115 Misc. 2d 195 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1982
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
Final judgment entered April 28, 1981 reversed, with $30 costs, and final judgment directed in favor of tenant dismissing the petition.
This holdover proceeding was submitted on stipulated facts. Appellant Frederick Chin is a rent-stabilized tenant having entered into possession of his apartment premises in August, 1976 under a printed lease which contained a standard clause limiting occupancy “to the tenant and immediate family of tenant and to no others”. This clause was continued in subsequent renewals and extension agreements. In or about June, 1980, an unrelated male, Bruce Harlow, commenced residing in the premises with Chin, without the prior consent of the petitioner. Chin affirms that he and Harlow “constitute a family”, and that they “maintain a close and loving personal relationship at
The law in this department, set down subsequent to the decision below, is that an “immediate family” clause may not be invoked as a predicate for eviction if its application will result in unlawful discrimination (Hudson View Props, v Weiss, 86 AD2d 803, revg 109 Misc 2d 589, for the reasons stated by Asch, J., dissenting at Appellate Term and Wilk, J., at Civil Ct; Executive Law, § 296, subd 5, par [a]). Inasmuch as the circumstances here involve cohabitation by two adult males, a case of discrimination on the basis of marital status cannot be made; indeed, any discrimination practiced against tenant could only fairly be characterized as discrimination based upon sexual or affectional preference, a status not protected under the Executive Law.
Apart from considerations of the Executive Law, however, dismissal of the petition is warranted on other, more basic grounds. A determination of what constitutes a violation of a “substantial” obligation of a tenancy is to be made “with reference to the peculiar legal and factual setting in which it occurs” (Matter of Park East Land Corp. v Finkelstein, 299 NY 70, 74). Judicial notice can be taken that the vacancy rate for rental apartments in this city is virtually nonexistent. Persons are sharing apartments in increasing numbers due to both economic necessity and changing social mores. As has been recently stated in a related context, “The ‘nuclear family’ arrangement is no longer the only mode of family life in America. The realities of present day urban life allow many different types of nontraditional families.” (Matter of Adult Anonymous II, 88 AD2d 30, 35.) In the housing field, these are not ordinary times and “strict adherence to technical concepts of landlord and tenant law” which might have justified eviction in the past
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). The majority’s decision represents an ill-advised extension of the holding in Hudson View Props, v Weiss (86 AD2d 803) not warranted either by precedent, public policy, or sound logic. It is conceded that this appeal does not present an instance of unlawful discriminatory practices in the leasing of housing accommodations arising under section 296 (subd 5, par [a]) of the Executive Law. There is as yet no statutory prohibition against discrimination on the ground of sexual preference (assuming arguendo that this landlord is so motivated), and it is for the Legislature, not us, to establish additional categories of protection. “Absent a supervening statutory proscription, a landlord is free to do what he wishes with his property, and to rent or not to rent to any given person at his whim. The only restraints which the law has imposed upon free exercise of his discretion is that he may not use race, creed, color, national origin, sex, [disability], or marital status as criteria.” (Kramarsky v Stahl Mgt., 92 Misc 2d 1030, 1032.)
There being no proven violation of the Human Rights Law (Executive Law, art 15, § 290 et seq.) there is no cause for this court to reach out and strip from the landlord his hitherto unquestioned right to contractually limit occupancy to chosen individuals and their immediate families. To do so is to read out of almost every residential lease a clause which is not unconscionable per se and which has been traditionally construed as a valid expression of a landlord’s interest in passing upon those who are to occupy his property. By today’s decision, a landlord seemingly surrenders to the tenant any semblance of control upon his execution of the lease — a result which unduly tilts the delicate balance of landlord-tenant relationships.