Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. v. Trussell

39 Misc. 2d 742, 241 N.Y.S.2d 985, 1963 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1829
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 Misc. 2d 742 (Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. v. Trussell) 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
Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. v. Trussell, 39 Misc. 2d 742, 241 N.Y.S.2d 985, 1963 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1829 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1963).

Opinion

James A. Roe, J.

This is a proceeding under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act to review and annul the determination of respondent, the Commissioner of Hospitals of the City of New York, refusing’ to renew petitioners’ annual license to conduct a private proprietary hospital and to compel him to issue such a license.

According to the petition and documents thereto annexed, petitioner Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as the Sanitarium) is a domestic stock corporation and the owner and operator of Kew Gardens General Hospital (hereinafter referred to as the Hospital), a private proprietary hospital which is located in Kew Gardens in this county. The Hospital has been in continuous operation since 1941 under an annual [744]*744license which has until recently been renewed without interruption.

By letter dated November 9, 1962, respondent notified petitioners that the license would not be renewed on February 15, 1963, unless the lease of the premises upon which the Hospital is being operated and the sublease of space within those premises were amended to eliminate the percentage rentals therein provided. Neither the lease nor the sublease has been so amended. A 90-day provisional license was issued by respondent on February 15,1963.

On December 20, 1940, the Sanitarium, as tenant, and Kew Gardens Corporation, as landlord, entered into a lease for a 21-year term commencing on January 1, 1941 with an option to renew for a further term of 15 years, the rental to be based upon stated percentages of graduated gross receipts with a minimum base rental. That lease was modified by a written agreement executed on August 21, 1961, between the Sanitarium, as tenant, and Kew Gardens'Enterprises, a limited partnership, as landlord. As modified, the lease was to expire on December 31, 1982, with an option to renew for an additional 15 years, such option to be exercised pursuant to the terms of the original lease, and also provided for the payment of rent based upon stated percentages of graduated gross receipts with a minimum base rental. The modified lease and the original lease contain the following identical provision: The term 1 gross receipts’ * * * shall not be deemed to include receipts from patients for the use of the telephone other than service charges made by the hospital (not to include toll charges); receipts from x-ray or x-ray therapy, other than actual receipts by the hospital for the use of the x-rays, x-ray therapy, physiotherapy and pathology departments; receipts from patients for services of special nurses employed by them and/or supplied by the hospital; receipts from patients to cover for services of doctors employed by them.”

Under a sublease which was executed on December 15, 1955, Doctors Fuhrman and Sumers, individually and as copartners, agreed to conduct, operate and maintain a radiology department at the Hospital at an annual rental of “ twenty-one and two-tenths percent (21.2%) of the annual gross receipts of [the] Radiology Department ”. That instrument also provided as follows: “ The words 1 gross receipts of the Radiology Department ’ * * * of which the Sanitarium is entitled to receive twenty-one and two-tenths percent (21.2%) thereof as rental for the leased space, is intended for all of the purposes of this [745]*745agreement to be, and shall be confined, solely to the said income derived from the Associated Hospital Service patients confined to the Kew Gardens Hospital, as aforesaid, all fees from private as well as compensation patients earned in the Radiology Department and to all other professional fees earned in said Radiology Department, and to none other. ’ ’ The original term of the sublease expired on December 26, 1961. The exercise by the Sanitarium of its option to renew the major lease ipso facto renewed the sublease for a like term.

The Sanitarium, continues the petition, is operating the Hospital in full compliance with section 35-b of the Social Welfare Law and the sole reason for respondent’s refusal to renew the license is the failure of the Sanitarium to amend the leases as requested. Such refusal by the respondent is then stated to be arbitrary and capricious, contrary to law and unconstitutional in that it is an attempt to impair the obligations of a contract and to deprive petitioners of their property without due process of law.

Respondent’s answer consists of general and specific denials and six affirmative defenses which are unnecessary to specify because the bases of respondent’s action and the questions raised is this proceeding are accurately reflected in the following two paragraphs from respondent’s memorandum of law:

The Commissioner of Hospitals determined that this participation by the landlord in the gross receipts of the hospital as well as the fees received by doctors for professional service rendered to patients was in violation of Section 35-b of the Social Welfare Law which limits the right to profit from the operation of a private proprietary hospital to physicians and Section 42 of the Hospital Code and Regulations which requires that only physicians duly licensed to practice medicine in the State of New York shall have a proprietary interest in the operation of the private proprietary hospital. The Commissioner of Hospitals also found that the participation by the landlord in the profits of the hospital rendered the landlord a partner in the operation of the hospital although it assumed none of the responsibilities imposed by statute upon a licensee. It is also clear that the landlord’s participation in the fees received by the doctors in the Radiology Department is highly improper if not unethical.

“ When the petitioner refused or failed to have its lease agreement revised so that the rent arrangement did not effectuate a participation in the profits of the hospital or in the professional fees received by doctors of the Radiology Department the Commissioner of Hospitals refused to renew the license for the [746]*746operation of the Kew Gardens General Hospital. From that denial the petitioners instituted the instant Article 78 Civil Practice Act Proceeding.”

In the supporting affidavit of Emanuel L. Sperber, a certified public accountant and a general partner in Kew Gardens Enterprises, the landlord, he states that the practice of percentage leasing has been established in the United States and other parts of the world for the past hundred years and is only a means of helping to establish a rental on a fair and equitable basis for the use of real property. He also states that the major lease has been assigned to a savings institution as additional security for a first mortgage loan which was made in order to build and finance an extension for the Hospital which has just been completed.

In his affidavit, petitioner Ziviello, the Sanitarium’s designee for the Hospital license, states that Kew Gardens General Hospital, with a bed capacity of 240, has been serving the County of Queens for the past 21 years. It is one of the foremost proprietary institutions in the City of New York and in 1956 became the first proprietary hospital in the County of Queens to be fully accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals. On April 10,1959, the State Department of Mental Hygiene approved the psychiatric service of the Hospital under section 202 of the Mental Hygiene Law, the only proprietary general hospital so approved by a State agency.

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Related

Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. v. Trussell
49 Misc. 2d 440 (New York Supreme Court, 1966)
Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. v. Trussell
20 A.D.2d 717 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1964)
Kew Gardens Sanitarium, Inc. v. Wyman
41 Misc. 2d 90 (New York Supreme Court, 1963)

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Bluebook (online)
39 Misc. 2d 742, 241 N.Y.S.2d 985, 1963 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kew-gardens-sanitarium-inc-v-trussell-nysupct-1963.