Matter of Avery v. NYS Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal

2004 NY Slip Op 50287(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedApril 14, 2004
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 50287(U) (Matter of Avery v. NYS Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Avery v. NYS Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 2004 NY Slip Op 50287(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

Matter of Avery v New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal (2004 NY Slip Op 50287(U)) [*1]
Matter of Avery v New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal
2004 NY Slip Op 50287(U)
Decided on April 14, 2004
Supreme Court, Kings County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on April 14, 2004
Supreme Court, Kings County


Matter of Gloria Avery, et. al., Petitioners,

against

NYS Division of Housing & Community Renewal, Respondent University Towers Associates, Proposed Intervener.




Index No. 2237/03

Yvonne Lewis, J.

The Petitioners herein (Gloria Avery, et. al. and Patsy Chen, et. al.) seek, by way of Article 78 relief, to set aside what they classify as the 11/19/02 Division of Housing and Community Renewals's (DHCR) "arbitrary and capricious revocation of the Rent Administrator's (DRA's) Orders (respectively, Docket No. BI2102100M & HA210003RP/BI2102090M) denying the building owner's request for . . .an MCI (major capital improvement) rent increase adjustment of $9.10 per room per month, effective March 1, 1990." The Petitioners, who are rent stabilized tenants of two of three premises, collectively known as University Towers, and individually located at 191 & 175 Willoughby Street, Brooklyn, NY, assert that by reversing the DRA's rent increase denials, DHCR has awarded "rent increases for improvements for which the owner has already received increases under the HUD program, and is [thereby] allowing the owner to 'double dip'." According to said Petitioners, they have been especially aggrieved for the following reasons, 1. DHCR had set the initial legal rent (ILR) for each apartment on the basis of the rents in effect in September, 1987 when the property was under federal HUD preemption. Thereafter rent increases were allowed for "work performed and expenses incurred" during the prior period of federal preemption; 2. DHCR failed to take into consideration the fact that since the work was not part of an overall project, it did not qualify for an MCI. In addition, the work was inadequate: to wit, windows were never completely installed and did not function properly; the owner failed to maintain services and perform necessary repairs, which resulted in findings of reductions in service; an increase was permitted for a new intercom system, when in fact the intercom system was removed and the service discontinued to some tenants and intruded into some tenant's personal telephone calls; and DHCR allowed for MCI increases in instances where the useful life of various systems were not exceeded.

The NYS Division of Housing & Community Renewal (DHCR) and the University Towers Associates [UTA], by their attorneys, responded to the foregoing by requesting a dismissal of the Petitioners' application herein on two grounds. 1. The Division's Commissioner issued a final order on September 8, 2003, which post-dated the petitioners' current application, and gave the petitioners 60 days therefrom to file an amended petition with this Court which they failed to do. Accordingly, an amended petition cannot now be timely interposed. Hence, this matter should be dismissed pursuant to CPLR 3211(a) 2; and, 2. Petitioners failed to state a valid [*2]cause of action since the Commissioner's final order is rational and based on the evidence of record. Therefore, this matter should be dismissed pursuant to CPLT 3211 (a) 7.

DHCR, joined by UTA, also argued that 1. "the work in question was properly found to qualify as a major capital improvement for which an appropriate rent increase was granted; 2. "the

tenants' complaint regarding the owner's provision of adequate services in the building had not been substantiated as there was an absence of any building-wide rent reduction orders at the time of the issuance of the final order." [In any event,] ". . .the existence of a service order for an individual apartment does not preclude the issuance of an MCI order. . .the owner is [simply] barred from collecting the rent increase until the rent restoration order is issued for the apartment; 3. "The windows, boiler and intercom were operable. [Hence,] if there was a finding of a lack of service, this was followed by a subsequent order which found that the service had been restored." Also, it was determined that the useful life of the replaced items had been exceeded.

In addition, DHCR and UTA set forth that the regulatory systems which permit an owner to apply for a permanent building-wide rent increase based upon the completion of a qualifying MCI are RCL [Rent Control Law], Section 26-405 (g)(1)(g); RER [Rent and Eviction Regulations], Section 2202.4( c ), and RSL [Rent Stabilization Law] Section 26-511 ( c (6) (b)); and RSC, [Rent Stabilization Code] Section 2522.4 (a) (2)(i), which basically require that the improvement be building-wide, depreciable under the Internal Revenue Code, other than for ordinary repairs, pursuant to a plan, for a specified amount of time, for the operation, preservation and maintenance of the structure, benefit all the tenants, and that items being replaced meet the requirements of a useful life schedule; i.e., have expired their useful life, except if waived by DHCR.

Furthermore, DHCR and UTA asserted that the Petition for Administrative Review (PAR; respectively Docket No. IH210044R0 & IH210045RO) which the mentioned tenants seek to reverse clearly determined ". . .that during the period of HUD preemption the owner made

expenditures for the claimed installations; [to wit, the new boilers, windows, intercom, roof, and engineering work,] and that such information would have been available for HUD review. However, DHCR records reveal that in an almost identical case. . .the Supreme Court, Kings County. . .rejected this rationale for denying MCI increases, holding that: '. . .DHCR improperly based its determination on the fact that petitioner received rent increases from HUD since, in actuality, there is nothing in the administrative record to indicate that such increases already included the cost of the improvements. Indeed, neither the Rent Stabilization Law, nor the Rent Stabilization Code prohibit an owner from applying for a rent increase based upon an MCI solely paid for by the owner for premises where rentals were previously regulated by the federal government.'" This ruling, DHCR and UTA noted, was made in connection with the remaining University Towers Building, located at 122 Ashland Place, Brooklyn, NY (Towers Management v. DHCR, Index No. 192862/92), and therefore should serve as res judica in the matters sub judice.

On or about December 11, 2003, Paul B. Dalnoky, Esq., submitted a new Article 78 petition on behalf of all the named Petitioners seeking a reversal of the DHCR's September 8, [*3]2003 final determination on the grounds that "the MCI work was performed on a piecemeal fashion over an extensive period of time without any plan, and merely amounted to repairs. Work was sporadic and, in many instances, never completed. Since the work was not part of an overall project, it did not qualify for an MCI. . .

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2004 NY Slip Op 50287(U), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-avery-v-nys-div-of-hous-community-renewal-nysupctkings-2004.