297 N.Y. 419 | NY | 1948
As landlords of an apartment property in Brooklyn, the petitioners demand an order for a warrant *423 whereby the tenants of the premises will be dispossessed therefrom. One of the two defendants is a Justice of the Municipal Court of the City of New York and the other is the clerk of that tribunal. For the sake of convenience, we shall speak of the petitioners as the landlords and of the defendants as the Municipal Court.
Having obtained a then necessary eviction certificate from the Rent Control Division of the Federal Office of Price Administration, the landlords, on March 11, 1947, instituted in the Municipal Court a summary proceeding to recover possession of the property in question. Though the final order made in that proceeding ran against the tenants, issuance of a warrant to dispossess them was immediately stayed and the landlords were thereafter required to show cause on September 18, 1947, why a further stay should not be granted. Before that date came round, however, the City of New York enacted an emergency local law (Local Laws, 1947, No. 66 of City of New York) barring the removal of apartment tenants at any time before September 30, 1948, except for nonpayment of rent, unless a local body — the Temporary City Housing Rent Commission — should in a particular case certify the existence of one or more other specified grounds for eviction. (Administrative Code of the City of New York, § U41-7.0.) This local law was made applicable "to all pending and future eviction proceedings" (subd. o). Accordingly, on the return of the above-mentioned order to show cause on September 18, 1947, a warrant of eviction was again withheld — this time until October 11, 1947 — by an order in which the Municipal Court also called upon the landlords to obtain in the meantime an eviction certificate from the Temporary City Housing Rent Commission under the local law. Upon their failure to comply with that order, the landlords were dismissed by the Municipal Court and they then brought in the Supreme Court this article 78 proceeding to compel issuance of the warrant of eviction which the Municipal Court had denied them.
On the strength of the prohibition against local legislation that would change or supersede or be inconsistent with an act of the Legislature (N.Y. Const., art. IX, § 12; City Home Rule Law, § 11, subd. 2), Special Term nullified the local law for incompatibility with the long-existing statute which — in *424 all courts of record in this State — regulates the prosecution of summary proceedings to recover possession of real property (Civ. Prac. Act, art. 83). The Appellate Division affirmed that declaration of the right of the landlords to a warrant ousting their tenants. But the decision so made by the courts below soon became of no more than secondary importance, because the Legislature thereupon "legalized and validated" the local law (and other related local laws) by enacting a statute (L. 1948, ch. 4) which says: "Notwithstanding any defect, irregularity or omission of any lawful requirement or lack of statutory authority, all acts and proceedings of the local legislative body, the board of estimate and the mayor of the city of New York in enacting local law number fifty-four, local law number sixty-six, local law number sixty-seven, local law number sixty-eight, local law number seventy-three and local law number eighty of the local laws of the city of New York for the year nineteen hundred forty-seven, and all of the provisions of such local laws are hereby legalized and validated. Such local laws shall be deemed effectual as of the date when such local laws purported to take effect and all acts authorized thereby are hereby legalized and confirmed."
All other things being in order, this curative statute may be given effect on this appeal (see Robinson v. Robins Dry Dock Repair Co.,
Such an adoption of a local law by State legislation may be an entirely sound procedure, even if the local law in itself was not a legitimate exercise of city power (see Robia Holding Corp. v.Walker,
At this point, we go back for a moment to the eviction certificate that was granted to the landlords by the Federal rent authority. Of course, that Federal license did not give the landlords a right to possession; indeed it merely authorized them to resort to any remedies that were open to them in the State courts. (See Parker v. Porter,
Under the now State-adopted local law, the facts determinative of a landlord's right to possession must be passed upon by a local administrative agency in the first instance. This variation from the Federal Housing and Rent Act of 1947 is the only difference between the two enactments that we need here consider, inasmuch as the petitioners have not shown themselves to be aggrieved by any other. Emergency control of rents and evictions would seem to be an affair for concurrent Federal and State action, at least until the field is pre-empted by Congress and so long as local legislation in that field does not conflict with the letter or policy of any Federal enactment (cf. Block v.Hirsch,
The orders should be reversed and the petition dismissed, without costs.
LEWIS, CONWAY, DESMOND, THACHER, DYE and FULD, JJ., concur.
Orders reversed, etc.