Skyview Holdings, LLC v. Cunningham

13 Misc. 3d 102
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedOctober 16, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 Misc. 3d 102 (Skyview Holdings, LLC v. Cunningham) 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
Skyview Holdings, LLC v. Cunningham, 13 Misc. 3d 102 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Per Curiam.

Order, dated June 20, 2005, reversed, without costs, petition reinstated, summary judgment of possession awarded to landlord on its nonprimary residence claim against tenant Cunningham, and matter remanded for further proceedings on the succession defense interposed by respondent Rowell.

The underlying notice of nonrenewal — sufficiently setting forth the facts supporting the landlord’s nonprimary residence claim — was sent by landlord via certified and regular mail on May 31, 2002, 92 days prior to the August 31, 2002 expiration date specified in the tenant’s most recent rent-stabilized renewal lease. The nonrenewal notice thus served as a proper predicate for the holdover summary proceeding, since it was timely served “at least 90 and not more than 150 days prior to the expiration of the lease term,” as required by the governing notice provision of the Rent Stabilization Code (see 9 NYCRR 2524.2 [c] [2]). The purpose of the 90-to-150-day nonrenewal notice — to communicate the landlord’s intention not to renew a stabilized lease and to provide a “window period” snapshot of the landlord’s reason(s) therefor — was fully served by the notice at issue. This is so even were we to assume, despite the absence of any sworn allegation on the point by tenant, that the notice was not actually received by tenant during the 90-to-150-day prelease expiration window period.

We are unpersuaded that the rule set forth in Matter of ATM One v Landaverde (2 NY3d 472 [2004]), requiring the addition [104]*104of five days to the 10-day statutory cure period for service by mail of notices requiring a tenant to rectify a claimed lease violation, should be extended beyond the narrow fact setting of that case. The rule enunciated in Landaverde was intended to “provide[ ] a practical and fair solution to [the] regulatory ambiguity” (Landaverde at 478) found to exist in the service and notice to cure provisions of the Emergency Tenant Protection Regulations there at issue (see 9 NYCRR 2508.1 [a]; 2504.1 [d]). Faced with a regulatory scheme that potentially might allow a tenant served by mail with a cure notice to remain unaware “ ‘of the date within which he or she may cure a [lease] violation until after that date has actually passed’ ” (id. at 476, quoting Matter of ATM One v Landaverde, 307 AD2d 922, 924 [2003]), and recognizing the “unpredictable results” (id. at 478) that such a scenario would create, the Court of Appeals concluded that promulgation of a so-called 10-day plus 5-day rule was “necessary ... to ensure that tenants are not disadvantaged by an owner’s choice of service method” (id.).

Reading the Landaverde opinion in context and in light of the issues presented (see Danann Realty Corp. v Harris, 5 NY2d 317, 322 [1959]), we decline tenant’s invitation to adopt a blanket rule requiring landlords to add five days to statutory notice periods upon the mailing of any and all notices “required by the rent regulations.” That the Landaverde rule was meant to be confined specifically and narrowly to the 10-day cure notice there involved is reflected in several passages of the Court’s opinion, including language declining to extend the five-day mailing allowance provided by CPLR 2103 to the commencement of summary proceedings generally (id. at 478) and its concluding statement “encouraging] DHCR to amend its regulations consistent with this determination in order to provide better guidance to parties who elect to serve notices to cure by mail” (id. [emphasis added]). Nor are any of the policy concerns giving rise to the “practical and fair solution” fashioned by the Landaverde court implicated in a situation where, as here, a 90-to-150-day notice of nonrenewal is served by mail. Unlike a 10-day notice to cure, a 90-to-150-day notice of nonrenewal does not require a tenant to undertake an affirmative act within narrow time constraints, but instead merely calls upon a tenant to elect whether to contest the merits of a landlord’s possessory claim following a lease termination date set months in advance or to vacate the demised premises in the interim. Thus, unlike a tenant who potentially may be deprived [105]*105of the full benefit of the mandated 10-day cure period by a landlord’s mailing of a notice to cure, a tenant who is served by mail with a nonrenewal notice within the 90-to-150-day period prescribed by the Code — even a notice whose delivery is unusually delayed — cannot reasonably be said to be “disadvantaged by an owner’s choice of service method” (Landaverde, 2 NY3d at 478).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Misc. 3d 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skyview-holdings-llc-v-cunningham-nyappterm-2006.