Matter of Fortoso v State of New York Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal

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Matter of Fortoso v State of New York Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal 2015 NY Slip Op 31895(U) September 18, 2015 Supreme Court, Bronx County Docket Number: 260379/2015 Judge: Jr., Kenneth L. Thompson Cases posted with a "30000" identifier, i.e., 2013 NY Slip Op 30001(U), are republished from various state and local government websites. These include the New York State Unified Court System's E-Courts Service, and the Bronx County Clerk's office. This opinion is uncorrected and not selected for official publication. [* 1] FILED Sep 24 2015 Bronx County Clerk SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK X COUNTY OF BRONX IA 20 In the Matter of the Application of: Index No: 260379/2015 LIDIA FORTOSO and MANUEL FORTOSO DECISION AND ORDER Petitioners, For a Determination Pursuant to Article 78 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules, Present: HON. KENNETH L. THOMPSON, JR. -againstTHE STATE OF NEW YORK DIVISION OF HOUSING AND COMMUNITY RENEW AL, Respondent. X The following papers numbered 1 to 10 read on this Article 78 No On Calendar of July 10, 2015 PAPERS NUMBER Notice of Motion-Order to Show Cause - Exhibits and Affidavits Annexed----------------__ 1, 9_ Answering Affidavit and Exhibits------ ---------------------------------------------__4, 10 Replying Affidavit and Exhibits---------------------------------------------------------------_ _8__ Affidavit--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - - Pleadings -- Exhibit-------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6a__ Memorandum of Law--------------------------------------------------------------------------------5_ Stipulation -- Referee's Report --Minutes-------------------------------------------------- 6, 7__ Fi led papers-----------------------------------------------------------------------2, 3_ __ Upon the foregoing papers and due deliberation thereof, the Decision/Order on this motion is as follows: In this Article 78 Petitioners seek to annul the order of Respondent, The State of New York, Division of Housing and Community Renewal, (DHCR), dated March 4, 2015, as iµbitrary, capricious and contrary to law, and to grant Petitioners' Petition for a rent overcharge and failure to provide a lease renewal or in the alternative, remanding the matter to DHCR for further proceedings. Proposed respondent-intervenor, Sunan Musovic, (Musovic), moves pursuant to CPLR 1013 and 7802(d) to intervene in this proceeding, as Musovic is the owner of the subject residential premises, and moves to amend the caption, interpose a pre-answer motion to dismiss, dismissing the Petition pursuant to CPLR 321 l(a)(lO) and 7804(f) for failure to name a necessary party, and dismiss the Petition pursuant to CPLR 321 l(a)(7), for failure to state a claim under Article 78. The Article 78 Petition and Musovic's motion to intervene are hereby consolidated for decision and disposition. [* 2] FILED Sep 24 2015 Bronx County Clerk In 1984, Petitioners moved into a one-bedroom rent stabilized apartment in a seven unit multiple dwelling, (front building), that was built in 1906. In 1995, petitioners moved to a separate two-family house to the rear of the original building, (rear building), that was built in 1901. Had the move been at Musovic' s request, Petitioners would be en~itled to a monthly rent governed by the rent stabilization laws A prior Article 78 brought by Musovic to overturn the decision ofDHCR, finding that the rear building was rent stabilized was settled by a stipulation dated November 30, 2012, that remanded the proceeding back to DHCR for further processing and order. The issue of whether Petitioners moved from the front building to the rear building at Petitioners' or the Musovic's request was heard before an Administrative Law Judge. After a hearing, it was determined that Petitioners move to the rear building at the request of Petitioners and to accommodate Petitioners growing family. The relocation determination is not challenged in Petitioners papers before this Court. If the relocation determination were challenged in this Petition, this Article 78 would have to be transferred to the Appellate Division. (CPLR 7804[g]). However, at issue is whether the rear building is exempt from rent stabilization because it has less than six apartments or is the rear building part ofa Horizontal Multiple Dwelling, (HMD), in concert with the front building, which is rent stabilized. In determining the existence of a regulated horizontal multiple dwelling, the crucial factor is whether there are sufficient indicia of common facilities, common ownership, management and operation to warrant treating the housing as an integrated unit and multiple dwelling subject to regulation (Matter of Salvati v Eimicke, 72 NY2d 784, 792, rearg denied 73 NY2d 995). The landlord's expert testified, based on his review of all documents on file at the Buildings Department back to 1903, that, other than a shared heating system, there was no structural or mechanical commonality among the buildings. Shared heating is insufficient to establish a horizontal multiple dwelling (Salvati v Eimicke, supra; see also, Delorenzo v Krizman, 125 AD2d 1015). Common ownership is not determinative to establish that separate buildings constitute a 2 [* 3] FILED Sep 24 2015 Bronx County Clerk horizontal multiple dwelling (Matter of Bambeck v State Div. ofHous. & Community Renewal, 129 AD2d 51, Iv denied70 NY2d 615). O'Reilly v. New York State Div. ofHous. & Cmtv. Renewal, 291A.D.2d252, 254, 737 N.Y.S.2d 361 (2002) In the instant Article 78, the front and rear buildings have common ownership, heating system, centrally located mail boxes, same address, common lighting system, and have a common water main and gas connection and all mailboxes were located in the front building. However, the buildings have separate water, gas and electric meters, separate building foundations and no common walls, roofs, basements or chimneys and were built at different times, with different configurations. Given the large number of factors considered in determining whether there is a HMD, no precedent is likely to be exactly on point on all such factors. Furthermore, given the differences highlighted above, the determination of the Deputy Commissioner rendered in an order and. opinion dated March 4, 2015, cannot be said to be arbitrary and capricious nor contrary to law. With respect to Petitioners' argument that the opposite conclusion reached by the Deputy Commissioner in his March 4, 2015 order and opinion from his June 29, 2012 order and opinion indicates that the March 4, 2015 order and opinion is arbitrary and capricious is an unpersuasive argument. In his decision granting the landlord's Petition for Administrative Review, the March 4, 2015 order and opinion, the Deputy Commissioner cited to "[a]dditional evidence supporting the separate nature of the buildings, [including] a November 12, 1914 letter from the New York City Tenement House Department finding that the rear house was separate from the front tenement and evidence that HPD considers only the front building with seven apartments to be a multiple dwelling." (Emphasis added). There was no reference to this additional evidence in the Deputy Commissioner's earlier order and opinion dated June 29, 2012. There is both evidence 3 [* 4] FILED Sep 24 2015 Bronx County Clerk and case law to support the PAR decision dated March 4, 2015, rendered by DHCR. Accordingly, the Petition is dismissed. The motion of the landlord, Sunan Musovic, to intervene is denied as moot. The foregoing shall constitute the decision and order of the Court. Dated:SEP 1 8 2015 KENNETHL. 4

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