Metzendorf v. 130 West 57 Co.

132 A.D.2d 262, 522 N.Y.S.2d 533, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 51556
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 132 A.D.2d 262 (Metzendorf v. 130 West 57 Co.) 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
Metzendorf v. 130 West 57 Co., 132 A.D.2d 262, 522 N.Y.S.2d 533, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 51556 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Per Curiam.

Defendant landlord appeals from that portion of an order and judgment which, in a declaratory judgment action, granted the cross motion of the plaintiff tenant for partial summary judgment determining that the duplex suite 9-10D (the premises) located on the ninth and tenth floors of the building located at 130 West 57 th Street in Manhattan was covered by the Rent Stabilization Law, that the tenant was entitled to recover rental overcharges and attorneys’ fees and other relief relating to the striking of the landlord’s affirmative defenses and counterclaims, and denied the landlord’s cross motion to dismiss the complaint or, alternatively, for summary judgment.

The building housing the premises is a class "A” multiple [264]*264dwelling located in a Special Purpose District within a restricted central commercial area designated CS-3.5, virtually next door to Carnegie Hall. It contains 3 commercial stores on the ground floor and basement, and 14 floors of mixed business and residential units. Of the 54 units in the building, 10 are purely residential, including one occupied by the superintendent on the ground floor.

Plaintiff Charles Metzendorf has been, during the period here relevant, a principal and officer of Metzendorf Brothers, Inc., a bakery supply business. The business, located in Edison, New Jersey, has a 50,000 foot warehouse and offices, 150 employees, and 30 trucks for the purpose of making deliveries to its numerous customers in the tristate area. On October 1, 1977, plaintiff executed a standard form of office lease, for a three-year term, which provided in its rider: "Premises are rented to the tenant for the purpose of the business carried on by the tenant. Tenant shall have the right to use some portion of these premises for residential purposes, providing the use made by the tenant for residence shall not change the predominantly commercial use thereof.” The tenant was given permission under the terms of the lease to make only such alterations and improvements which were not structural, and did not affect utility services or plumbing and electrical lines. The lease was renewed two times', on the same terms, at rents increasing from the initial $1,500 per month in 1977, to $3,400 per month in a two-year lease commencing October 15, 1983.

During the period covered by the successive leases the tenant claims that he expended $150,000 making improvements to the premises, "creating from what was a shambles into a beautiful four-bedroom duplex apartment containing 2,100 square feet, four bedrooms, three bathrooms, and a living room with a 26 foot ceiling.” In September 1985, when the last lease was about to expire, the landlord demanded an increase in rent from $3,400 per month to $6,800 per month. This prompted the tenant to retain counsel to ascertain and protect whatever tenancy rights he might have. The tenant thereafter demanded of the landlord that by virtue of his having used the premises solely, for residential purposes, he was entitled to a renewal lease under the prevailing rent stabilization guidelines. The landlord rejected this demand. The tenant then commenced the within action seeking a declaration of the parties’ rights.

In his action, the plaintiff tenant sought and obtained preliminary injunctive relief prohibiting his eviction pending [265]*265trial. Plaintiff claimed in his verified complaint that the landlord "knew or should have known” that the premises were to be occupied for residential purposes only, that he did occupy the premises for residential purposes only, and that he was therefore entitled to continued possession as a rent-stabilized tenant. He sought a declaration to that effect, an equitable reformation of his lease, a return of past rentals in excess of rent-stabilized rentals, damages for fraud, and attorneys’ fees.

Defendant landlord raised several affirmative defenses and counterclaims which, excluding those abandoned on appeal, claimed that if the tenant occupied the premises solely as a residence he did so without the landlord’s knowledge and consent and in violation of the various leases, that the tenant made structural alterations in violation of the leases, that tenant is not entitled to a renewal lease even if he did occupy the premises solely for residential purposes because the premises were not occupied as the tenant’s primary residence, and for damages based on illegal holdover. Cross motions for summary judgment were consolidated, and resolved almost entirely in favor of the tenant.

It is elemental that a tenant cannot sign a commercial lease for premises that have a long history of primarily commercial use, and unilaterally change the character of the premises from commercial to residential simply by surreptitiously creating a "beautiful four-bedroom duplex apartment containing 2,100 square feet, four bedrooms, three bathrooms, and a living room with a 26 foot ceiling” through extensive structural alterations which are explicitly prohibited in every lease executed by the tenant. It is equally elemental that a landlord cannot rent premises under a commercial lease with full knowledge that the tenant intends, to convert the premises to solely residential use as his primary residence, to thereafter knowingly permit such use for eight years, and thereafter avoid the protections afforded to residential tenants under the Rent Stabilization Law and Emergency Tenant Protection Act. (See, e.g., Mandel v Pitkowsky, 102 Misc 2d 478, affd 76 AD2d 807.)

Lydia Jedwabnik was the managing agent for the building, and a principal of the landlord, and she dealt with the tenant when he first rented the premises in 1977. In her affidavit in support of the landlord’s cross motion for summary judgment, she alleged that the history of the premises was primarily commercial, and that the parties understood and agreed that [266]*266the tenant’s occupancy was to remain primarily commercial in character. "Mr. Metzendorf went out of his way to explain to me that because he was involved in a family-owned bakery supplies business located in New Jersey which operated in and around New York, he could and would be using the premises as his office.” She noted that the tenant listed in his rental application both his current business address in New Jersey, and his current residential address in New Jersey, and that he thereafter represented to the Middlesex County Board of Elections that he had just relocated his primary residence to 18 Harbor Terrace in Perth Amboy, New Jersey.

Mrs. Jedwabnik further claimed that the extensive alterations were not "fully known” to her and were done "either surreptitiously or in a manner that was certain to conceal them from my attention.” Finally, she alleged that the tenant installed a special combination lock on his door which prevented her and the building staff from gaining access to the premises, and that the extent of the alterations and the nature of the occupancy first became known in September 1985 during an inspection of the premises by Mira Van Doren, another principal of the landlord.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A.D.2d 262, 522 N.Y.S.2d 533, 1987 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 51556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metzendorf-v-130-west-57-co-nyappdiv-1987.