Rosenshein v. Heyman

18 Misc. 3d 109
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedDecember 27, 2007
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Misc. 3d 109 (Rosenshein v. Heyman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosenshein v. Heyman, 18 Misc. 3d 109 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Memorandum.

Order affirmed without costs.

The primary issues in this nonpayment proceeding concern the proper interpretation of the parties’ preferential rent rider and the effect on the parties’ agreement of the 2003 amendment (L 2003, ch 82, § 6) to the Rent Stabilization Law of 1969 permitting an owner to discontinue a preferential rent upon a renewal or a vacancy lease. This amendment requires that the Rent Stabilization Code provide, inter alia,

“that where the amount of rent charged to and paid by the tenant is less than the legal regulated rent for the housing accommodation, the amount of rent for such housing accommodation which may be charged upon renewal or upon vacancy thereof may, at the option of the owner, be based upon such previously established legal regulated rent, as adjusted by the most recent applicable guidelines increases and any other increases authorized by law.”

Tenant moved into the subject apartment on January 1, 1995 pursuant to a lease executed by a receiver as landlord. The lease stated that tenant’s monthly rent would be $535 and did not state that this amount was a preferential rent, nor was a preferential rent rider attached to the lease. On November 1, 1995, tenant and the receiver executed a one-year renewal lease at a rental of $545.70, which included an authorized guideline increase of $10.70 per month. The renewal form did not state that the renewal rent was a preferential rent and, again, no preferential rent rider was attached to the renewal form. The record is silent as to the contents of the rent registrations, if any, during the first two years of tenant’s occupancy.

Beginning with tenant’s November 1996 renewal, all of tenant’s renewal leases contained preferential rent riders. These riders set forth the amount of the purported legal regulated [111]*111rent (the 1996 lease states that this is $860.46) and provided that “during the term of the tenant’s occupancy,” tenant would be charged a preferential rent. Each rent rider then set forth the amount of the preferential rent “for the term of this Renewal Lease.” Each rider stated that the preferential rent was personal to tenant and would not inure to her successors or assigns. Paragraph (4) of the riders stated that the rent

“for the term of this renewal lease and any renewal leases which the tenant may enter into shall be the preferential rent set forth herein, subject to adjustment in accordance with the Rent Stabilization law [sic], applicable orders of the Rent Guidelines Board . . . and any other adjustment which may be authorized by a court or agency with appropriate jurisdiction.”

The 1996 rider also stated that it was acknowledged that the preference “is granted to the Tenant in exchange for the Tenant’s acceptance of the Owner’s offer as a result of the receiver . . . renting to the Tenant at below market rent.” In the subsequent riders, the acknowledgment was changed to state that the “preference is granted to the Tenant in exchange for the Tenant’s acceptance of the Owner’s offer due to a temporary rent decrease in the market.” The last rider was executed on April 25, 2003, prior to the June 20, 2003 effective date of the 2003 amendment. By letter dated March 10, 2005, landlords advised tenant that they were discontinuing the preferential rent, claiming that this was their right under the 2003 amendment, and they offered to renew tenant’s lease at the claimed legal regulated rent of $1,041.83 for a one-year lease, or $1,072.02 for a two-year lease. Tenant refused to sign the 2005 renewal and continued to pay rent at the rate of her last preferential rent. Thereafter, landlords commenced this nonpayment proceeding, seeking the difference between what tenant had paid and the legal regulated rent for a one-year renewal lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Misc. 3d 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenshein-v-heyman-nyappterm-2007.