Mishkin v. 155 Condominium, Bd. of Mgrs. of 155 Condominium

2004 NY Slip Op 50066(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, New York County
DecidedFebruary 19, 2004
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 50066(U) (Mishkin v. 155 Condominium, Bd. of Mgrs. of 155 Condominium) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mishkin v. 155 Condominium, Bd. of Mgrs. of 155 Condominium, 2004 NY Slip Op 50066(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

Mishkin v 155 Condominium, Bd. of Mgrs. of 155 Condominium (2004 NY Slip Op 50066(U)) [*1]
Mishkin v 155 Condominium, Bd. of Mgrs. of 155 Condominium
2004 NY Slip Op 50066(U)
Decided on February 19, 2004
Supreme Court, New York 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This opinion is uncorrected and will not be published in the printed Official Reports.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 February 19, 2004
Supreme Court, New York County


RUTH MISHKIN, Petitioner, - -

against

THE 155 CONDOMINIUM, THE BOARD OF MANAGERS OF THE 155 CONDOMINIUM and GARY DONG, Respondents.




Index No. 106770/03

Herman Cahn, J.

Petitioner seeks an order annulling the election for the Board of Managers held during the 2002 annual meeting of respondent 155 Condominium, and directing a new election (CPLR 7801 et seq.). Petitioner is a Condominium unit owner.[FN1] Petitioner also seeks an order directing the Condominium to furnish her with the names and addresses of all other unit owners.

Respondents cross-moved to dismiss for failure to state a claim (CPLR 3211 [a] [7]).

Respondent Gary Dong was the president of respondent Board of Managers.

The facts are not in dispute. By notice dated October 2, 2003, the court informed the parties of its intention to treat the motion and cross-motion as a motion and cross-motion for summary judgment (CPLR 3211 [c]). As stated in the notice, this matter depends solely upon the court's interpretation of the Condominium's By-Laws. By letters dated October 14, 2003, counsel consented.

The By-Laws:

Section 2.7 of the Condominium's By-Laws (Verified Petition Ex. A) provide for a nine-member Board of Managers "to be elected by the Unit Owners pursuant to the terms of Section 4.9 hereof." Section 4.9 (A) provides, in pertinent part:

When voting for members of the Condominium Board, each

Unit Owner (including Sponsor or its designee, for so long as Sponsor

or such designee shall own Unsold Units) shall be entitled to cast one

vote for each .0001% of Common Interest attributable to his or her

Unit(s) per member to be elected.

Section 4.9 (C) provides that "[s]ubject to the terms of paragraph (D) of this [*2]Section 4.9, all elections of members of the Condominium Board shall be determined by plurality vote." Section 4.9 (D), in turn, provides as follows, in pertinent part:

Not more than . . . three members of the Condominium Board

shall serve by reason of the votes cast by Sponsor or its designee at any

election held after the expiration of the Initial Control Period.[[FN2]]

However, Sponsor or its designee shall have the right to elect the

following minimum number of members of the Condominium

Board: * * * (b) two members, for so long as the Common Interests

attributable to any Units owned by Sponsor or its designee equals, in the aggregate, less than 35% but more than 15% of the Common Interests of

all Units . . . .

There is no dispute that the Condominium's Sponsor, non-party Cheltenham Associates, holds approximately 17% of the Condominium's Common Interests and, thus, comes within the foregoing clause allowing it "the right to elect," i.e., designate, a minimum number of two Board members of its choosing (Verified Petition ¶¶ 10, 17; Brett Aff. ¶ 6). The dispute concerns the extent to which the Sponsor may participate in the election of additional board members.

Petitioner argues that a proper reading of Section 4.9 (D) permits the Sponsor to designate two board members, as stated, and to vote for only one additional member, in accord with the prefatory clause in that section providing that "not more than three members of the Condominium Board shall serve by reason of the votes cast by Sponsor . . . ."

Respondents employ a drastically different construct. They do not read the prefatory clause as a broad limitation to the Sponsor's ability to vote in the board election, as petitioner does. Rather, respondents posit that the clause narrowly limits the Sponsor's ability to constitute the winning vote for any or all of the various candidates, restricting that ability to "not more than three" candidates (By-Laws § 4.9 [D]). In other words, respondents argue that a proper reading of the By-Laws permits the Sponsor to designate two (as petitioner concedes) and to vote for any or all of the remaining seven candidates, with the caveat that of those remaining seven, the Sponsor's votes cannot be the vote which put more than three of them "over the top." Respondents urge this construct based on the distinct language: "not more than three

members . . . shall serve by reason of the votes cast by Sponsor . . . ." (Id. [emphasis added.) That is to say, the Sponsor may vote for all seven; but of those seven, only as to three can the Sponsor's vote be the decisive, plurality achieving vote.

In adherence to that construct, the December 2002 annual meeting, overseen by respondents, produced the following slate of nine designated and elected board members: 1.

Harriet Rosenbluth (Sponsor's Designee) 2. Nancy Reese(Sponsor's Designee) 3. [*3]John Ansbro(Elected, with Sponsor's Unnecessary [FN3] Participation) 4. Gary Dong(Elected, with Sponsor's Unnecessary Participation) 5. Arnold Gitomer(Elected, with Sponsor's Unnecessary Participation) 6. John Scelfo(Elected, with Sponsor's Unnecessary Participation) 7. Adele Rifkin(Elected, with Sponsor's Necessary Participation) 8. Claire Carcich(Elected, with Sponsor's Unnecessary Participation) 9. Jeffrey Haas(Elected, with Sponsor's Necessary Participation)

(Verified Petition Ex. E; Brett Aff. ¶¶ 4-9, Ex. B.)[FN4] Respondents insist that the election was proper because, other than the Sponsor's two designees, Rosenbluth and Reese, only two managers, Rifkin and Haas, were elected "by reason of the votes cast by the Sponsor . . . ." (By-Laws § 4.9 [D] [emphasis added].)[FN5]

Discussion:

Summary judgment is proper where there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and a moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law (Alvarez v Prospect Hosp., 68 NY2d 320 [1986]). Interpretation of an unambiguous contract is an issue of law for the court (Chimart Assocs. v Paul, 66 NY2d 570 [1986]; Sutton v East River Sav. Bank, 55 NY2d 550 [1982]).

A condominium's by-laws constitute a contract with the unit owners, and are, as all contracts, to be construed in a manner giving effect to all of their terms (Lesal Assocs. v Board of Mgrs., 309 AD2d 594 [1st Dept 2003]).

Section 4.9 (A) of the By-Laws unequivocally entitles each unit owner, "including Sponsor," to vote its shares for any candidate. Section 4.9 (C) provides that, subject to the terms of Section 4.9 (D), all Board elections "shall be determined by plurality vote." This is precisely what occurred at the December 16, 2002 election.

The Sponsor voted its 17% common interest for each of seven candidates. Up to two of those candidates were permitted by Section 4.9 (D) to be elected "by reason of the votes cast by Sponsor . . . ."

In Rego Park Garden Assocs.

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