Whitby Operating Corp. v. Schleissner

117 Misc. 2d 794, 459 N.Y.S.2d 203, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4087
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 117 Misc. 2d 794 (Whitby Operating Corp. v. Schleissner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitby Operating Corp. v. Schleissner, 117 Misc. 2d 794, 459 N.Y.S.2d 203, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4087 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Kristin Booth Glen, J.

This case raises important issues which directly affect the ability of tenants to organize effectively in response to conditions which deprive them of safe and habitable accommodations. The right to form and participate meaningfully in tenants’ organizations implicates the First Amendment rights of free speech and association, and involves a State and local statutory scheme which attempts to balance the rights and obligations of landlords and tenants. All of these considerations must figure in a resolution of the issues presented on this motion.

As more fully discussed below, a number of tenants in the Whitby Hotel (the Hotel), a residential and transient hotel located in midtown Manhattan, have formed a ten[795]*795ants’ association (the Association) which has engaged in rent strikes and other actions over the past several years. The landlord, Whitby Operating Corp. (Whitby) moves here to enjoin the Association from collecting and holding the rent of individual tenants during the present rent strike, and further moves to enjoin the Association and its members1 from displaying rent strike signs on the windows and doors of their apartments and on the outside of the building appurtenant to their apartments.

Plaintiffs rely primarily on two Appellate Division cases2 in support of the relief they request, Ansonia Assoc. v Ansonia Residents’ Assn. (78 AD2d 211), on the collection issue, and Alcoa Residences v Association of Tenants of Lincoln Towers (28 AD2d 831), on the issue of rent strike signs. The applicability or the binding effect of those decisions may not, however, be reached without consideration of the particular facts of this case, the applicability of section 230 of the Real Property Law, and the continually evolving explication of First Amendment rights by State and Federal courts, particularly several recent decisions of the United States Supreme Court. Accordingly, these three matters will be discussed prior to consideration of Ansonia and Alcoa.

FACTS

More than two years ago, at some time prior to April, 1980, a number of tenants in the hotel protested the conditions there, including numerous violations placed on it by city agencies, by joining together in an association [796]*796and commencing an informal rent strike.3 That strike was settled with a stipulation which provided for certain rent abatements for the tenants and an agreement by Whitby to repair the violations.4 Apparently, Whitby failed to live up to the stipulation, because a second rent strike followed sometime thereafter, causing Whitby to bring nonpayment actions against participating tenants. That rent strike wás “resolved” by a second stipulation made before a Housing Court Judge5 on February 3, 1981.

THE 1981 STIPULATION

The February stipulation provided, inter alia, that the prior stipulation, including the list of violations which were to have been corrected pursuant to it, be fully incorporated. Inspections of individual apartments were to be made, and a new list of necessary repairs drawn up. The “old” repairs were to be completed within 60 days, and the “new” repairs within 90. Various promises regarding elevator service, cleaning of public areas, access to the laundry room, and the hiring of a new managing agent were made. A procedure for resolving disputes concerning the terms of the stipulation before the Housing Court Judge was also provided.

Most significant for this proceeding, the remainder of the stipulation concerned the transactions between Whitby and the Association, not the individual tenants sued. The Association was to turn over a portion of the previously withheld rent moneys it held in escrow under the 1980 stipulation and to give an accounting for funds presently held. A payment schedule was devised for those funds, conditioned on the completion of various percentages of the listed repairs. These payments were clearly to be made by the Association, on behalf of its members. An address was [797]*797specified for correspondence to the Association by Whitby, and Whitby agreed to pay legal fees to the attorney for the Association. Finally the stipulation provided: “It is further specifically understood and agreed, that peter schleissner and Austin colyer, members of the tenants association, agree that they are acting under a fiduciary relationship and further agrees to abide by any direction of the Court with regard to disbursement of the rent money presently being held and to be held by the tenants association or any direction given to them in writing by their attorney with regard to the disbursement of any monies being held by the tenants association, and in such event of violation of the order or of the direction of their attorney, shall subject them to immediate contempt.”

In short, although the underlying legal actions were brought against individual tenants, Whitby acknowledged and accepted the Association as their collective voice. Moreover, Whitby took advantage of the Association as both the holder and payor of previously collected rents, and the collector of future rents, in escrow, until all repairs were completed.

SUBSEQUENT PROCEEDINGS

There is no dispute that prompt and accurate accountings were given, nor that rents were paid through May, 1982.6 Subsequently, however, the tenants and their Association began a third rent strike, this time because of conditions in the hotel resulting from a strike of the hotel’s building workers.7

Whitby then brought orders to show cause in Civil Court, Housing Part, against 31 individual tenants. It requested a hearing pursuant to paragraph 14 of the 1981 stipulation, judgments of possession and rent arrears against each of the tenant respondents, and/or payment of all rent arrearages into Civil Court “pending resolution of its disputes under the stipulation”. On June 25, the Hous[798]*798ing Court Judge denied Whitby’s applications in their entirety.8

THE INSTANT PROCEEDING

On July 30, Whitby commenced the instant proceeding by service of a summons and complaint for permanent injunction and punitive damages. Simultaneously it brought an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue which brought on the instant motion. That order contained a temporary restraining order which was signed by Justice Riccobono on August 2. The temporary restraining order enjoined the Association from continuing solicitation and collection of rents from individual tenants, and from releasing any rent moneys already on deposit except pursuant to a court order. On the return date, upon oral application, the stay was continued until determination of this motion, but an oral application for a similar stay of the exhibition of rent strike signs was denied. Of course, in determining this motion, this court is not bound by any of the prior temporary restraining orders or stays (see Ansonia Assoc. v Ansonia Residents’ Assn., 78 AD2d 211, 213, supra). For the reasons below, I dissolve that stay and deny that portion of Whitby’s motion for preliminary injunction of collection of rents by the Association.

THE NECESSITY FOR A PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 Misc. 2d 794, 459 N.Y.S.2d 203, 1982 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitby-operating-corp-v-schleissner-nysupct-1982.