The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (“FHLMC”) brought this declaratory judgment action seeking a determination that an exemption from New York City’s Rent Stabilization Law for housing that is cooperatively owned, see N.Y. City Admin. Code § 26-504, continues to apply even upon foreclosure, or alternatively, that application of the Rent Stabilization Law to previously exempt housing violates the Takings Clause of the United States Constitution, U.S. Const, amend. V.
*47 The dispute arose from the following facts. In July 1986, FHLMC became the assignee of a $1.45 million mortgage on a multi-family apartment dwelling located in Brooklyn, New York. At the time the FHLMC acquired its mortgage lien, the building consisted exclusively of rental units, all of which were subject to the provisions of the New York City Rent Stabilization Law, see N.Y. City Admin. Code § 26-501, et seq. After the FHLMC’s acquisition of the mortgage lien, the building was converted to cooperative ownership, and title to the building passed to the 101 Lincoln Tenants Corporation (the “co-op corporation”). The FHLMC approved the conversion on November 16,1989. Three of eighty-three units in the building were purchased by existing tenants; seventeen units were purchased by outsiders with no prior rental relationship with the building. The remaining units, rented by existing tenants who declined the purchase option, remained rent stabilized; these units are not the subject of the instant appeal.
Within two years after the conversion, the co-op corporation defaulted on its mortgage, and FHLMC instituted foreclosure proceedings. A judgment of foreclosure was entered on October 8, 1991, and in June, 1993 FHLMC purchased the property at public auction. Upon completion of the foreclosure, the proprietary leases were cancelled. FHLMC then commenced this declaratory judgment action in federal district court, seeking a ruling as to whether, upon dissolution of the co-op corporation, the units revert to rent-stabilized status.
On cross-motions for summary judgment, Judge Glasser granted judgment for the defendant.
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. v. New York State Div. of Housing and Community Renewal,
The Court of Appeals answered the state law question in the affirmative, holding that rent stabilization applies to formerly cooperative housing that, because of foreclosure, has reverted to rental status,
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. v. New York State Div. of Housing and Community Renewal,
Rent control is a controversial subject, and some have argued that it offends the Takings Clause of the Constitution as a physical or regulatory taking of the landlord’s property.
See
Richard A. Epstein,
Takings: Private Property and the Power of Eminent Domain
186-88 (1985); Epstein,
Rent Control and the Theory of Efficient Regulation,
54 Brook.L.Rev. 741, 742-50 (1988); Neal Stout,
Making Room at the Inn: Rent Control as a Regulatory Taking,
38 Wash. U.J. Urb. & Contemp. L. 305 (1990). Caselaw has run in the other direction, however, and it is not for a lower court to reverse this tide. Under governing Supreme Court precedent, a taking occurs where governmental action compels an owner to endure a “permanent physical occupation” of its property.
Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
It is also immaterial under the caselaw that the units’ occupants had a prior rental relationship with FHLMC. The renters had been occupying the units (albeit as owners of those units) continuously for several years, and the harm suffered by FHLMC is not of the character required by the caselaw to constitute an unconstitutional physical taking.
See Yee,
Nor does the caselaw support the view that application of the Rent Stabilization Law constitutes a regulatory taking.
See Keystone Bituminous Coal
Assoc.
v. DeBenedictis,
FHLMC has thus failed to demonstrate that the regulations constitute either a physical or regulatory taking under governing caselaw, 1 and we affirm.
Notes
. We reject as unworthy of discussion FHLMC’s void for vagueness argument based on the Due Process Clause.
