The Matter of Regina Metropolitan Co. v. NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal, Joel Raden v. W7879 , James Taylor v. 72A Realty Associates , Elizabeth Reich v. Belnord Partners

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 2020
Docket1-4
StatusPublished

This text of The Matter of Regina Metropolitan Co. v. NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal, Joel Raden v. W7879 , James Taylor v. 72A Realty Associates , Elizabeth Reich v. Belnord Partners (The Matter of Regina Metropolitan Co. v. NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal, Joel Raden v. W7879 , James Taylor v. 72A Realty Associates , Elizabeth Reich v. Belnord Partners) 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.

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The Matter of Regina Metropolitan Co. v. NYS Division of Housing and Community Renewal, Joel Raden v. W7879 , James Taylor v. 72A Realty Associates , Elizabeth Reich v. Belnord Partners, (N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 1 In the Matter of Regina Metropolitan Co., LLC, Respondent, v. New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal, Appellant, Leslie E. Carr et al., Intervenors-Respondents. (And Another Proceeding). ------------------------------------------- No. 2 Joel Raden et al., Appellants, v. W7879, LLC, et al., Respondents. ------------------------------------------- No. 3 James Taylor et al., Respondents, v. 72A Realty Associates, L.P., Appellant, et al., Defendant. ------------------------------------------- No. 4 Elizabeth Reich, et al., Appellants, v. Belnord Partners, LLC, et al., Respondents. Case No. 1: Ester Murdukhayeva, for appellant. Niles C. Welikson, for respondent. Darryl M. Vernon, for intervenor-respondents. Community Housing Improvement Program, Inc. et al.; Stephenie Futch, et al., amici curiae.

Case No. 2: Seth A. Miller, for appellants. Nativ Winiarsky, for respondents. Jacobus Gomes, et al., amici curiae.

Case No. 3: Joel M. Zinberg, for appellant. Robert E. Sokolski, for respondents. Stuart Davidson-Tribbs, et al., amici curiae.

Case No. 4: Darryl M. Vernon, for appellants. Deborah E. Riegel, for respondents. Peter Gunther, et al., amicus curiae.

PER CURIAM:

In our tripartite form of government, the Legislature determines the public policy of

this State, recalibrating rights and changing course when it deems such alteration

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appropriate as it grapples with enduring problems and rises to meet new challenges facing

our communities. It is the distinct role of the courts to interpret the laws to give effect to

legislative intent while safeguarding the constitutional rights of impacted individuals. We

fulfill both core functions in these four appeals, which present a common issue under the

Rent Stabilization Law (RSL): what is the proper method for calculating the recoverable

rent overcharge for New York City apartments that were improperly removed from rent

stabilization during receipt of J-51 benefits prior to our 2009 decision in Roberts v Tishman

Speyer Props., L.P. (13 NY3d 270 [2009]).

As explained below, when leave was granted in these cases, the RSL mandated that,

absent fraud, an overcharge was to be calculated by using the rent charged on the date four

years prior to filing of the overcharge complaint (the “lookback period”) as the “base date

rent,” adding any legal increases applicable during the four-year lookback period and

computing the difference between that legal regulated rent and the rent actually charged to

determine if the tenant was overcharged during the recovery period. In such cases,

consideration of rental history predating the four-year lookback and statute of limitations

period was prohibited. While the appeals to this Court were pending, the Legislature – as

is its prerogative – enacted the Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019

(HSTPA), making sweeping changes to the RSL, the majority of which are not at issue in

these appeals. As relevant here, Part F of the HSTPA includes amendments that, among

other things, extend the statute of limitations, alter the method for determining legal

regulated rent for overcharge purposes and substantially expand the nature and scope of

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owner liability in rent overcharge cases (see L 2019, ch 36, Part F). The tenants in these

cases urge us to apply the new overcharge calculation provisions to these appeals that were

pending at the time of the HSTPA’s enactment, some of which seek recovery of

overcharges incurred more than a decade before the new legislation.

The validity of Part F is not in question here – but significant issues are raised

concerning whether the presumption against retroactive application of statutes has been

rebutted and, if so, whether application of certain amendments relating to overcharge

calculation in Part F to these appeals involving conduct that occurred years prior to its

enactment comports with fundamental notions of substantial justice embodied in the Due

Process Clause. Retroactive application of the overcharge calculation amendments would

create or considerably enlarge owners’ financial liability for conduct that occurred, in some

cases, many years or even decades before the HSTPA was enacted and for which the prior

statutory scheme conferred on owners clear repose. Because such application of these

amendments to past conduct would not comport with our retroactivity jurisprudence or the

requirements of due process, we resolve these claims pursuant to the law in effect when

the purported overcharges occurred. Notwithstanding the hyperbole employed by our

dissenting colleagues, our analysis of the narrow legal issue presented by application of the

overcharge calculation amendments to these appeals turns entirely on conventional and

time-honored principles of judicial review. “We are, of course, mindful . . . of the

responsibility . . . to defer to the Legislature in matters of policymaking,” but it is the role

of the judicial branch “to interpret and safeguard constitutional rights and review

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challenged acts of our co-equal branches of government – not in order to make policy but

in order to assure the protection of constitutional rights” (Campaign for Fiscal Equity v

State of New York, 100 NY2d 893, 925, 931 [2003]). As to the HSTPA, today we fulfill

this quintessential judicial function in holding that a limited suite of enforcement

provisions may not be applied retroactively and opine in no way on the vast majority of

that legislation or its prospective application.

These rent overcharge cases arose in the wake of our 2009 decision in Roberts,

interpreting RSL provisions relating to New York City’s J-51 program, which offered tax

benefits to building owners who made capital improvements to their residential properties.

Buildings electing to receive J-51 benefits become subject to the rent stabilization scheme

(RSL [Administrative Code of City of NY] § 11-243[b], [i][1], [t]). From 1993 until the

enactment of the HSTPA in 2019, the RSL contained “luxury deregulation” provisions,

permitting an owner of a stabilized unit to deregulate if the rent exceeded a statutory

threshold and (1) the tenant vacated or (2) the tenants’ combined income exceeded a

statutory threshold (former RSL §§ 26-504.1, 26-504.2). As early as 1996, first in an

opinion letter and later promulgated as an agency regulation, the Division of Housing and

Community Renewal (DHCR) 1 took the position that statutory language precluding luxury

deregulation of apartments during receipt of J-51 benefits did not apply to buildings that

were already subject to the RSL prior to receipt of those benefits (see Roberts, 13 NY3d at

1 DHCR is the State agency tasked with administering the RSL and the J-51 program.

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281-282; former Rent Stabilization Code [RSC] [9 NYCRR] § 2520.11[r][5], [s][2]). In

Roberts, this Court rejected DHCR’s long-standing statutory interpretation and concluded

that luxury deregulation was unavailable in any building during receipt of J-51 benefits (13

NY3d at 285-287). In 2011, the Appellate Division held that Roberts applied retroactively

(Gersten v 56 7th Ave. LLC, 88 AD3d 189, 198 [1st Dept 2011], appeal withdrawn 18

NY3d 954 [2012]).

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