JDM Washington Street, LLC v. 90 Washington Rest. Associates, LLC

36 Misc. 3d 769
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJune 11, 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 36 Misc. 3d 769 (JDM Washington Street, LLC v. 90 Washington Rest. Associates, LLC) 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
JDM Washington Street, LLC v. 90 Washington Rest. Associates, LLC, 36 Misc. 3d 769 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Peter H. Moulton, J.

After presenting its prima facie case in this commercial nonpayment proceeding petitioner moved to conform its pleading to the proof adduced at trial and then rested. The primary purpose of the motion to conform was to seek rent that has accrued since service of the predicate notice.

Respondent opposed the motion to conform and moved to dismiss the petition. The parties submitted letter briefs on these issues. The court now grants respondent’s motion to dismiss on the basis of the defective rent demand.

A. Amendment of the Petition

Respondent first argues that petitioner must make an updated demand for any rent and additional rent that has accrued since the predicate notice before it can seek to amend the petition at trial. According to respondent, petitioner is limited to a claim for the rent sought in the predicate notice because petitioner never demanded any additional rent while this proceeding was pending.

Respondent relies on 1587 Broadway Rest. Corp. v Magic Pyramid (NYLJ, Dec. 19, 1979, at 10, col 2 [App Term, First Dept]) and subsequent decisions that have invoked that case.

[771]*771In 1587 Broadway, a commercial nonpayment proceeding, the trial court denied the petitioner’s motion to amend the petition to include rent that accrued after service of the predicate notice. The court held:

“The Court below did not improperly deny landlord’s application to amend its petition to include a claim for September and October rent, insofar as the record does not establish the requisite demand by the landlord for such additional rent. The landlord is, however, granted leave to renew its motion to so amend the petition at the time of trial, upon a proper showing of demand for the September and October rent.”

1587 Broadway concerned a pretrial motion to dismiss, and has been invoked by at least two courts that have denied similar pretrial motions to amend the petition. In Walsam Fifth Ave. Dev. Co. v Lions Gate Capital Corp. (163 Misc 2d 1071, 1074 [1995]) the Civil Court denied the petitioner’s pretrial motion to amend the petition “without prejudice to renewal upon proper papers or at trial.” The court reached the same conclusion in denying a motion to amend in 501 Seventh Ave. Assoc. v 501 Seventh Ave. Bake Corp. (2002 NY Slip Op 50362[U] [2002]). Both lower courts noted the Appellate Term’s requirement in 1587 Broadway that “a petitioner is entitled to amend its petition to include rents that have accrued subsequent to service of the original petition only if the request is predicated upon an additional demand for the subsequently accruing rent.” {Id. at *6.)

The court in RCPI Landmark v Chasm Lake Mgt. Servs., LLC (32 Misc 3d 405 [2011]) was faced with a slightly different issue. There the court granted respondent’s motion to dismiss because the original petition sought more rent than was sought in the predicate notice. The predicate notice sought all rent due through January 2011. The petition added February 2011 rent. The court dismissed the petition on that ground, relying on 1587 Broadway and the other cases cited above. Again the court found that the Appellate Term “made clear that an additional [rent] demand is necessary in order to amend the petition to include rent accrued since the original demand was made.” {Id. at 408.)

None of the decisions discussed above concern a motion to conform the pleadings to the evidence at trial. Indeed, the court in RCPI assumes that a motion made at the time of trial would [772]*772be on different footing. (RCPI at 407.) The only case cited by respondent in support of its instant motion to dismiss is the unpublished decision in Brown v Tribro Assoc. LLC (Civ Ct, NY County, Jan. 27, 2012, index No. 80081/11). That court severed, without prejudice, any claim for rent sought post predicate demand. The money judgment in that case was for the amount sought in the predicate demand and petition. Again, the only appellate authority cited by the court was 1587 Broadway.

The result in Brown, and the dicta in the other cases discussed above, is understandable given the expansive language quoted above from 1587 Broadway. That decision appears to provide that an updated rent demand is a necessary predicate before a petitioner may amend a petition to seek rent that has accrued since the date of the original predicate notice. The Appellate Term did not limit its holding to the procedural frame before it, a pretrial motion. Instead it held that “[t]he landlord is . . . granted leave to renew its motion to so amend the petition at the time of trial, upon a proper showing of demand for the September and October rent,” i.e., rent that had accrued since the predicate demand.

This portion of the holding in 1587 Broadway is contrary to common practice in the Civil Court. In this court’s experience a landlord never submits an additional rent demand in a commercial nonpayment proceeding. Instead, the landlord moves to amend the petition at the time of trial to reflect the inevitable accrual of rent that results from the passage of time. A predicate notice is a snapshot of the rent due on a given day.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Misc. 3d 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jdm-washington-street-llc-v-90-washington-rest-associates-llc-nycivct-2012.