5 Misc. 2d 269 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1957
Tenants dwelling in two tenement houses have brought this proceeding under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act to annul a determination and order of the State Bent Administrator granting certificates to evict them from their homes. The avowed purpose of the eviction is to enable the owner of the two buildings recently acquired by it — in fact the deed for one was not even executed until after the application to evict the tenants had been filed — to demolish them and to use the land on which they stand for the expanding needs of an adjoining parking lot now operated by the same owner. Justification for the eviction so sought is said to be found in a provision of the State Besidential Bent Law and an implementing section of the State Bent and Eviction Begulations dealing with the withdrawal of housing accommodations from the rental market. The question to be decided here is whether the owner may be permitted to accomplish this objective within the framework of the emergency housing legislation.
The State Besidential Bent Law declares: “ Nothing in this act shall be construed to require any person to offer any housing accommodations for rent, but housing accommodations already on the rental market may be withdrawn only after prior written approval of the state rent commission, if such withdrawal requires that a tenant be evicted from such accommodations.” (§ 10, subd. 4; L. 1946, ch. 274, as amd. by L. 1951, eh. 443.)
Section 59 of the regulations, entitled “ Withdrawal of occupied housing accommodations from rental market ”, prescribes the cases in which an owner who desires to withdraw housing accommodations from the rental market may procure certificates of eviction. The portion of the section relied on to sustain the order here under review reads: “ A certificate shall be issued
More important, however, is the concluding admonition of the section: “ No certificate shall be issued under this section where the granting of the certificate- is inconsistent with the purposes of the Act.”
Is the evacuation of these tenants from their homes to make room for a parking lot reconcilable with the purposes of an act intended to meet a housing emergency1? Is it consonant with a law which declares that preventive action by the Legislature is “ imperative ” to prevent “ perils to health, safety and welfare ”? (State Residential Rent Law, § 1; L. 1946, ch. 274, as amd. by L. 1955, ch. 685.)
In our approach we should bear in mind the high public interest served by this legislation. As the court said: “ In the residential rent law there is a higher public interest protected and a different class of persons for whose benefit the State has chosen to exercise its police power. In the case of the commercial rent laws' we have a matter of balancing economic interests that may not always be in harmony, but not relating to so fundamental a matter as basic shelter for human beings.” (Garay v. Todros, 282 App. Div. 126, 128-129.)
In our inquiry whether the eviction here contemplated is consistent with the purposes of the act, we are therefore justified in assuming that the Legislature felt at least as much solicitude for the well-being of residential tenants as that of commercial and business tenants.
The buildings occupied by the petitioning tenants were, as already stated, bought for the very purpose of tearing them down and using the land for a parking lot. This is not the case of one who has owned property for a long time and wishes to withdraw it from the rental market because its continued operation works an economic hardship. Even then, the rights of tenants in possession must be taken into account. (See Matter of New York Univ. v. McGoldrick, 205 Misc. 790, 796-797.)
It is questionable in any case whether the transaction on which the owner of these tenements has embarked, viewed realistically, may be treated as a withdrawal at all. It has all the earmarks of an acquisition, rather than a withdrawal. But, whatever its name, it plainly runs counter to the purposes of the act and thereby violates both the letter and the spirit of the regulation. An act intended to protect residential tenants in- their occupancy is flouted when families are driven from their homes for no better reason than to enable a parking lot operator, who has become a landlord for a day, to accommodate more cars and thereby to add to his profits. The emphatic declaration of section 59 of the regulations that no certificate shall be issued where granting, it “is inconsistent with the purposes of the Act” becomes meaningless when eviction from housing accommodations is allowed in such circumstances.
There is nothing in the record to show that the owner is suffering any financial embarrassment because of its present limited space. Its lot, accommodating 42 cars, is generally filled to capacity by mid-morning. The same is true of many other parking lots throughout the city. The sole purpose of the application to the rent commission was to enable the owner to expand its parking lot business.
The administrator’s determination granting the application for withdrawal upon these facts must be held to be arbitrary and capricious. I am not unmindful of the holding in Matter of Tarnopol v. Abrams (supra). I do not, however, regard that ease as laying down a rule of general or uniform application. There the subject building, a rooming house, had been owned by the landlord or a corporation controlled by her for four years before the application was made and the sole objector was the rooming house operator or prime tenant. Its facts are clearly distinguishable.
The maintenance of the proper balance between private property rights and the larger public interest, in keeping with the underlying philosophy of the emergency housing legislation, forbids the eviction of these tenants. Their eviction would make a mockery of rent control.
The determination granting certificates of eviction is accordingly annulled. Settle order.