Kogan v. Popolizio

141 A.D.2d 339, 529 N.Y.S.2d 755, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6434

This text of 141 A.D.2d 339 (Kogan v. Popolizio) 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
Kogan v. Popolizio, 141 A.D.2d 339, 529 N.Y.S.2d 755, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6434 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Leave to appeal from the order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Jerome Hornblass, J.), entered on August 19, 1987, is unanimously granted.

Order of the Supreme Court, New York County (Jerome Hornblass, J.), entered on August 19, 1987, which granted the petition pursuant to CPLR article 78, directed respondent New York City Housing Authority to reinstate petitioner’s benefits retroactive to August of 1986 in the amount of $261 [340]*340per month to be paid to her landlord, continued the matter pending an administrative hearing and directed that, in the event respondent should reject petitioner’s claim, she be provided with written reasons therefor, is modified on the law and the petition granted only to the extent of directing that respondent provide petitioner with an administrative hearing in connection with this matter, vacating the direction that respondent reinstate petitioner’s benefits, and otherwise affirmed, without costs or disbursements.

Petitioner-respondent Maria Kogan is a 72-year-old widow who, beginning in February of 1985, received benefits pursuant to the Section 8 Housing Assistance Payments Program (24 CFR part 882), a Federally funded, State-administered plan for providing subsidies to low-income tenants. Under this program, recipients are required to pay their landlords a portion of their monthly rent, and respondent-appellant Housing Authority pays the remainder directly to their landlords. In that regard, petitioner was responsible for remitting $112 per month for apartment 4B at 1401 Ocean Avenue in Brooklyn, while respondent New York City Housing Authority made subsidy payments of $260.75 per month to her landlord, Edgar Lyubling, who lived at the same address in apartment 4H. However, in June of 1986, petitioner informed the Housing Authority that she wished to move to another apartment in the same building and was issued a certificate of family participation, conditioned on approval within 60 days of the lease for the new unit. Although each such certificate expires automatically after the expiration of the 60-day period unless it matures into a rental, the Authority has the discretion to extend the applicant’s eligibility for up to an additional 60 days.

In July of 1986, petitioner submitted a proposed lease for apartment 4H, the premises formerly occupied by her purported landlord, Edgar Lyubling. An investigation by the Authority, however, revealed that she had already moved into the new apartment notwithstanding that the leasehold had yet to be approved. It appears that the relocation was precipitated by Lyubling’s desire to sell petitioner’s prior unit. The Authority also discovered that Lyubling, along with his wife, petitioner’s daughter, owns apartment 4H. According to the Authority, its personnel had been under the impression that petitioner, a Russian emigré, had no relatives in this country since the death of her husband, and there had been no previous suspicion that she and her landlord were related. In originally applying for Section 8 assistance, petitioner had [341]*341listed her friend Michael Rumshinsky as the nearest relative or friend for emergency contact. Thus, while the fact that Lyubling is petitioner’s son-in-law does not disqualify her from receiving Section 8 aid, the Authority now sought to verify that there is, indeed, a bona fide tenant-landlord relationship between petitioner and Lyubling and that he has not been supplying her with free housing and, simultaneously, collecting public benefits. The Authority ceased making payments for apartment 4B after July of 1986.

Since petitioner was unable to produce canceled checks or other documentation showing that she had been remitting rent to Lyubling, the Authority requested permission to review the latter’s tax returns to confirm his status as landlord. However, Lyubling did not demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Authority that he was actually being paid by his mother-in-law, and, by letter dated July 21, 1986, he informed the Authority that he had not attached a schedule E form (supplemental income schedule) to his 1985 tax return in that his maintenance expenses slightly exceeded his rental income. His 1984 and 1985 tax returns did include a schedule C (profit or loss from business), but no rental income was entered thereon. Respondent states that its doubts concerning Lyubling’s status as a landlord were magnified even more when his accountant subsequently wrote to the Authority advising that apartment 4B was not a money-making proposition and that there was no income. In the meantime, petitioner’s certificate of family participation, already extended for one 30-day period, expired on September 25, 1986, and no second extension was requested.

On May 12, 1987, petitioner instituted the instant proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 seeking to annul the determination by the New York City Housing Authority that she is no longer eligible for Section 8 assistance and awarding her benefits retroactive to August of 1986 or, in the alternative, vacating that decision and remanding the matter for a hearing. In conjunction with bringing the petition, she submitted Lyubling’s handwritten rent receipts from March of 1985 to July of 1986, her own affidavit that she had remitted rent monthly and an affidavit from Michael Rumshinsky that he had loaned her a certain sum of money to help her pay rent. It should be noted that none of these items had been furnished to the Housing Authority before the commencement of the legal proceeding, and Rumshinsky’s claim that he loaned petitioner rent money is not supported by any documentation, such as a written contract or a check evincing a payment [342]*342from Rumshinsky to petitioner. Moreover, petitioner has never formally been found ineligible for Section 8 aid; the Housing Authority has simply failed to approve further payments pending the receipt of persuasive documentation that Lyubling is, in fact, her landlord. She was, nonetheless, notified by letter dated January 12, 1987 from respondent’s Deputy General Counsel to the Legal Aid Society, which has been representing petitioner in connection with this dispute, that "there is strong evidence that the apartment has not been income-generating. Under these circumstances, Ms. Kogan does not appear eligible to continue receiving benefits under the Section 8 program.”

In holding that respondent’s refusal to continue providing petitioner with Section 8 aid was arbitrary and directing that her benefits be reinstated retroactively to August of 1986, the Supreme Court concluded that "[rjent receipts signed by petitioner’s son-in-law, an affidavit of payment of rent from petitioner’s son-in-law, and an affidavit of money lent to petitioner by a friend were offered as proof of petitioner’s rent payments. At the respondent’s request, the son-in-law’s tax returns were produced in an effort to establish his landlord status. Although they did not record any income from petitioner’s apartment, the son-in-law’s accountant rebutted any inference of petitioner’s non-payment by explaining that the maintenance for the apartment cost more than the rental income received from petitioner, thus, it was reasonable that the apartment did not appear on the tax returns.” In the view of the court, respondent had offered no suggestion beyond demanding that Lyubling furnish tax returns for how he and petitioner could demonstrate their business dealings and had also given no reasons why the documents proffered by petitioner were not probative of a landlord-tenant relationship.

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Bluebook (online)
141 A.D.2d 339, 529 N.Y.S.2d 755, 1988 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kogan-v-popolizio-nyappdiv-1988.