Riverton Associates v. Knibb

3 Misc. 3d 193, 772 N.Y.S.2d 494, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 40
CourtCivil Court of the City of New York
DecidedJanuary 21, 2004
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Misc. 3d 193 (Riverton Associates v. Knibb) 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
Riverton Associates v. Knibb, 3 Misc. 3d 193, 772 N.Y.S.2d 494, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 40 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Rolando T. Acosta, J.

This summary holdover proceeding was tried before the court without a jury on September 23 and 30, 2003. At issue is [194]*194whether respondent has succession rights to the subject premises located at 2255 Fifth Avenue, apartment 10 E, New York, New York 10037. After considering all the testimony and exhibits the court finds in favor of petitioner.

The primary and novel issue for this court’s consideration is whether an occupant claiming succession of premises subject to the Rent Stabilization Code can establish succession rights where that occupant affirmatively engages in deceptive acts, such as forging a renewal lease, that effectively prevent a landlord from timely asserting his claim to possession of the subject premises.

A grandchild may succeed to a rent-stabilized apartment under the Rent Stabilization Code as a traditional family member provided that she has resided, as her primary residence, with the tenant of record for at least two years before the tenant permanently vacated the apartment. (Rent Stabilization Code [9 NYCRR] § 2523.5 [b] [1]; § 2520.6 [o] [1].) The burden is on the prospective tenant to establish succession rights by a preponderance of the evidence. (300 E. 34th St. Co. v Habeeb, 248 AD2d 50, 55-56 [1st Dept 1997].) While the Rent Stabilization Code provides four factors which may be considered in determining whether a housing accommodation subject to the Code is occupied as a primary residence, by the Code’s express language, a court is not limited to these four factors in determining whether a primary residence has been established. (9 NYCRR 2520.6 [u].)1

In the present case, respondent established through birth and death certificates, as well as through testimonial evidence, that she was in fact Elaine Alliks’s granddaughter (Elaine Alliks was the tenant of record). The harder question for the court is whether respondent lived with Alliks in the subject premises as [195]*195her primary residence for two years prior to Alliks’s death.2 Respondent, having chosen to live a lifestyle devoid of the usual trappings associated with urban living, failed to produce a single document traditionally recognized as indicia of primary residence to corroborate her claim that she lived in the apartment for the required two years. The absence of documentary proof notwithstanding, respondent established through testimonial evidence that she resided in the subject premises as her primary residence for two years prior to Alliks’s death.

First, this court credits respondent and her witnesses’ testimony that 90-year-old Elaine Alliks required help in her advanced age, especially given the fact that her 92-year-old husband was living in a nursing home. The family decided that respondent, who had been separated from her husband for over 20 years, was in the best position to care for her grandmother, particularly given the situation of other family members. Respondent’s mother (Claudette Knibb) was 72 years old at the time of trial, and respondent’s sister (Robin Johnson) is married, has a son, and lives in the Bronx. Moreover, respondent credibly testified that she had been living in the subject premises since the early 1990s for the express purpose of taking care of her grandparents. Her testimony was corroborated by her sister and a neighbor, a longtime tenant residing across the hall from the subject premises and with no apparent interest in having respondent succeed to the apartment.

That petitioner’s manager had no knowledge of respondent prior to the year 2000 is hardly dispositive of the relevant issue, namely, whether respondent did in fact live in the subject premises. (300 E. 34th St. Co. v Habeeb, 248 AD2d 50, 53 [1st Dept 1997], citing Matter of Rose Assoc. v State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 121 AD2d 185 [1st Dept 1986].) Moreover, petitioner, as in 300 E. 34th St. Co. v Habeeb, offered no evidence to establish that respondent actually lived elsewhere during the relevant time in question. (Id. at 53.) Accordingly, this court, crediting respondent’s witnesses, finds that respondent established that she lived in the subject premises as her primary residence for the required two-year period.

Contrary to petitioner’s argument at trial, a court may find “primary residence” relying solely on testimonial evidence. (300 E. 34th St. Co. v Habeeb, supra, 248 AD2d at 55.) In facts re[196]*196markably similar to the present case, the Appellate Division reversed the Appellate Term for, inter alia, “effectively impos[ing] a legal requirement that a prospective tenant provide documentary evidence of the change of address, a construction required neither by statute nor by controlling case law.” (300 E. 34th St. Co. v Habeeb, supra, 248 AD2d at 55.) The Court went on to state that “[t]he question posed by the Appellate Term’s ruling then, is whether documentary evidence is necessary as well as sufficient. We conclude that it is not.” (Id.) “Although we have found ‘the traditional indicia of primary residence,’ including driver’s license, voter’s registration, tax returns, telephone and bank records, to be competent evidence establishing a period of residency ... we have not found it to be required evidence. While documentation, or the absence thereof, might be a significant factor ... in evaluating primary residence, especially in the case of the dubious credibility of witnesses, it would not be a dispositive factor . . . especially when there is a preponderance of credible personal testimony.” (Id. [emphasis added and citations omitted]; see also 243 Realty v Buksha, NYLJ, Dec. 11, 1991, at 25, col 2 [Civ Ct, NY County] [respondent established that she lived with her father as a primary residence for more than two years through testimonial evidence from three other neighbors who saw her in the building frequently over a period of more than two years]; cf. 23 Jones St. Assoc. v Keebler-Beretta, 284 AD2d 109 [1st Dept 2001] [“(w)hile documentary evidence can be significant in determining primary residence (in a rent controlled apartment), it is not essential, and it does not necessarily preponderate over inconsistent testimonial evidence”].)3

But the court’s inquiry does not end here. The court is now constrained to consider the effect of respondent admittedly forging her grandmother’s signature on the renewal lease after the death of her grandmother. For the reasons stated in this decision, the court finds that respondent forfeited her right to succeed to her grandmother’s apartment when she forged her grandmother’s signature. Respondent’s forgery prejudiced the landlord by preventing it from timely, and on its own terms, asserting its right to recover possession of the subject premises. In [197]*197addition, respondent put herself in control of the time sequence to assert her affirmative defense of succession.

In very candid testimony, respondent conceded that she and Ms. Alliks hid her presence in the subject premises from the landlord primarily at Ms. Alliks’s request. Respondent adapted a lifestyle based primarily on her ability to prevent the landlord from finding out that she resided in her grandmother’s apartment. She did not subscribe to any magazines or newspapers, nor listed her grandmother’s apartment as her residence in any contact with the outside world. Indeed, it appears that to conceal respondent’s presence in the apartment, Ms.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Misc. 3d 193, 772 N.Y.S.2d 494, 2004 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverton-associates-v-knibb-nycivct-2004.