Mutual ReDevelopment Houses, Inc. v. Hanft

42 Misc. 2d 1044, 249 N.Y.S.2d 988, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1773
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedMay 13, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 Misc. 2d 1044 (Mutual ReDevelopment Houses, Inc. v. Hanft) 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
Mutual ReDevelopment Houses, Inc. v. Hanft, 42 Misc. 2d 1044, 249 N.Y.S.2d 988, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1773 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Maurice Wahl, J.

This is a holdover proceeding to dispossess the tenants, husband and wife, of a co-operative building after alleged termination of their lease for failure to comply with a prohibition against harboring a dog in their apartment.

The tenants are proprietary lessees of an apartment in premises 341 West 24th Street, Borough of Manhattan, New York, which is one of the buildings in the ILGWU group of middle income co-operative apartments which was in large part subsidized and financed with Federal and/or State funds.

Prior to taking possession of their apartment in November, 1962, the tenants owned a pedigreed dachshund which was then approximately 10 years old and had been a member of their household since it was seven weeks old. The puppy was given to them by an aunt of Mr. Hanft who, it is claimed, at great risk to life, person and liberty had returned to her home in German-occupied territory during the persecutions to reclaim the puppy’s grandmother left behind in the haste of flight. The tenants testified that they' were extremely fond of the dog and that it became the prized companion and playmate of their children and later of their grandchildren, some of whom live with them at the present time.

[1046]*1046The evidence shows that, during the extensive period while the tenants lived in the apartment which they occupied prior to moving to the present one, there was no- complaint or objection about their dog by the owner, managing agent or any of the tenants. Consequently, when they purchased an apartment from plans in 1959 they had no reason to believe that there would be any prohibition against or difficulty in taking the dog with them to their new home.

It is not denied that no intimation, suggestion or statement regarding a prohibition against dogs was communicated to them verbally or in writing when the apartment was purchased and a portion of the price was paid. In the interval between purchasing and notification in October, 1962, that the apartment would be ready for occupancy November 29, 1962, no notification was given to them that dogs would not be allowed. During that period, the balance of the purchase price was paid and arrangements to move to the new building were made.

On or about October 27, 1962, they were advised for the first time, and this is not denied, that the lease would contain a provision prohibiting the harboring of a dog. The information was in the form of a letter dated October 26,1962, accompanying the proprietary lease. It stated that the apartment would be ready for occupancy on November 29, 1962, and referred to certain restrictions in the lease, among which was the one relating to dogs.

At that time, the tenants testified, they were in no position economically, emotionally or physically to reverse the course of events. They had notified their landlord that they were moving, and they had parted with some of their possessions which the smaller apartment could not accommodate. The long anticipated move was at hand and they were suddenly confronted with a requirement that they part with one of their dearest possessions. It is alleged that they had no alternative but to sign the lease and move into the apartment and hope that management would not arbitrarily and unreasonably insist upon compliance.

The tenants made no attempt to conceal the presence of the dog. On December 24, 1962, their attorney wrote a letter to Mr. Paul Kurtzmann of ILGrWU Cooperative Houses referring to the regulation in the lease and calling to his attention the fact that Mr. Hanft kept a dog on the premises. The letter mentioned that Mr. Hanft had no knowledge of the restriction prior to receiving the proprietary lease, gave some information about the dog’s ancestry, habits and behavior and ended with the hope that some satisfactory arrangement could be con-[1047]*1047eluded. The letter was not answered but the landlord corporation continued to collect rent for many months after its receipt.

The tenants maintain that the animal is quiet, tidy and completely housebroken. It is never out of the apartment except on a leash and is curbed until it is off the premises of the co-operative corporation and the related group of houses. The dog is now 11 years old, and its span of life cannot be much longer, as this kind of animal rarely survives after 10 years. The tenants have offered to stipulate in any manner that the landlord may require with whatever protective measures it may deem necessary that, upon its death, it will not be replaced by any other dog or pet of any kind.

The court finds no merit in landlord’s contention that a tenant, by subscribing to the stock of this co-operative, may receive only a nonproprietary lease. The very nature of a co-operative is that, because of the capital investment, the tenant becomes a proprietary pro rata owner and as such is entitled to a “ proprietary lease.” Were it otherwise, we would have the anomalous fact that the tenant is paying in effect a premium for his lease. The mere ownership of stock in such a co-operative corporation finds no ready market. The net result, if landlord is correct herein, would be nothing more than the creation of a deduction for tax purposes. In one breath, the landlord states that the benefits of co-operative ownership are shared with the tenant, but in another, that tenant has no ‘ ‘ proprietary lease ’ ’ but stands at arm’s length in landlord-tenant relationship.

Contrary to landlord’s position, the lease does not per se make a violation of any rule or regulation a violation of a substantial lease obligation. The provisions of article fourth, paragraph 15, concerning compliance with all now existing or hereafter enacted rules and that violation of such rules is to be considered a violation of a substantial obligation of occupancy, are too broad and undefined in scope. They leave untrammeled power in the landlord’s directors and would compel tenants to an absolute pledge of compliance without the slightest knowledge of the rule. Such autocracy should not be encouraged. Allowing landlord and tenants to agree as to Avhat constitutes a substantial obligation of a lease, no matter how trivial or unreasonable it may be, would oust the courts from jurisdiction.

In Hilltop Vil. Co-op. No. 4 v. Goldstein (41 Misc 2d 402), where there was a flagrant violation of a regulation against harboring a dog, the court refused to find that there had been a breach of a substantial obligation but indicated it might have ruled differently if the parties had expressly agreed that such conduct would be deemed a substantial violation. A provision [1048]*1048authorizing termination for failure to comply with a specific, designated regulation or restriction might warrant eviction of a tenant without inquiring into the facts and circumstances (see L. H. Estates v. Bartholomew, 9 Misc 2d 116, affd. 5 A D 2d 815), although the extent to which such private arrangements should be countenanced remains an open question. However, where, as in the present case, the provision is of the blanket, blunderbuss variety, covering all imaginable behavior which may now or later be prohibited, enforcement would amount to abdication of the judicial function.

The court interprets the language of article fourth, paragraph 15, as an attempt to regulate the rights of the parties which is not binding on the courts.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Misc. 2d 1044, 249 N.Y.S.2d 988, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-redevelopment-houses-inc-v-hanft-nycivct-1964.