VNO 100 West 33rd Street LLC v. Square One of Manhattan, Inc.

22 Misc. 3d 560
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedOctober 7, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 3d 560 (VNO 100 West 33rd Street LLC v. Square One of Manhattan, Inc.) 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
VNO 100 West 33rd Street LLC v. Square One of Manhattan, Inc., 22 Misc. 3d 560 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Arthur F. Engoron, J.

Capitalism is in chaos. Six months ago investment bank Bear Stearns collapsed. One month ago giant home mortgage lenders Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were placed under federal conservatorship. In the last several weeks, probably the most tumultuous time in Wall Street’s history, the venerable Lehman Brothers investment bank declared bankruptcy (the largest bankruptcy by far in American history); the federal government took over 80% of insurance behemoth American International Group; Merrill Lynch agreed to be bought by a large bank; the government approved emergency measures to help stabilize Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley; federal regulators took over Washington Mutual (the largest bank failure by far in American history); and Wachovia Bank, the nation’s fourth largest, is looking to sell its banking business. The financial landscape is littered with the fallen and the mortally wounded.

So what has all of this to do with the instant summary holdover proceeding? This court sees two connections. One is that the economy of New York City, so dependent on the fabulous salaries and famous bonuses paid to the wheelers and dealers of what, at least until recently, has been the financial capital of the world, will be facing hard times. Courts, no less than other public institutions, should foster efficiency in the local business community. When real estate, which is at the core of the current crisis, is unused or underutilized, the drag on capital formation is palpable. Furthermore, although Adam Smith’s “unseen hand” and the “miracle of the market” theories of capitalism have recently taken a bad beating, as a matter of elemental fairness businesses should be allowed the benefit of their bargains and held to the performance of their obligations. A deal is a deal.

Two is that while the reasons for the recent meltdown will be analyzed for generations, one salient feature is the exaltation of form over substance, and a lack of simple common sense. If a home mortgage had a high interest rate, it was worth purchasing, never mind that the principal amount was greater than the value of the property and that the mortgagor was about to [562]*562default. The more “sub-prime” mortgages that were purchased, the better the balance sheet looked; and if the masters of the universe were doing it, why, we can’t all fail, can we? How irrational can the exuberance be? The fundamentals were forgotten, and the focus was on short term gain.

Similarly, in this court’s humble opinion, an exaltation of form over substance and a lack of plain common sense permeate the procedural aspects of many summary proceedings. I believe the time has come to reexamine the shibboleth that as such proceedings are creatures of statute, every error is fatal, every mistake is substantial, and every hoop must be jumped through perfectly. The right to retain property is no more sacred than the right to reclaim it. This court will not require perfection, will not ignore plain meaning, will not kowtow to legal legerdemain, and will not be complicit in unnecessarily delaying the resolution, on their merits, of summary proceedings. In landlord-tenant matters, no less than in any other, common sense should prevail over inanity; substance should trump form; and the intent of the parties, not the sometimes imperfect expression thereof, should govern their relations.

All this is not to suggest that adherence to statutes and settled law is optional. And judicial discretion has its limits, witness the immutability of the statute of limitations (see CPLR 201). Nevertheless, judges need not be automatons. Along with the solemn obligation to “follow the law,” we are invested with the latitude to interpret and apply it to a dynamic society populated by fallible parties represented by harried attorneys. Let justice, not formality, be our lodestar. The statute of limitations cannot be extended, but for good cause shown it can be tolled!

At oral argument of the instant motion respondent’s learned counsel, vigorously representing his client, kept repeating that the subject lease did not use “the magic words,” to wit, “shall expire.” However, when this court interprets leases (and other contracts) the only “magic words” are “intent,” “spirit,” and “substance.” Judge Cardozo eloquently and inimitably expressed this in Wood v Duff-Gordon (222 NY 88, 91 [1917]): “The law has outgrown its primitive stage of formalism when the precise word was the sovereign talisman, and every slip was fatal. It takes a broader view to-day.”

For example, if I give you a thousand dollars and say, “Here’s a thousand dollars, it’s a gift,” it is a gift, and by definition it does not have to be repaid. If I give you a thousand dollars and say, “Here’s a thousand dollars, it’s a loan,” it is a loan, and by [563]*563law it is payable on demand. However, if I give you a thousand dollars and say, “Here’s a gift of a thousand dollars; you must repay it on demand,” the operative word is not “gift,” it is “repay,” because my intent is to make a loan. Conversely, if I give you a thousand dollars and say, “Here’s a loan of a thousand dollars; you can keep it,” the operative word is not “loan,” it is “keep,” because my intent is to make a gift. Almost a century after Judge Cardozo’s famous utterance, let its liberality be our guiding light.

Background

Petitioner commenced the instant summary proceeding to regain possession of certain property in midtown Manhattan that petitioner’s predecessor in interest leased to respondent. Respondent now moves to dismiss on the ground of lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a cause of action. Respondent contends (moving mem at 2), and this court agrees, that “the only materials needed [to decide] this motion are the lease, the notice of termination, and the petition.”

The subject lease (moving exhibit B), article 21 (I), “Termination or Relocation,” provides (at 35), as here relevant, as follows: “Landlord reserves the right to terminate this lease [if the landlord needs the premises to restructure the building] provided: (a) Landlord shall give Tenant at least one hundred twenty (120) days’ prior notice thereof, and (b) Landlord shall pay [certain moving-out and moving-in expenses].”

Petitioner served a “One Hundred and Twenty (120) Day Notice of Termination” (see moving exhibit A) claiming, essentially, that petitioner needed the premises to restructure the building, and that petitioner was, accordingly, invoking its right to terminate the tenancy in 120 days. After expiration of the 120 days, petitioner served the instant notice of petition and petition (moving exhibit A), the latter of which (if 6) states that “[t]he Lease was terminated ... for the reasons set forth in the Notice of Termination [annexed thereto].”

In support of the instant motion, respondent does not claim that petitioner does not need the subject premises to restructure the building; does not claim that petitioner failed to serve the predicate notice; does not claim that petitioner did not wait 120 days thereafter to commence the instant proceeding; and does not claim that petitioner failed to pay respondent any monies owed pursuant to article 21 (I) or any other provision. Rather, respondent argues (1) that article 21 (I) creates a condition subsequent rather than a conditional limitation, thus divesting [564]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 3d 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vno-100-west-33rd-street-llc-v-square-one-of-manhattan-inc-nyappterm-2008.