190 Misc. 593 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1948
Application pursuant to article 78 of the Civil Practice Act for an order reviewing the determination of the respondents, constituting the Temporary City Housing Bent Commission of the City of Hew York, which determination denied petitioner’s application for a certificate of eviction; and for related relief.
Petitioner is the owner of a seven-room one-family house located at 4817 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, Hew York. She purchased these premises in 1945 in order to provide a residence for members of her family, namely, her two married daughters and their veteran husbands. On October 25, 1946, she applied to the Office of Price Administration, then having jurisdiction, for a certificate of eviction, and on January 8, 1947, such certificate was issued authorizing her to evict the tenant “ solely for occupancy of the premises in question ” by her said daughters and sons-in-law, after the expiration of four months from October 25, 1946, all in accordance with the requirements of then existing law. (Emergency Price Control Act of 1942, as amd.; U. S. Code, tit. 50, Appendix, § 901 et seq.; and the rent regulations promulgated thereunder.) A thirty-day notice to vacate was served upon the tenant, and on March 10, 1947, a petition in summary proceedings was filed in the office of the clerk of the Municipal Court, Borough of Brooklyn, Eighth District. On the return day, March 19,1947, the tenant appeared by her attorney, and after a hearing, all of the parties, in person and by their respective attorneys, entered into a written stipulation of settlement, by which stipulation the following was agreed upon:
*595 “ 1. The tenant hereby appears in the above entitled proceeding ; and admits all of the allegations contained in the landlord’s petition.
“ 2. The landlord is to have a final order against the tenant and the undertenants immediately.
“ 3. The issuance of the warrant under said final order is however stayed up to and including Oct. 31st, 1947; on which date it shall issue without further notice.
“ 4. Neither the tenant nor anyone directly or indirectly on her behalf shall at any time apply to any Court or judge for a further stay of the issuance of the warrant, and the tenant shall deliver possession of the premises to the Landlord on or before Oct. 31st-, 1947.”
The stipulation was signed by the subtenant as well as the tenant, the former being the son-in-law of the latter. Said stipulation, opposite the signatures, was signed by the justice as follows:
“ So Ordered:
Dated: March 19, 1947.
Carroll
J. M. C.”
A final order based on this stipulation was entered on March 19, 1947, in favor of the landlord.
On September 17,1947, Local Law No. 66 of 1947,
Petitioner thereupon brought this application to review the determination of the respondent commission, upon the ground that its denial was arbitrary, unreasonable and unlawful, and in violation of petitioner’s rights.
Aside from the questioned constitutionality of Local Law No. 66 of 1947, which is already the subject of an appeal now pending in the Appellate Division, Second Department (Matter of Tartaglia v. McLaughlin, 190 Misc. 266
The two cases last cited were decided prior to the enactment of Local Law No. 66, and it is a rule of statutory construction that “ When a statute contains language which has previously been construed by the courts, it will be presumed that the Legislature intended that its meaning should be the same as that given to it by the courts [unless otherwise clearly indicated], (Pouch v. Prudential Ins. Co., 204 N. Y. 281, 288; Schieffelin v. Berry, 217 App. Div. 451, 460; affd. 243 N. Y. 603.) ” (Sulkowski v.
Under these circumstances, the respondent commission exceeded its powers in assuming to restrict the landlord’s right to possession under a final order in summary proceedings (Civ. Prac. Act, art. 83), by arbitrarily narrowing the language of the statute (Local Law No. 66,1947, subd. c, par. [2]), and particularly in the light of the prior judicial construction of the language. While it is true that the said statute (subd. m) empowers the commission to adopt regulations “ to effectuate the purposes of this section ”, it may not itself legislate beyond the authority of the statute, and it certainly may not, by mere regulation, circumvent the effect of judicial decisions with which it does not agree. Such power may only he exercised by the Legislature, not by an administrative agency.
In the case at bar, the petitioner and her husband, one of her married daughters and her husband, as well as three single children of the petitioner, or a total of seven people, live in a four-room apartment as one household. Bach married couple occupies one bedroom, and the three single children sleep in the living room. Petitioner’s 'other married daughter lives with her husband and two infant children in two basement rooms of a condemned house. Under the commission’s regulation and determination, petitioner has been unable to obtain possession of her own premises for members of her own household, children and grandchildren, even in spite of the fact that the tenant herself no longer occupies the premises, having herself sublet them to her own son-in-law. In my opinion, the second sentence of paragraph (1) of subdivision (b) of section 5 of article II of regulation II, is invalid, and the determination of the respondent commission cannot be justified in law, upon the facts here presented, nor as a matter of simple justice and common sense. Accordingly, its determination is set aside, and it is directed to issue a certificate of eviction forthwith. (Braunstein v. Swartz, 189 Misc. 791, supra; Matter of Chapman v. Ross, N. Y. L. J., Dec. 30, 1947, p. 1916, col. 3; City of New York v. Salod, 189 Misc. 1014; Ucci v. McBrian, 190 Misc. 14, supra.)
Settle order on notice.
Since validated by chapter 4 of Laws of 1948. — [Rep.
Since affd. without opinion 273 App. Div. 821. — [Rep.