Order and judgment (one paper) and judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Edward J. Greenfield, J.), both entered December 15, 1989, which, inter alia, granted defendant Messing’s motion to confirm the report of a Referee and fixed the amount of use and occupancy for the subject premises through the date of closing of title in the amount of $130,860, unanimously modified, on the law and the facts and
This dispute concerns plaintiffs’ right to purchase the shares to an apartment located at 179 East 79th Street in the Borough of Manhattan which were issued by defendant 179 Tenants Corporation pursuant to a plan of cooperative conversion sponsored by defendant Samuel L. Messing. This matter has been the subject of a number of proceedings both in the Housing Part of Civil Court and in Supreme Court. It was resolved in favor of plaintiffs by an order of the Supreme Court dated May 22, 1987 declaring them entitled to purchase the shares pursuant to the terms of the offering plan. The decision was subsequently affirmed by this court (Stephens v Messing,
The only issue before us on this appeal is the amount to be paid by plaintiffs for their use and occupancy of the premises pending closing of title which, according to the briefs, has still not taken place. The parties dispute whether or not any amount is payable by plaintiffs for use of the premises pending the closing and, if so, whether its value should be determined by the rental market or by some lesser valuation method, such as the monthly maintenance charge. In his cross appeal, defendant Messing argues that the court should have set use and occupancy at an amount equal to the value of the apartment on the rental market for the period commencing January 15, 1982 and not just from March 31, 1985 to present, the period following conclusion of the holdover proceeding before Civil Court.
Plaintiffs contend that an award for use and occupancy presupposes a landlord-tenant relationship, the existence of which they dispute (Barbarita v Shilling,
