceeding in the New York City Housing Court, which was settled by a stipulation. The complaint also asserts that plaintiffs transgender clients suffer from gender identity disorder1 and that plaintiff learned that there are a number of single-user bathrooms in the building which its transgender clients could have used.

The complaint alleges the following six causes of action: (1) defendants’ refusal to renew plaintiffs lease on the ground that plaintiff refused to bar its transgender clients from using all rest rooms in the building, defendants’ requirement that plaintiff, but no other tenant in the building, restrict use of the rest rooms to its staff and employees, and defendants’ design to exclude plaintiff’s transgender clients from the building altogether constituted discrimination because of “sex and/or gender,” in violation of the New York State Human Rights Law (Executive Law § 290 et seq.); (2) these same acts, undertaken with malice, constituted discrimination because of sex, in violation of Administrative Code of the City of New York § 8-107 (4) (a); (5) (b) and § 8-502; (3) these same acts constituted discrimination because of disability in violation of the New York State Human Rights Law; and (4) Administrative Code of the City of NY § 8-107. Plaintiffs fifth and sixth causes of action also allege discrimination on the basis of disability, and a refusal to discuss a reasonable accommodation thereto, in violation of, respectively, the New York State Human Rights Law and Administrative Code of the City of NY § 8-107. These claims, however, unlike those alleged in the third and fourth causes of action, are based on plaintiffs allegation that the standard of [964]

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16 Misc. 3d 960, 2007 NY Slip Op 27284, 238 N.Y.L.J. 28, 839 N.Y.S.2d 691, 2007 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hispanic-aids-forum-v-bruno-nysupct-2007.