Jemrock Realty Co. v. Krugman

64 A.D.3d 290, 880 N.Y.S.2d 233
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 19, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 A.D.3d 290 (Jemrock Realty Co. v. Krugman) 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.

Bluebook
Jemrock Realty Co. v. Krugman, 64 A.D.3d 290, 880 N.Y.S.2d 233 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

McGuire, J.

Jemrock Realty Co. LLC (landlord) owns an apartment building at 210 West 101st Street in Manhattan. On January 31, 2004, a long-time, rent-regulated tenant vacated apartment 16E of the building. Landlord, through its managing agent, retained a contractor to perform work in the apartment to prepare it for a new tenant. According to the managing agent’s director of leasing, Higgins, who supervised all repairs in the building, the apartment was in “pretty bad condition” after the long-time tenant vacated it, and she prepared an extensive punch list delineating the work that she wanted the contractor to perform. The punch list specified the following work:

• “very heavy wall prep” throughout the apartment

• plastering and painting of the entire apartment

• refinishing of all hardwood floors in the apartment

• replacing all wall and baseboard moldings, closet fittings, electrical outlets and switches, and lighting fixtures in the apartment

• installing new door frames, radiator covers, and air conditioner outlets throughout the apartment, and a circuit breaker panel

[292]*292• rewiring of the entire apartment

• replumbing of the entire apartment

• removing all rubbish and debris from the apartment

• installing ceramic tile flooring, counter tops, drop ceiling, a sink, and new appliances (stove, refrigerator, microwave and dishwasher) in the kitchen

• removing and replacing all kitchen cabinets

• repairing kitchen underflooring

• removing and replacing all floor and wall tiles in both of the apartment’s bathrooms

• installing a new sink and toilet in both bathrooms

• replacing all of the shower and sink fixtures (e.g., shower heads, shower rods, towel bars)

The purchase order accompanying the punch list provided a budget for the work of $50,000. By a “check request/installment payment requisition” form, dated February 4, 2004, the managing agent paid the contractor a “deposit on renovation apt 16E” of $20,000; the form noted the “contract price” of the work was $50,000. Landlord paid the contractor the $30,000 balance in three $10,000 installments with the last payment coming on March 23, 2004.1 Each of the payments was made by check to the contractor from landlord.

After it received the initial $20,000 payment but before it received the first $10,000 installment, the contractor sent landlord an invoice detailing the work it would perform in the apartment. The work listed in the invoice essentially matched the work listed in the punch list. The invoice indicated that the work would be performed for $50,000 and that landlord had already paid $20,000. Between the beginning of February and the end of March 2004, the contractor renovated the apartment, performing the work called for in the punch list (and its invoice) and additional other work that was required in the course of [293]*293the project. The contractor sent the managing agent invoices for the additional work, which were paid by landlord.

Landlord and respondent Jay Krugman (tenant) entered into a lease for apartment 16E that commenced on April 1, 2004. Attached to the lease was a certification calculating the rent based on increases permitted by the Rent Stabilization Law—a vacancy increase, an increase for each year of the prior tenant’s occupancy and an increase for the renovations the contractor performed (see Rent Stabilization Code [9 NYCRR] § 2522.4 [a]). The monthly rent for the apartment, which was $920.12 for the former, long-time tenant, was listed as $3,600. Because the monthly rent exceeded $2,000, the apartment was no longer subject to regulation under the Rent Stabilization Law (see Rent Stabilization Law [Administrative Code of City of NY] § 26-504.2).

In October 2005 landlord commenced an action in Civil Court seeking rent arrears and possession of the apartment based on tenant’s failure to pay rent. Tenant answered the action, asserting that the rent was illegal under the Rent Stabilization Law because the renovations made by landlord did not qualify as “improvements” that would support a rent increase, and that landlord breached the warranty of habitability. Tenant claimed that he was entitled to a rent abatement for the breach of the warranty of habitability and treble damages for a willful rent overcharge.

At a nonjury trial, Higgins and an employee of the contractor testified, and the punch list, invoices and cancelled checks from landlord to the contractor were admitted into evidence. Civil Court concluded that while 9 NYCRR 2522.4 (a) authorizes a rent increase of one fortieth of the cost of certain improvements that a landlord makes to an apartment, landlord failed to establish that it was entitled to that increase. Although “improvements” to the apartment, which are considered in calculating the amount, if any, of a rent increase, had been made, the contractor also performed repair work, which is not. Because landlord failed to offer evidence distinguishing costs incurred in making improvements from costs incurred in performing repair work, the court stated that it could not determine how much money landlord had spent on improvements. Accordingly, although the court found that the contractor had performed the work listed on the punch list and that these renovations were “extensive” and “substantial,” the court ruled that landlord was not entitled to any rent increase based on improvements. [294]*294Subtracting from tenant’s rent the portion founded on the improvements, the court determined that the rent fell below $2,000 and the unit thus was subject to the Rent Stabilization Law.2 The court rejected tenant’s claim for treble damages based on the rent overcharge, finding that the overcharge was not willful, but found that tenant was entitled to an abatement of 15% of the rent between June 2004 and September 2005 because landlord breached the warranty of habitability by permitting a persistent leak to occur in a bedroom. Adding the rent overcharged ($42,339.60) and the rent abatement ($2,994.40) and subtracting the rent arrears ($7,486.08), Civil Court entered a judgment in favor of tenant in the amount of $37,847.92.

Tenant appealed to Appellate Term from the judgment to the extent it denied his claim for treble damages, and landlord cross-appealed to the extent the judgment determined that landlord was not entitled to a rent increase for improvements and that it breached the warranty of habitability. The Appellate Term, over a dissent, modified the judgment,3 determining both that landlord was entitled to a rent increase for improvements and that, as a result of that increase, the monthly rent exceeded $2,000; Appellate Term remanded the matter to Civil Court for a determination of the rent arrears due to landlord. The court wrote, in pertinent part, that

“[ljandlord established the amount spent on the apartment renovations here involved through the submission of the specification sheet, i.e. a punch list of the renovations needed in the apartment, a contractor’s invoice, cancelled checks tendered contemporaneously with the work, and the contractor’s trial testimony indicating that all the work delineated in the invoice was completed and paid in full.

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Jemrock Realty Co. v. Krugman
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A.D.3d 290, 880 N.Y.S.2d 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jemrock-realty-co-v-krugman-nyappdiv-2009.