In re Morataya

53 Misc. 3d 242, 37 N.Y.S.3d 375
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJuly 13, 2016
StatusPublished

This text of 53 Misc. 3d 242 (In re Morataya) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court of the City of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Morataya, 53 Misc. 3d 242, 37 N.Y.S.3d 375 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Susan F. Avery, J.

Brief Background

Petitioners commenced this proceeding seeking the appointment of a Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law article 7-A administrator1 which was granted by the court.

The Landlords’ Current Motion

The owners of the subject property, Mr. Abdus Shahid and Ms. Halima Ansari, currently move to vacate this court’s March 13, 2016 order2 “pursuant to CPLR § 2221 (a)” based upon alleged evidence of fraud (a claimed conspiracy at the hands of the tenants’ attorney) and also based upon a stated plan to responsibly manage the property (presumably a new fact, not previously available).3

The Order from Which Movants Seek Renewal

Movants are the owners of 284 Cooper Street, Brooklyn, New York 11237, which are the premises that are the subject of this action. Movants previously requested that this court remove the 7-A administrator, and reinstate movants to managerial authority of the property. By a decision/order dated March 13, 2016, this court denied a prior motion seeking the same relief, as herein requested. The court stated in its March 13, 2016 order that movants’ moving papers failed to demonstrate that the owners have the financial resources to maintain the [244]*244premises in compliance with applicable legal requirements. Additionally, the court’s March 13, 2016 decision stated that the owners’ moving papers failed to “detail a plan for future proper and responsible maintenance of the premises.” In denying the owners’ prior motion, the court wrote “the motion is denied without prejudice to renew on proper papers.”

Administrator’s Opposition

Counsel for the article 7-A administrator opposes the motion. Counsel argues that the current application is the movants’ twelfth motion seeking to discharge the 7-A administrator, and fails to submit new or additional facts which were not submitted in the movants’ 11 prior applications seeking the same relief. Therefore, counsel argues that there is no basis upon which renewal can be granted, or the March 13, 2016 order vacated.

Motion Practice Generally

CPLR 2214 (a) requires that a “notice of motion shall specify the time and place of the hearing on the motion, the supporting papers upon which the motion is based, the relief demanded and the grounds therefor.” Although the notice of motion misidentifies the date of the decision that the movants seek to vacate and offers no basis to grant “renewal,” “[t]he court may grant relief that is warranted pursuant to a general prayer contained in the notice of motion, if the relief granted is not too dramatically unlike the relief sought, the proof offered supports it, and there is no prejudice to any party.”4 Additionally, “where the wrong ground is designated but other . . . grounds do apply, the court may treat the motion as having specified the right ground and grant relief, absent prejudice.”5 Accordingly, this court will deem the motion to be an application to remove the 7-A administrator and place the movants back in managerial authority of the property.

Movants’ Arguments Based upon Fraud

The movants assert two different allegations of fraud. One fraud allegation asserted is that, as a result of a conspiracy at the hands of the complaining tenants’ attorney, the movants [245]*245(as the owners) were forced to appear as self represented litigants during the trial, and therefore the owners “lost.”6 The other allegation of fraud asserted by the moving parties is that the 7-A administrator is acting unlawfully because there are only five minor conditions that need repair and the movants state that they can complete repair work of those conditions in one week at a cost of only $1,000.7

Movants’ allegation that, because of a conspiracy against them (a fraud), they had to appear as self represented litigants at trial, which caused them to lose the case, is not properly before the court. Following the trial, which resulted in the appointment of a 7-A administrator, movants commenced 11 prior motions seeking to substitute the administrator, and restore them to management responsibility of the property, and, as a result, that issue has been previously raised and finally determined and it cannot form the basis of this court granting the relief herein requested.8

Additionally, the movants’ contention that there are very few (and only minor) conditions in need of repair, which they can have repaired in a week, does not form the basis to conclude that there is fraud on behalf of the 7-A administrator, or that movants will be responsible managers of the premises.

Movants’ Plan to Remove the “Few” Remaining “Minor Violations”

Financial Stability: “Money in the Bank”

In support of their application, the movants assert that they are financially sound, and have the resources to responsibly maintain the premises. Indeed, annexed to the motion as exhibit 2 are photocopies of two documents claiming to be Citibank, Citigold bank account statements. The first document bears the names of Mr. Abdus Shahid and Ms. Halima Ansari as the account holders. The document states that it is for the period of February 1, 2016 through February 29, 2016. The documents annexed as movant’s exhibit 2 will not be considered by the court for the following reasons: (1) there is nothing in the supporting affidavit to authenticate the docu[246]*246ments;9 (2) the date noted on the face of each document shows that each document was available at the time the movants commenced the motion which resulted in this court’s March 13, 2016 decision;10 and (3) the face of each document states that the document is “1 of 4” pages, and only “page 1” of each document was annexed to the moving papers, therefore each “statement” was an incomplete document.11

Based upon the foregoing, the movants have failed to sufficiently demonstrate that they are financially stable to responsibly maintain the premises.

Financial Independence

The Building is Running at a Significant Profit

The movants argue that the “['t]otal rental income per month is $7,700 [and the t]otal rental income per year is $92,400.00.”12 The movants offset the $92,400 yearly income generated from rent collection with the $30,900 yearly costs of running the building, which they calculated as follows: yearly real estate taxes ($6,543.12), yearly water costs ($5,486.56), yearly cost of gas ($5,700), yearly electricity costs ($1,200) and yearly maintenance costs of ($12,000).13

It is movants’ conclusion that calculating the above cited numbers, the building generates “$61,500.00 profit per year.”14 This court notes that the movants failed to submit any documentary evidence to support that the building is operating at $61,500 per year profit. Indeed, a review of the “7A Monthly [247]*247Filing Report” submitted by Mr. Nicolaos Leonardos, the appointed 7-A administrator, demonstrates that during the month of February 201615 the movants’ position is incorrect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 Misc. 3d 242, 37 N.Y.S.3d 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-morataya-nycivct-2016.