From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Goldner v. Doknovitch

Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department
Sep 24, 1976
88 Misc. 2d 88 (N.Y. App. Term 1976)

Summary

In Goldner v Doknovitch (88 Misc.2d 88), the Appellate Term did hold that tenants were entitled to an offset for a reduction of services during a 17-day strike of Local 32B of the Building Service Employee International Union, since tenants need not pay for services they did not receive.

Summary of this case from Leris Realty v. Robbins

Opinion

September 24, 1976

Appeal from the Civil Court of the City of New York, New York County, MILANO, H.O.

McLaughlin Fougner (Robert S. Fougner and Gary Rosenberg of counsel), for appellant.

Berger, Kramer Sugerman (Robert Sugerman of counsel), for Anthony Doknovitch, respondent.

Proskauer Rose Goetz Mendelsohn (Howard Lichtenstein, Marvin Dicker and Abraham Borenstein of counsel), for Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, amicus curiae. Levenson Ule for Metropolitan Council on Housing, amicus curiae.


Final judgment in each proceeding, entered after trial before MILANO, H.O., on June 14, 1976, so far as appealed from, reversed without costs and each proceeding remanded to the court below for retrial of the counterclaim in accordance with this opinion.

In these nonpayment summary proceedings tenants interposed counterclaims for breach of the warranty of habitability due to the reduction of services to the building by landlord, during the 17-day strike by Local 32B of the Building Service Employees International Union which began on May 2, 1976. Four of the five employees of the building did not work during the strike. The building is 171 West 79th Street, in Manhattan.

Tenant Doknovitch occupies four rooms on the eighth floor of the building, and pays a rent of $317.55 per month. Tenant Lupu occupies four rooms on the fifteenth floor of the building and pays a rent of $318.69 per month. After trial, the Hearing Officer allowed each tenant a setoff of $74.50 against the rent then due, consisting of the following: Lack of use of laundry room, $17; Garbage disposal, $34; Mail and Parcel deliveries, $8.50; Cleaning halls and lobby $5; Lack of security, $10.

As far back as 1972, this court ruled that leases "are no longer conveyances of space for a stated period; today they partake of service contracts as much as of rent contracts" (57 E. 54 Realty Corp. v Gay Nineties Realty Corp., 71 Misc.2d 353, lv to app den by App. Div., NYLJ Oct. 18, 1972, p 2, col 1). In 1973, we held that a tenant had a setoff for breach of the lease for landlord's failure to keep in operation a manually operated elevator (Levine v Ehrenburg, NYLJ, June 11, 1973, p 18, col 2). We reached the same result in 1974, for landlord's failure to provide heat and hot water (Steinberg v Carreras, 77 Misc.2d 774), and in 1975, for landlord's failure to remove serious violations in the tenant's apartment (B.L.H. Realty Corp. v Cruz, 87 Misc.2d 258). Four days before the publication of our B.L.H. Realty decision, the Appellate Division, Second Department, decided Tonetti v Penati ( 48 A.D.2d 25), confirming our view that (p 29) "a lease of residential premises establishes a contractual relationship with mutual obligations and is not intended to be treated as a conveyance of an interest in realty". Hence, to the extent that tenants suffered damage as a result of the strike and established such damage, they are entitled to relief (West, Weir Bartel v Carter Paint Co., 29 A.D.2d 526; same case 25 A.D.2d 81, 31 A.D.2d 517, mod 25 N.Y.2d 535).

We do not agree with petitioner-appellant that the foregoing is not applicable to temporary conditions resulting from strikes and lockouts. Landlord was not an innocent victim of the subject strike; he was a participant in the dispute. In this posture "tenants should not be required to pay for services they [did] * * * not receive" (Matter of Concord Realty Co. v City of New York, 30 N.Y.2d 308, 314; on remand, to the same effect sub nom. Matter of Bozart Realty Corp. v City of New York, 39 A.D.2d 906).

Also without merit is his argument that the housing court had no jurisdiction to pass on tenants' claims. The record discloses no duplication of action between the court and the city's rent agency, and tenants were entitled to appropriate relief from the court (520 East 81 St. Assoc. v Lenox Hill Hosp., 38 N.Y.2d 525, affg 47 A.D.2d 513, affg, 76 Misc.2d 892, which mod and, as mod, affd 74 Misc.2d 438; Barbee v 2639 Corp., 284 App. Div. 298). Furthermore, contrary to petitioner's contention, to the extent that section 235-b Real Prop. of the Real Property Law (warranty of habitability) applies to these proceedings, under its express provisions the exculpatory clauses in tenants' leases are "void as contrary to public policy" (see Gleason v Gleason, 26 N.Y.2d 28).

The argument of the Realty Advisory Board on Labor Relations, Inc., that the Hearing Officer's decision unconstitutionally infringed on the policy of full collective bargaining is equally without merit. The record is devoid of any showing that "in motive" or "in effect" the decision interfered in the slightest with the collective bargaining between petitioner and his employees (Matter of Concord Realty Co. v City of New York, 30 N.Y.2d 308, 314, supra). To the contrary, the proceeding was instituted after the strike was over. So long as, in reaching its decision, the court "in motive and in effect" was as neutral in relation to the strike as the circumstances permitted, its power to grant damages to the tenants for services they did not receive is not curtailed "even when caused by a strike rather than by attempted circumvention or evasion of rent controls" (Matter of Bozart Realty Corp. v City of New York, 39 A.D.2d 906, 907, supra).

Appellant is on firmer ground on the subject of damages. Tenants fixed no sum in their answers as the amount they claimed as a setoff against the rent due; and no such sum was fixed by them during the trial. There was no testimony by tenants, or by any witness, professional or otherwise, as to the reduced rental value of their apartments from the deprivation of services (Steinberg v Carreras, 77 Misc.2d 774, supra; Levine v Ehrenberg, NYLJ, June 11, 1973, p 18, col 2, supra). There was no proof of the amount paid to the employees on strike before they went on strike, or of the total rental roll of the building, or of the allocate part of the amount theretofore paid the striking employees applicable to the tenants before the court. There was no evidence of monetary damage suffered by either tenant as a result of the strike (see, for instance, Academy Spires v Brown, 111 N.J. Super. 477). There was no evidence of the time spent by either tenant in substituting for the striking employees and the value of these services. Where it can reasonably be expected that evidence can be furnished from which reasonable men can derive substantial data for fixing the amount of damages, such evidence must be produced (York, Implied Warranty of Habitability, NYLJ, May 12, 1976, pp 1, 6, citing McCormick, Damages, § 26). Absent some reasonable basis for determining the damages sustained by the tenants, only nominal damages may be granted them (Randall-Smith v 43rd St. Estates Corp., 17 N.Y.2d 99, 106; Finley v Atlantic Transp. Co., 220 N.Y. 249; American Electronics v Neptune Meter Co., 33 A.D.2d 157). "Mere temporary inconveniences and annoyances to the tenant by an act of the landlord do not ordinarily constitute a breach of the covenant" of quiet enjoyment (33 N.Y. Jur, Landlord Tenant, § 162, p 501). Nor may damages be ascertained by mere conjecture or guess work (Broadway Photoplay Co. v World Film Corp., 225 N.Y. 104, 109; Dunkel v McDonald, 272 App. Div. 267, affd 298 N.Y. 586).

Tenants are not required to pay for services they did not receive. The resultant loss to tenants may be measured by the reduction in rental value of their apartments, or by actual monetary damage suffered by them, or by some other practical means to determine the damage to tenants just to both parties, or by some combination of these elements of damage (see Kaufman v Gordon, 24 Misc.2d 240, affd 12 A.D.2d 586, affd 10 N.Y.2d 769; Dunkel v McDonald, supra). The allowances granted tenants by the Hearing Officer do not meet these criteria, are without support in the record, and are speculative (Strough v Conley, 257 App. Div. 1057, affd 283 N.Y. 631; Skrine v Staiman, 30 A.D.2d 707, affd 23 N.Y.2d 946).

Concur: DUDLEY, P.J., HUGHES and TIERNEY, JJ.


Summaries of

Goldner v. Doknovitch

Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department
Sep 24, 1976
88 Misc. 2d 88 (N.Y. App. Term 1976)

In Goldner v Doknovitch (88 Misc.2d 88), the Appellate Term did hold that tenants were entitled to an offset for a reduction of services during a 17-day strike of Local 32B of the Building Service Employee International Union, since tenants need not pay for services they did not receive.

Summary of this case from Leris Realty v. Robbins
Case details for

Goldner v. Doknovitch

Case Details

Full title:CHARLES GOLDNER, as Agent for 171 West 79 Street Co., Appellant, v…

Court:Supreme Court, Appellate Term, First Department

Date published: Sep 24, 1976

Citations

88 Misc. 2d 88 (N.Y. App. Term 1976)
388 N.Y.S.2d 504

Citing Cases

H R Bernstein v. Barrett

In a recent line of cases, the defense that a strike by employees prevented landlord from furnishing…

Allyn v. 131-151 Purchase St. Inv'r 1

A landlord is not insulated from liability for breach of the warranty simply because damages are not…