91 A.D.2d 934 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1983
Lead Opinion
— Order, Supreme Court, New York County (Shainswit, J.), entered August 6, 1982, which, inter alia, granted plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction compelling defendants to grant plaintiffs access to their respective apartments to permit the conversion of electricity from master to individual metering and denied the cross motion to dismiss the complaint, modified, on the law, without costs, to deny preliminary injunctive relief, grant the cross motions to dismiss the complaint and otherwise affirmed. The action, brought by the landlord and its managing agent of premises located at 301 East 21st Street, New York City, seeks a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief directing the tenants to permit the owner access to their apartments to facilitate the conversion of electricity in the 204-apartment complex from master to individual metering. Several of the tenants are members of a loosely formed tenants’association which had been organized by 156 tenants to deal with neighborhood conditions and the sufficiency of services provided by the landlord. Each tenant contributed $75 to become a member in the association. The individual members of the association were not named as defendants in the action, nor were they served with process. Service upon them was directed by Special Term, Part II, by means of personal service upon the attorney representing the tenants’ association. A supplemental order to show cause authorized service upon those tenants who were not members of the association by the affixation of the summons and the supplemental order to the doors of their apartments and by mailing same to their residence address. We are in agreement that the complaint should be dismissed as against the Conciliation and Appeals Board (CAB) and the city Department of Rent and Housing Maintenance, since no affirmative relief is sought as against those parties. However, we find that Special Term erred in failing to dismiss the complaint and deny injunctive relief on the jurisdictional grounds raised on the cross motions to dismiss. Despite the conclusory assertion that the attorney representing the tenants’ association agreed to accept service on behalf of the individual members of the association, assuming that such a representation had been made, the record is barren of any evidence sufficient to find that counsel was duly authorized by those tenants to act as their agent for the purpose of service. While any factual issue as to the authority of the attorney would ordinarily require a reference for a hearing, we find, under the facts of this case, that the joinder of, and the service of process upon this loosely formed tenants’ association were insufficient to confer personal jurisdiction over its individual members. This case raises in issue a critical dispute between the landlord and each of its tenants. The association, while it may have been formed to press for what the tenants believed to be needed improvements in the building, nevertheless, does not operate to stand in lieu of the tenant vis-a-vis the relationship of the tenant with the landlord (see Bartley v Walentas, 78 AD2d 310). This is particularly so in this case, where there is an issue as to the right of the lessor to have access to all of the apartments over the opposition of the individual tenants, who claim that the
Dissenting Opinion
I concur in the result on the basis that the initial determination should be made by the administrative agency. If it were not for that, we should proceed to determine the matter. Inasmuch as many of the tenants were served, it matters not whether the rest received personal service. There is no doubt that they had actual notice, and the issue of metering can be determined with reference to those who appear and be binding by estoppel against the others.