Linden Hill No. 1 Cooperative Corp. v. Kleiner

124 Misc. 2d 1001, 478 N.Y.S.2d 519, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3291
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJune 20, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 124 Misc. 2d 1001 (Linden Hill No. 1 Cooperative Corp. v. Kleiner) 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
Linden Hill No. 1 Cooperative Corp. v. Kleiner, 124 Misc. 2d 1001, 478 N.Y.S.2d 519, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3291 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

John A. Milano, J.

issue:

This court is asked to decide whether section D26-10.10 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York (statutory waiver of no pet covenants law) is applicable to residential cooperatives.

proceeding:

The owner, Linden Hill No. 1 Cooperative Corporation, brings this holdover proceeding to remove the respondent tenant Frances Kleiner from the subject premises (apartment 1H represented by shares of stock in premises 25-15 Union St., Flushing, Borough of Queens, consisting of 4Vfe rooms) for violating the terms of her proprietary lease in that the said respondent failed to remove from her apartment an animal, to wit, a dog, after having received notice from the owner that harboring a dog in said apartment was in violation of the occupancy agreement and the rules and regulations set forth of the board of directors.

[1002]*1002facts:

Petitioner is the corporate owner of a multiple dwelling which has been converted to a cooperative. Section D2610.10 requires that any language in a multiple dwelling lease prohibiting household pets be deemed waived if the landlord does not commence an action or summary proceeding to enforce the lease within three months of knowledge of same, provided the pet is not a nuisance. Petitioner admits knowledge of the harboring of the dog for more than three months prior to the commencement of this proceeding and has pleaded its apartment ■ house as a multiple dwelling. Respondent acknowledges that there is language in the proprietary lease prohibiting pets. Petitioner has not alleged nuisance.

ADMINISTRATIVE CODE

Section D26-10.10 provides as follows:

“Rights and responsibilities of owners and tenants in relation to pets. — a. Legislative Declaration. The Council hereby finds that the enforcement of covenants contained in multiple dwelling leases which prohibit the harboring of household pets has led to widespread abuses by building owners or their agents, who knowing that a tenant has a pet for an extended period of time, seek to evict the tenant and/or his pet often for reasons unrelated to the creation of a nuisance. Because household pets are kept for reasons of safety and companionship under the existence of a continuing housing emergency it is necessary to protect pet owners from retaliatory eviction and to safeguard the health, safety and welfare of tenants who harbor pets under the circumstances provided herein, it is hereby found that the enactment of the provisions of this section is necessary to prevent potential hardship and dislocation of tenants within this city.

“b. Where a tenant in a multiple dwelling openly and notoriously for a period of three months or more following taking possession of a unit, harbors or has harbored a household pet or pets, the harboring of which is not prohibited by the multiple dwelling law, the housing maintenance or the health codes of the City of New York or any other applicable law, and the owner or his agent has [1003]*1003knowledge of this fact, and such owner fails within this three month period to commence a summary proceeding or action to enforce a lease provision prohibiting the keeping of such household pets, such lease provision shall be deemed waived.

“c. It shall be unlawful for an owner or his agent, by express terms or otherwise, to restrict a tenant’s rights as provided in this section. Any such restriction shall be unenforceable and deemed void as against public policy.

“d. The waiver provision of this section shall not apply where the harboring of a household pet causes damage to the subject premises, creates a nuisance or interferes substantially with the health, safety or welfare of other tenants or occupants of the same or adjacent building or structure.

“e. The New York City housing authority shall be exempt from the provisions of this section.”

CONTENTIONS OF PETITIONER

The petitioner argues that residential cooperatives and cooperative shareholders were not meant to be included within the coverage of section D26-10.10. Further that the language of the local law does not mention cooperative corporations or cooperative shareholders and in fact confines itself to “covenants contained in multiple dwelling leases.” That the respondent is not only a member of the board of directors of the cooperative, but she is a shareholder as well and possesses a proprietary lease; that this type of ownership, coupled with perpetual leasehold, is radically different from the simple “multiple dwelling leases” referred to in the City Council resolution; that if a cooperative tenant does not like the rules of the cooperative, he or she may change them through democratic means provided for in the by-laws and in the regular meetings of the cooperative; that paragraph a of section D26-10.10 discusses the housing emergency, the need to protect pet owners from “retaliatory eviction”, as well as other common landlord abuses; that this rationale is clearly applicable to the conventional landlord-tenant scenario, but not to the cooperative environment; that a conventional landlord operating under either rent controls or rent stabilization [1004]*1004has every financial incentive to evict a tenant but that a cooperative corporation does not have such profit incentives.

CONTENTIONS OF RESPONDENT

The respondent submits that the City Council in enacting section D26-10.10 clearly intended the law to apply to multiple dwelling cooperatives; the co-op tenant is in the same position with respect to landlord-tenant law as any other tenant; that had the Council wanted to exclude co-op tenants from the law’s protection it would have done so expressly as it did with respect to the New York City Housing Authority, and as it did in the Rent Stabilization Law; that the underlying rationale for the new law is the protection of tenants from hardship during a housing emergency. Both co-op tenants and traditional tenants are in need of such protection.

NATURE OF THE CO-OP LEASE

Courts have frequently been called upon to determine the precise nature of a co-op lease and tenancy with respect to matters of landlord-tenant law in general. It is now well settled that a proprietary lease is no different from any other type of lease (1 Rasch, NY Landlord & Tenant, Summary Proceedings, § 82, March, 1984 Cum Supp, p 15, citing Silverman v Alcoa Plaza Assoc., 37 AD2d 166; Suarez v Rivercross Tenants’ Corp., 107 Misc 2d 135 [App Term, 1st Dept]).

The co-op tenant and holder of a proprietary lease “is in much the position as any other tenant under usual leasing arrangements.” (19 NY Jur 2d, Condominiums and Cooperative Apartments, § 51, p 556; People ex rel. McGoldrick v Sterling, 283 App Div 88.) “The reason is undoubtedly the wish to retain for the corporation the facile and summary remedies that are available to the ordinary landlord, in the event the lessee defaults in his obligations.” (Supra, at p 93.)

It is therefore apparent that the relationship between a shareholder-tenant and the cooperative is akin to that of landlord and tenant. (Hauptman v 222 East 80th St. Corp., 100 Misc 2d 153; Jimerson Housing Co. v Butler, 102 Misc 2d 423 [App Term, 2d Dept], revg 97 Misc 2d 563; Suarez v [1005]*1005Rivercross Tenants’ Corp., supra; Lacaille v Feldman, 44 Misc 2d 370;

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Bluebook (online)
124 Misc. 2d 1001, 478 N.Y.S.2d 519, 1984 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linden-hill-no-1-cooperative-corp-v-kleiner-nycivct-1984.