B.N. REALTY ASSOCIATES, Aрpellant, v BEN LICHTENSTEIN, Respondent, et al., Defendant.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, New York
October 13, 2005
801 N.Y.S.2d 271
Plaintiff B.N. Reаlty Associates (BNRA), a landlord, commenced this action in 1994 to recover $42,544.32 in rent and/or use and occupancy that defendant-respondent Ben Lichtenstein and his former wife (the nonappearing codefendant) allegedly owe for their occupancy of an apartment in BNRA’s building from December 1, 1988 through July 1, 1993. In his answer to the complaint, Lichtenstein asserted 17 affirmative defenses and six counterclaims. The first affirmative defense set forth in Lichtenstein’s answer was lack of personal jurisdiction, based on the claim that Lichtenstein had not beеn properly served with process.
For about four years after the service of Lichtenstein’s answer, the action remained dormant. Then, in April 1998, BNRA
In August 1998, Lichtenstein filed a voluntary chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, thereby automatically staying proceedings in this action. Lichtenstein’s petition acknowledged BNRA’s claim against him for back rent for the period at issue in this action, аnd did not indicate that such claim was either “contingent,” “unliquidated,” or “disputed.” Although the petition did not disclose any counterclaims, setoffs or affirmative defenses that Lichtenstein allegedly had against BNRA, it did disclose the pendency of the instant action. In December 1999, BNRA commenced an adversary proceeding in the bankruptcy case. BNRA’s complaint in the adversary proceeding objected to Lichtenstein’s receiving a discharge in bankruptcy on the ground that Lichtenstein’s allegedly fraudulent conduct constituted a bar to his discharge under
In September 2000, Lichtenstein moved to dismiss his own bankruptcy petition. In response, BNRA cross-moved for, among other relief, summary judgment on its complaint in the adversary proceeding. By order dated February 14, 2002, the Bankruptcy Court denied Lichtenstein’s motion, granted BNRA’s cross motion for summary judgment denying Lichtenstein a discharge, lifted the automatic stay of litigation against Lichtenstein, and awarded BNRA attorneys’ fees (subsequently assessed against Lichtenstein in the amount of $25,000). In effect, the Bankruptcy Court dismissed Lichtenstein’s petition.1
In April 2003, BNRA moved to restore this action to Supreme Court’s calendar, and for summary judgment holding Lichtenstein liable to it for the damages sought in the complaint, plus prejudgment interest, costs and attorneys’ fees. BNRA sought summary judgment on the ground that Lichtenstein’s failure to list any alleged counterclaims, setoffs or affirmative defenses against BNRA in his bankruptcy petition deprived him of standing to assert such matters in this action. Lichtenstein, in addition to opposing the motion, cross-moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground of laches or, in the alternative, for a
In the order entered November 3, 2003, Supreme Court granted BNRA’s motion insofar as it sought to restore the action to the calendar, but denied the motion insofar as it sought summary judgment in BNRA’s favor. The court denied Lichtenstein’s cross motion to dismiss the complaint, but did order a traverse hearing to resolve the jurisdictional issue. When the traverse hearing was convened, BNRA was unable to produce a process server to testify. In the order entered February 24, 2004, the court dismissed the complaint on the ground that, at the traverse hearing, BNRA had failed to prove valid service of process. BNRA appeals from both of these orders.
We first address the appeal from the February 2004 order dismissing the complaint for want of proof of valid service of proсess, since the substantive issues raised by the appeal from the November 2003 order would be academic if Lichtenstein’s jurisdictional defense had merit. The record establishes, however, that, contrary to the motion court’s view, Lichtenstein has waived his jurisdictional defense as a matter of law.
During the pendency of this action (and more than a year before the filing of the bankruptcy petition), the Legislature (by L 1996, ch 501, § 1) amended
We now turn to BNRA’s appeal from the November 2003 order, which, insofar as appealed from, denied BNRA’s motion for summary judgmеnt and directed that a traverse hearing be held to determine the merits of Lichtenstein’s jurisdictional defense. Initially, we note that the portion of the November 2003 order concerning the traverse hearing is moot, since the traverse hearing has already been held, and thе jurisdictional issue was determined by the subsequent February 2004 order, which we have addressed in the immediately preceding paragraph. Accordingly, we dismiss as academic the portion of BNRA’s appeal from the November 2003 order that seeks review of that order’s direction to hold a traverse hearing.
At this point, we reach the question of whether the motion court, in its November 2003 order, correctly denied BNRA’s motion for summary judgment holding Lichtenstein liable for the principal amount sought in the complaint, and dismissing his counterclaims. As previously indicated, the basis on which BNRA moved for summary judgment was Lichtenstein’s omission from his now-dismissed bankruptcy petition of the counterclaims, offsets and defenses he now asserts against BNRA in this action. Citing Kunica v St. Jean Fin., Inc. (233 BR 46 [SD NY 1999], amended on other grounds 63 F Supp 2d 342 [SD NY 1999]), BNRA argues that Lichtenstein’s omission from his bankruptcy petition of his present counterclaims, offsets and defеnses deprives him of standing to continue to assert such matters in this action now that the bankruptcy proceeding has been dismissed. We disagree.
The Bankruptcy Code provides, in relevant part, that the termination of a bankruptcy case by dismissal (rather than by discharge) “revеsts the property of the estate in the entity in which such property was vested immediately before the commencement of the case” (
At first blush, Kunica might appear to support a finding of no standing in this case. Closer inspection reveals, however, that Kunica is distinguishable, even aside from the fact that it involved a corporate debtor’s chapter 11 bankruptcy case rather than, as here, an individual debtor’s chapter 7 case. The Kunica court observed that it “militate[d] in favor” of the finding of no standing in that case that, “given that Sci-O-Tech [the debtor] obtained its dismissal after its [bankruptcy] case was fully administered and all of its assets scheduled, it arguably obtained the functional equivalent of a discharge” (233 BR at 55 [emphasis added]). Specifically, the Sci-O-Tech bankruptcy case had been dismissed after Sci-O-Tech, with court approval, had sold substantially all of its assets (other than the undisclosed claims) and had distributed the proceeds of the sale to its creditors (id. at 51-52, 55). Thus, even though Sci-O-Tech did not formally receive a discharge, the end result of the dismissed bankruptcy proceeding was that Sci-O-Tech’s creditors were left without recourse (aside from the undisclosed claims) to recover what Sci-O-Tech owed them—which, as the court said, was “the functional equivalent of a discharge.” In this case, by contrast, Lichtenstein’s bankruptcy case did not result in any impairment of his creditors’ ability to collect their debts from him once the automatic stay was lifted. Rather, the case was dismissed before there had been any administration of assets or restructuring of debt. Since Lichtenstein thus did not obtain “the functional equivalent of a discharge” as a result of his bankruptcy filing, the dismissal of the bankruptcy case had the effect, pursuant to
BNRA further argues that, even if Lichtenstein has standing to pursue his alleged counterclaims, defenses and setoffs in this
For the foregoing reasons, BNRA is not entitled, at this juncture, to summary judgment in its favor on the ultimate issue of liability. On this record, however, BNRA is entitled to partial summary judgment dismissing Lichtenstein’s tenth affirmative defensе of laches, and we modify the November 2003 order to grant such relief. To the extent Lichtenstein’s claim of laches is based on BNRA’s having permitted this action to lie dormant for certain extended periods of time, he has not stated a defense, as a matter of law, since he has not demonstrated that such periods of dormancy in the litigation (in which he evidently acquiesced) caused him any cognizable prejudice (see Matter of Barabash, 31 NY2d 76, 81 [1972]). To the extent Lichtenstein asserts the laches defense on the basis of BNRA’s delay in commencing this action at law (which was timely under the applicable six-year statute of limitations [
