Riverside Syndicate, Inc. v. Munroe

882 N.E.2d 875, 10 N.Y.3d 18, 853 N.Y.S.2d 263
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 882 N.E.2d 875 (Riverside Syndicate, Inc. v. Munroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riverside Syndicate, Inc. v. Munroe, 882 N.E.2d 875, 10 N.Y.3d 18, 853 N.Y.S.2d 263 (N.Y. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Smith, J.

We hold that an agreement by tenants to pay an illegal rent for a rent-stabilized apartment, in exchange for an agreement by the landlord to let the tenants use the apartment as a second home, is void and cannot be enforced by either party.

Facts and Procedural History

The tenants, Victoria Munroe and Eric Saltzman, rented three apartments (apparently combined into one) on Riverside Drive in Manhattan. All three apartments were subject to the rent stabilization laws. Originally, the tenants subleased one of the three from another tenant, and the landlord sued to evict them, claiming that the sublease was illegal. This eviction proceeding was settled by the agreement now at issue, a so-ordered stipulation between the landlord and the tenants entered into in 1996.

The parties agreed that the tenants “shall be recognized as the lawful, rent stabilized legal tenants of the subject premises at a monthly rental rate of $2,000.00.” This was far in excess of the maximum rent allowed by the rent stabilization laws: The landlord’s brief in this Court says that the maximum legal rent would have been $1,325, and the tenants’ brief suggests a lower figure. The agreement said that the tenants “waive all right to challenge the legality of the rent” and that “[r]egardless of [their] primary residence” the tenants “may remain as the rent stabilized tenants.” The agreement also said that, if the apartments were deregulated, the landlord would offer a renewal lease to the tenants every two years, at a rent increase of no more than 8%. In 2000, the apartments were deregulated, without objection from the tenants.

Apparently, the parties continued to comply with the 1996 agreement until 2003. In that year, the landlord began eviction proceedings based on the claim that the tenants were not using the apartments as their primary residence. There was a brief *22 truce, and the proceedings were dismissed without prejudice, but in 2004 the landlord began the present action. It seeks a declaratory judgment that the 1996 agreement violates public policy and is void.

Supreme Court granted summary judgment to the tenants, but the Appellate Division reversed and granted summary judgment to the landlord, declaring the agreement “null, void, and of no force or effect” (39 AD3d 256, 256 [1st Dept 2007]). The Appellate Division granted the tenants leave to appeal, and we now affirm the Appellate Division’s order.

Discussion

Rent Stabilization Code (RSC) (9 NYCRR) § 2520.13 says:

“An agreement by the tenant to waive the benefit of any provision of the RSL [Rent Stabilization Law] or this Code is void; provided, however, that based upon a negotiated settlement between the parties and with the approval of the DHCR [Division of Housing and Community Renewal], or a court of competent jurisdiction, or where a tenant is represented by counsel, a tenant may withdraw, with prejudice, any complaint pending before the DHCR.”

The application of this regulation to this case seems uncomplicated. The agreement is, on its face, one to “waive the benefit” of rent stabilization, and is therefore void. It is not an agreement to withdraw a “complaint pending before the DHCR,” and therefore the exception in the regulation does not apply.

In exchange for an illegal rent, the landlord agreed, among other things, not to enforce its right under RSC § 2524.4 (c) to “recover possession” of a “housing accommodation . . . not occupied by the tenant ... as his or her primary residence.” As the Appellate Division has repeatedly held, an agreement of this kind is not enforceable by the tenant (Park Towers S. Co. v Universal Attractions, 274 AD2d 312 [1st Dept 2000]; Rima 106 v Alvarez, 257 AD2d 201 [1st Dept 1999]). Such an agreement allows a tenant who already has one home, and who is able to pay more than the legal rent for a second one, to use the law as a means of getting that second home in perpetuity at a bargain price. As Justice Wallach said in Rima, to countenance such an arrangement “would violate the fundamental policies and purposes of the statutory rent regulation scheme” (257 AD2d at 204).

*23 Seeking to defend the agreement, the tenants make essentially three arguments: that, on the facts of this case, enforcement of the agreement would violate no public policy; that the “negotiated settlement” exception to ESC § 2520.13 should apply here; and that the landlord’s claim is barred by the statute of limitations. All three arguments lack merit.

The basis for the tenants’ public policy argument is their assertion that, if the 1996 eviction proceeding had not been settled by the agreement in suit, only two outcomes were possible: either the tenants would have remained in the apartments at the legal rent, or they would have been evicted and the apartments would have been deregulated. Neither result, the tenants say, would serve the policy of the rent stabilization laws any better than the compromise result the parties reached. The assertion on which this argument rests is dubious, but even assuming the assertion is true, the conclusion is wrong. It is the policy of the rent stabilization laws that apartments should either be rented at no more than the legal maximum or deregulated. Deregulation, when the conditions for it are met, serves public policy by increasing the availability of housing on the open market. Agreements like the one at issue here distort the market without benefitting the people the rent stabilization laws were designed to protect.

The tenants also argue that settlements, especially court-approved settlements, should be encouraged, and therefore the exception in ESC § 2520.13 should be read broadly. Though the exception applies only to the withdrawal of a “complaint pending before the DHCE,” the tenants say that the absence of any such complaint in this case is a meaningless formality; the tenants could easily have filed such a complaint, and withdrawn it as part of the settlement. Thus, the tenants argue in substance, this case is within the spirit though not the letter of the exception.

We disagree. We find the agreement to be within neither the letter nor the spirit of the law, because it was not a bona fide settlement of the parties’ dispute. The argument for upholding the agreement would be stronger if, in 1996, the parties had had a dispute about the amount of the legal maximum rent, and had compromised at a figure above the tenants’ and below the landlord’s. But the “compromise” in this case put the rent roughly 50% higher than the highest rent the landlord could have demanded. The obvious purpose of the settlement was not to resolve a dispute about what the law permitted, but to achieve something the law undisputedly did not and does not permit.

*24 Finally, the tenants argue that, since the agreement was made in 1996, this action, brought in 2004, is barred by the six year statute of limitations provided by CPLR 213 (2) for “an action upon a contractual obligation or liability.” This argument misconceives the nature of a statute of limitations; it does not make an agreement that was void at its inception valid by the mere passage of time (Pacchiana v Pacchiana, 94 AD2d 721 [2d Dept 1983]).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
882 N.E.2d 875, 10 N.Y.3d 18, 853 N.Y.S.2d 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverside-syndicate-inc-v-munroe-ny-2008.