300 N.Y. 140 | NY | 1949
In this summary proceeding, the landlord has appealed directly to this court from a decision of the Municipal Court of the City of New York granting to the tenant a final order "dismissing the Petition without prejudice to Landlord's right to start a new proceeding after compliance with the Sharkey Law". The enactment so cited is Local Law No. 73 of 1949 of the City of New York. (Administrative Code of City of New York, § U41-7.0.)
A question in respect of our jurisdiction must first be disposed of. An appeal to this court may be taken "as of right, from a judgment or order of a court of record of original jurisdiction which finally determines an action or special proceeding where the only question involved on the appeal is the validity of a statutory provision of the state or of the United States under the constitution of the state or of the United States; and on any such appeal only the constitutional question shall be considered and determined by the court" (N.Y. Const., art. VI, § 7, subd. [2]. So, Civ. Prac. Act, § 588, subd. 4). The local law in question is a "statutory provision of the state" within the meaning of the above words of the State Constitution. Whether that local law is valid under the Federal and State Constitutions is the only question here involved. Hence this direct appeal to us is rightly here. (Matter of Rudack v. *145 Valentine,
The local law declares the existence within the city of New York of a serious emergency arising from a shortage of apartments and from demands for excessive rent increases. The local law makes also this declaration (subd. a): "Unless evictions from such accommodations are regulated, disruptive practices and abnormal conditions will produce serious threats to the health, safety and general welfare of the inhabitants of the city." The policy of the local law as therein declared is "to impose certain additional restrictions upon the right to evict tenants from apartments and upon increases in rents for apartments in the city, for the purpose of alleviating the present housing emergency and preventing abuses."
The local law further says:
"c. Rents not to exceed maximum. It shall be unlawful for any person to demand, accept or receive from any tenant for the use or occupancy of any apartment a rent therefor greater than the rent which was being received by the landlord for said apartment on March first, nineteen hundred and forty-nine, unless the [temporary city housing rent] commission shall by appropriate order authorize the collection of a higher rent for said apartment.
"The commission is hereby authorized to adjust the rent of any apartment within the city of New York, due and payable therefor after March first, nineteen hundred and forty-nine, to such amount as it may deem just and reasonable consistent with the emergency, provided that the landlord shall allege and prove that he is presently providing substantially the same services, facilities, accommodations and maintenance which the landlord was legally obliged to provide on June thirtieth, nineteen hundred and forty-seven, and further provided that such rent so adjusted by the commission shall in no event be less *146 than the rent payable therefor on the first day of March, nineteen hundred and forty-nine, except that the commission shall have the power by regulation or order to decrease the maximum rent for any apartment, if the commission should find that the landlord has decreased the services, facilities, accommodations, or maintenance to which the tenant was entitled on June thirtieth, nineteen hundred and forty-seven. * * *
"d. Evictions. No tenant shall be removed from any apartment by action or proceeding to evict or to recover possession, by exclusion from possession, or otherwise, nor shall any action or other proceeding be commenced for the collection of any rent greater than the rent due and payable on the first day of March, nineteen hundred and forty-nine or for non-payment of such greater rent unless the commission has certified that such rent for the non-payment of which the removal is sought or for the collection of which judgment is demanded, has before the commencement of such action or proceeding, been certified as just and reasonable consistent with the emergency, by the commission * * *.
"e. Eviction certificate; application required. Prior to the institution of any summary proceedings or any other action or proceeding to evict a tenant or to recover possession of an apartment, except for non-payment of rent no greater than that which was being received by the landlord for said apartment on March first, nineteen hundred forty-nine, the person instituting such action or proceeding shall file in triplicate with the commission, a verified application for a certificate of eviction. Such application shall contain a detailed statement of the facts upon which such action or proceeding is based. The commission shall promptly transmit a copy of such application to the department of housing and buildings and the department of health, which departments shall promptly furnish the commission with such information or reports as the commission shall require concerning the premises and the tenants thereof, described in the application filed pursuant to this subdivision.
"The commission shall, as promptly as is practicable, render its determination granting or denying a certificate of eviction under subdivision d of this section and shall promptly notify the person filing such application for such certificate, of such determination." *147
The facts of the case in hand are briefly these: After the tenant's lease expired in 1943, he continued to occupy his apartment at a rent fixed by the Federal housing authority. On August 23, 1949, the rent was increased by that authority. When the tenant refused to pay the increase, the landlord brought the present summary proceeding to dispossess him and for recovery of the rent unpaid, though no certificate had been obtained from the temporary city housing rent commission. Taking his stand upon the local law in question, the tenant denied liability for rent in excess of that paid by him on March 1, 1949, and, as we have seen, the court below sustained him in that position.
The Municipal Court of the City of New York is a court of record (Judiciary Law, §
Summary proceedings to recover possession of real property are governed by article 83 of the Civil Practice Act. In such a proceeding, a landlord may dispossess his tenant for nonpayment of rent and at the same time have judgment for rent in arrears. (Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 1410, 1425.) The present cause is such a proceeding.
The Home Rule Amendment of the State Constitution says (art. IX, § 12): "Every city shall have power to adopt and amend local laws not inconsistent with the constitution and laws of the state relating to its property, affairs or government. Every city shall also have the power to adopt and amend local laws not inconsistent with this constitution and laws of the state, and whether or not such local laws relate to its property, affairs or government, in respect to the following subjects: * * * the government and regulation of the conduct of its inhabitants and the protection of their property, safety and health." (See, too, City Home Rule Law, §§ 11, 12.)
We have, then, here before us this question of law: Is the local law consistent with article 83 of the Civil Practice Act — the State statute which regulates summary proceedings in courts of record? To our minds the only admissible answer is "No". As appears by the words we have quoted from subdivisions *148
d and e of the local law, the council of the city (in accordance with the policy declared in subdivision a) has imposed prerequisite "additional restrictions" upon the right of a landlord to evict a tenant from an apartment in the city. The local law is, therefore, inconsistent with article 83 of the Civil Practice Act and in that respect runs foul of the limitation laid down by the above words of the Home Rule Amendment of the State Constitution (see Matter of Tartaglia v.McLaughlin,
But the void eviction provisions of subdivisions d and e are not the whole of the local law. The rent fixing provisions of subdivision c remain to be discussed. Whether subdivision c can stand alone or must fall with subdivisions d and e is a question to which we now turn in the light of the separability clause found in subdivision o. This question is one of legislative purpose, namely: Would the city council have enacted the local law if it had been aware that the eviction provisions were invalid? The answer does not turn upon the division of the local law into sections or subdivisions. We have set forth the text of the local law at some length earlier in this opinion. As we read that text, the restrictions upon the right to evict tenants and the restrictions upon rent increases were regarded by the city council as being equally essential to the declared purpose of their local law. Hence the one set of restrictions cannot be separated from the other except by a remodeling of the law on a scale which, as we believe, would be beyond the judicial power (see People ex rel. Alpha Portland Cement Co. v. Knapp,
The foregoing considerations are decisive of this case. Accordingly we express no opinion as to other constitutional questions that have here been argued.
The order should be reversed, without costs, and the matter remitted to the Municipal Court of the City of New York for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
LEWIS, CONWAY, DESMOND, DYE, FULD and BROMLEY, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *149