M. N. S. Brandell, Inc. v. Roosevelt Nassau Operating Corp.

42 A.D.2d 708, 345 N.Y.S.2d 608, 1973 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3944

This text of 42 A.D.2d 708 (M. N. S. Brandell, Inc. v. Roosevelt Nassau Operating Corp.) 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
M. N. S. Brandell, Inc. v. Roosevelt Nassau Operating Corp., 42 A.D.2d 708, 345 N.Y.S.2d 608, 1973 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3944 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

In an action for a declaratory judgment, injunctive relief and damages, plaintiff appeals from a judgment of the Supreme Court, [709]*709Nassau County, entered July 28, 1972, in favor of defendants, after a non jury trial. Judgment affirmed, without costs. No opinion. Martuscello, Acting P. J., Shapiro and Brennan, JJ., concur; Gulotta, J., dissents and votes to reverse the judgment and to remand the case to the trial court for the granting of relief to plaintiff in accordance with the following memorandum, in which Benjamin, J., concurs: Plaintiff is a tenant in the Roosevelt Field Shopping Center selling books, candy, stationery and novelty gift items. In this action against its landlord (defendant Roosevelt Nassau Operating Corp.) and others, plaintiff seeks a declaration of rights, injunctive relief and damages for invasion of its rights under a leasehold. The appeal is from a judgment which denied it any relief. The genesis of plaintiff’s grievance is the construction in 1970 of Alexander’s department store in an area which from 1963, when plaintiff’s lease was made, had been part of the parking field which bordered the Center to the east of the tenanted premises. Plaintiff’s store is 175 feet in length by 40 feet in width. The westerly entrance fronts on Fountain Mall, a north/south promenade connecting Gimbel’s on the north with Macy’s on the south. The east or rear entrance looks out upon a 15-foot sidewalk which traverses the shopping center on the east from, north to south, formerly with free access to the large parking field. It is a corner shop on the south side of Building E, with display windows across the eastern and western ends of the store, each of which continues for eight feet along the southernmost wall of the building. This southerly side of the building faced upon an attractive 39-foot wide corridor between Building E and Building D, decorated with growing trees and shrubs, and provided benches for weary shoppers. It also served as the connecting link between the east parking area and the Fountain Mall. Plaintiff pays $5 per square foot for this corner location, as opposed to $3.50 per square foot which is charged for inside stores. Defendants have constructed the large Alexander store itself in the former parking field in such close proximity to plaintiff’s premises that, together with the new parking deck built to service it (the Alexander store), it effectively cuts off plaintiff’s premises from the flow of traffic and exposure they formerly enjoyed. Plaintiff is particularly aggrieved by defendants’ conversion of the major part of the former corridor into a new store and entrance to Alexander’s, leaving in its place a dingy, artificially lighted hall, 12-foot wide at its widest point, narrowing down to five feet where a fire stairway has been moved into it from its former place which is now occupied by the new store. The 15-foot sidewalk east of the building which served traffic moving north and south is now blocked by two sets of glass doors (see plaintiff’s exhibits 12A, 12B and 12D) which constitute a continuation of the entrance and new store from the Fountain Mall to the main Alexander store. These doors may be locked when Alexander chooses and thus no traffic from the south can find its way to plaintiff’s establishment except by some other circuitous route. To contend that these changes have not seriously and drastically reduced the value of the leasehold for which plaintiff bargained back in 1963 is to deny the incontrovertible. The justification for all this is said to be a reservation by the landlord in the lease to do these very things. One looks in vain in the lease for any such provision. In the first place this is a lengthy, detailed, preprepared, printed lease drafted by the landlord’s attorneys to be used exclusively for Roosevelt Field Shopping Center leasings. Nothing is better settled than that such a document is to be construed strictly against the draftsman, i.e., contra proferentem (United Water Works Co. V. Omaha Water Co., 164 N. Y. 41; Gillet v. Bank of Amer., 160 N. Y. 549; Rentways, Inc. v. O’Neill Milk & Cream Co., 308 N. Y. 342), and the rule is frequently applied in cases of contracts on printed forms prepared [710]*710by one of the parties (Brandt v. Godwin, 3 N. Y. S. 807, affd. 15 Daly 456). Appropriate to this ease, the Court of Appeals said in Black v. General Wiper Supply Co. (305 N. Y. 386, 390): “ ‘ The law is well settled ’, this court recently wrote, ‘that changes in a lease are not to be presumed or implied; and no additional liability will be imposed upon a tenant unless it is clearly within the provisions of the instrument under which it is claimed. If the instrument contains any ambiguity it must be resolved against the landlord and in favor of the tenant.’ (455 Seventh Ave. v. Hussey Realty Gorp., supra, 295 N. Y. 166, 172.) Here, the landlord, who drew the lease, specified that the tenants were to ‘pay * * * -all water rents and water taxes * * * charged against * * * the demised, premises’, but, in contrast, said nothing of possible sewer rents. This, of itself, goes far toward establishing the parties’ purpose that any other charges levied against the property be borne by the landlord.” Yet the justification for what the landlord has done in this case is claimed to lie in the fact that there is no specific prohibition in the lease forbidding it. This is an attempt to put the boot on the wrong foot. Rather it is incumbent upon the landlord to demonstrate that it had the right to so drastically alter the existing easements and physical conveniences which were so integral a part of this lease as clearly shown on the aerial photo and the' site plan, erroneously excluded from evidence (see Wilkinson v. Nassau Shores, 1 Misc 2d 917, affd. 278 App. Div. 970, mod. 304 N. Y. 614). Under article 5 of the lease, entitled “ Common Areas”, such areas are defined as (a) parking areas, (b) the truckway, (e) the loading dock, (d) public conveniences of the Center and (e) all other areas in the building and the' Shopping Center, including the so-called “Mall” to be used in common by the tenants. Actually there is nothing labeled a “ Mall ” on exhibit A annexed to the lease, but we find what was meant by this term by examination of plaintiff’s excluded exhibit 3 for identification, which shows a Fountain Mall on which plaintiff’s store fronts and a Flight Mall to the west of it. The critical part of this lease is an unnumbered paragraph of article 5 reading as follows: “Landlord reserves the right to make changes, additions, alterations or improvements in or to such common areas; provided, however, that there shall thereby be caused no unreasonable obstruction of Tenant’s right of access to the demised premises or any unreasonable interference with Tenant’s use of the demised premises.” To escalate this simple right to make changes and- alterations into a full fledged right to erect new buildings in any “Common Area” of the Center, especially in favor of the one who chose the language, is in my opinion highly unreasonable and contrary to the ordinary rules of construction. By way of illustrating its extremity, it would permit the landlord to obstruct the Fountain Mall with a building, so long as it left a passage to get into plaintiff’s front door. Nor can I see any justification for holding that another paragraph of article 5, which imposes an obligation on the landlord to maintain adequate parking if it constructs any additional buildings, creates a right in the landlord by implication to construct new buildings any place it pleases. In Phillips v.. West Rockaway Land Co. (226 N. Y.

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42 A.D.2d 708, 345 N.Y.S.2d 608, 1973 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-n-s-brandell-inc-v-roosevelt-nassau-operating-corp-nyappdiv-1973.