Court Opinion

ID: 9952460
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-19 20:09:02.26877+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:39:39.354769
License: Public Domain

Taubes v Yorkshire House Assoc. LLC
               2024 NY Slip Op 30827(U)
                     March 14, 2024
           Supreme Court, New York County
        Docket Number: Index No. 151605/2020
               Judge: James E. d'Auguste
Cases posted with a "30000" identifier, i.e., 2013 NY Slip
 Op 30001(U), are republished from various New York
 State and local government sources, including the New
  York State Unified Court System's eCourts Service.
 This opinion is uncorrected and not selected for official
                       publication.
                                                                                                   INDEX NO. 151605/2020
  NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                       RECEIVED NYSCEF: 03/14/2024

                             SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
                                       NEW YORK COUNTY
            PRESENT:        Hon. James E. d' Auguste                        PART 55
                                                                 Justice
           - - - - - - - ------------------ X                                INDEX NO.            151605/2020
             JON TAUBES, LISA TAUBES
                                                                             MOTION DATE           10/15/2021
                                               Plaintiff,
                                                                             MOTION SEQ. NO.           001
                                        - V-

             YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC,                                   DECISION + ORDER ON
                                                                                     MOTION
                                               Defendant.
                                                                ---X

            The following e-filed documents, listed by NYSCEF document number (Motion 001) 14, 15, 16, 17, 18,
            19,20,21,22,23, 24, 25,26, 27,28,29, 30, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,
            49,50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59,60,61,62,63,64,66,67
            were read on this motion to/for                     SUMMARY JUDGMENT (AFTER JOINDER)

                   In this landlord-tenant action, plaintiffs Jon Taubes and Lisa Taubes move, pursuant to

           CPLR 3212, for an order granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against

           defendants on their first, second, fourth, and sixth causes of action, as well as dismissing all

           affirmative defenses asserted against them.

                   Defendant Yorkshire House Associates LLC opposes and cross-moves pursuant to CPLR

           3211 for an order dismissing the first, second, third, fourth and sixth causes of action contained

           in the complaint, compelling plaintiffs to pay all outstanding use and occupancy or, alternatively,

           compelling plaintiffs to pay ongoing use and occupancy pendente lite.

                   For the reasons set forth below, plaintiffs motion is denied, and the cross-motion is

           granted in part and denied in part.

           Background

                   Plaintiffs are tenants of apartment l 8C located at 401 East 81 st Street, New York, New

           York 10028 (the premises). Defendant Yorkshire House Associates LLC is a New York limited

            151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                            Page 1 of 21
            Motion No. 001

[* 1]                                                       1 of 21
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    NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              RECEIVED NYSCEF:            03/14/2024

                                              liability company with offices maintained at 33 East 20th Street, Suite 400, New York, 10003.

                                              The premises is a multiple dwelling pursuant to New York's Multiple Dwelling Laws (MDL).

                                              Plaintiffs entered into possession of the premises pursuant to a written lease agreement dated

                                              March 19, 2016 (original lease) (NYSCEF Doc No. 20, lease agreement dated March 18, 2016)

                                              for the apartment; the lease term of which began on April 1, 2016, and ended March 31, 2018, at

                                              a monthly rate of $5,700 per month (id.).

                                                                       Upon the expiration of the original lease in March 2018, the parties executed a renewal

                                              lease, commencing on April 1, 2018, and ending March 31, 2020, at a monthly rate of $5,900

                                              (NYSCEF Doc No. 21, lease agreement dated February 28, 2018). On February 12, 2020, before

                                             the renewal lease expired, plaintiffs commenced this action by filing a summons and complaint

                                             containing causes of action for: 1) a declaratory judgment determining that the premises is

                                             subject to Rent Stabilization Law; 2) a declaratory judgment determining that any lease offered

                                             to plaintiffs must be on a renewal lease form promulgated by the Division of Housing and

                                             Community Renewal (DHCR) and that plaintiffs are not required to pay any rent increase until

                                             they receive a valid rent-stabilized renewal lease; 3) an order enjoining defendant from

                                             commencing holdover or ejectment proceedings; 4) an order awarding money damages to

                                             plaintiff for rent overcharges, including a reimbursement of overcharges, interest, and an award

                                             of treble damages; 5) an award of damages for violation of the warranty of habitability; and 6) an

                                            award of attorneys' fees (NYSCEF Doc No. 1, complaint at 8-14). When the renewal lease

                                            expired, defendant did not offer plaintiffs another renewal lease (NYSCEF Doc No. 15, Taubes

                                            aff at 2, ,r 6 & NYSCEF Doc No. 34, Cacaj aff at 6, ,r 23). After the expiration of the renewal

                                            lease, plaintiffs began to occupy the premises on a month-to-month basis.

                                                151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                                                                                                                                                                                                                      Page 2 of 21
                                                Motion No. 001

                                                                                                                                                                                                        2 of 21
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  NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                       RECEIVED NYSCEF: 03/14/2024

                   On July 30, 2020, defendant served an amended answer (NYSCEF Doc No. 8, amended

            answer). Defendant's answer, among other things, denied allegations that the premises were

            unlawfully deregulated and that it overcharged plaintiffs (id. at 6-8, 10-12). Defendant also

            interposed counterclaims for attorneys' fees and past use and occupancy (id. at 13 ).

                   Plaintiffs' Motion

                   On October 15, 2021, plaintiffs filed the instant motion for summary judgment (NYSCEF

            Doc No. 14, Taubes notice of motion). Plaintiffs argue that defendant unlawfully removed the

            premises from rent stabilization by offering them a market rate lease, where defendant

            improperly set a first rent for the subject premises at $5,700, which was above the high-rent

            vacancy deregulation threshold, removing the apartment from the scheme of rent stabilization

            (NYSCEF Doc No. 17, memo of law in support of plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment at

            15). Plaintiffs allege that defendant did not perform the kind of extensive work in the premises

            that would permit defendant to set a first rent (id. at 15-19). Plaintiffs also argue that pursuant to

            the Rent Act of 2015, defendant could not remove the apartment from rent stabilization due to

            high rent vacancy until the rental amount reached the threshold amount of $2,700 while the

            subject premises were occupied (id. at 23). In other words, plaintiffs argue that even if defendant

            was entitled to set a first rent above the threshold amount, the apartment could not be deregulated

            during the vacancy following the temporary exemption period. Plaintiffs urge the Court to issue

            a declaratory judgment adjudicating the premises to be rent-stabilized (id. at 15-23). Plaintiffs

            also seek a finding that they were overcharged and ask the Court to implement the default

            formula to determine the base date rent (id. at 26-30). Plaintiffs move for a dismissal of

            defendant's affirmative defenses as meritless (id. at 30). Plaintiffs also move for an award of

             151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                             Page 3 of 21
             Motion No. 001

                                                          3 of   21
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  NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                       RECEIVED NYSCEF: 03/14/2024

            attorney's fees pursuant to Real Property Law§ 234 in the event that they prevail on the instant

            motion (id. at 23-26).

                   Defendant's Cross-Motion

                   On November 24, 2021, defendant cross-moved for dismissal of all causes of action,

            excluding the cause of action for violations of warranty of habitability, reserving its right to

            move for dismissal on this cause of action (NYSCEF Doc No. 33, Brett affirmation dated

            November 23, 2021 at 1 n 2). Defendant asserts that plaintiffs misconstrue the law because, at

            the relevant time, defendants were permitted to set a first rent above the threshold amount for

            deregulation since the subject premises was previously part of a larger apartment, 18CD, which

            has ceased to exist (NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo oflaw in support of defendant's cross-motion

            at 9). According to defendant, the reconfiguration of 18CD into two individual apartments took

            place after 18CD became vacant but before plaintiffs moved into 18C in April 2016 (NYSCEF

            Doc No. 34, Cacaj aff at 3, ,r,r 12, 17). Defendant alleges that since the building was built in

            1965, apartment 18CD was a single unit with one external door (id. at 2, ,r 6), without an internal

            wall separating 18C and 18D (id. at 3, ,r 12). Defendant points to the certificate of occupancy

            and I-card (NYSCEF Doc Nos. 37, exhibit C & 38, exhibit D), which list six units on the 18th

            story, as proof that there had always been six apartments on the floor where the subject premises

            is located (NYSCEF Doc No. 34, Cacaj aff at 2, ,r,r 6-7). Currently, there are seven apartments,

            including the subdivided apartments l 8C and 18D. Defendant argues that this is the kind of

            substantial reconfiguration contemplated by the law allowing defendant to set a first rent

            (NYSCEF Doc No. 33, Brett affirmation dated November 23, 2021 at 5, ,r,r 14-15). Defendant

            attaches invoices and receipts (NYSCEF Doc No. 41, exhibit G) purporting to show that, among

            other things, it constructed a new perimeter wall, installed new electrical systems, and performed

             151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                            Page 4 of 21
             Motion No. 001

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  NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                          RECEIVED NYSCEF: 03/14/2024

            substantial plumbing work in unit 18C (NYSCEF Doc No. 33, Brett affirmation dated November

            23, 2021 at 6, ,i 21).

                     Defendant also seeks dismissal of plaintiffs overcharge claims. Here, the base date for

            calculating the alleged overcharge occurred prior to the enactment of the Housing Stability and

            Tenant Protection Act of 2019 (HSTP A). Defendant argues that plaintiffs impermissibly ask the

            Court to examine the apartment's rental history beyond of the four-year lookback period for

            calculating a rent-overcharge (NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo of law in support of defendant's

            cross-motion at 18). Defendant insists that the holding in Matter of Regina Metro. Co., LLC v

            New York State Div. of Haus. & Community Renewal, 35 NY3d 332 (2020) 1 invalidated the 2014

            amendment to RSC § 2526.1 (a) (3) (iii), which allows the Court in calculating an overcharge to

            consider the prior legal regulated rent for the apartment even if it was beyond the four-year look-

            back period (NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo oflaw in support of defendant's cross-motion at 17-

            22). Defendant asserts that under the iteration of the law applicable prior to the 2014

            amendment, the base date rent would have been the rent to which defendant and plaintiff agreed

            in the initial lease, i.e., $5,700 (id. at 20). Thus, according to defendant, plaintiffs were not

            overcharged since they were never charged above the agreed upon amount (id. at 22).

                     Further, defendant moves for an order compelling plaintiffs to pay use and occupancy in

           the amount of $158,209.31 in unpaid rent for the period of July 11, 2019, through November 1,

           2021, or, alternatively, for an order directing plaintiffs to pay ongoing use and occupancy

           pendente lite at the rate of $5,900 per month (id. at 27). Defendant also seeks an order

           1
             The Court in Regina upheld prospectively the provisions of the HSTP A that, among other things,
           extended the statute of limitations for overcharge claims from four years to six and extended the lookback
           period from four years to indefinitely; however, Regina barred the retroactive application of the HSTPA
           to cases that were pending at the time the HSTPA was enacted Matter of Regina Metro. Co., LLC v New
           York State Div. of Haus. & Community Renewal, 35 NY3d at 381-383.
               151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                             Page 5 of 21
               Motion No. 001

                                                           5 of 21
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            dismissing plaintiffs' claims for attorneys' fees because plaintiffs reliance on post-HSTPA

            amendments contravenes the ruling in Regina, which requires the application of law in effect at

            the time of the alleged overcharge (id. at 25).

            Discussion

                   Standard for Summary Judgment

                   The proponent of a summary judgment motion has the initial burden of establishing a

            prima facie showing that it is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law, providing

            sufficient evidence that no material issues of triable fact exist (Trustees of Columbia Univ. in the

            City of NY v D'Agostino Supermarkets, Inc., 36 NY3d 69, 74 (2020); Alvarez v Prospect Hosp.,

            68 NY2d 320,324 [1986]; Friends ofAnimals v Associated Fur Mfrs., 46 NY2d 1065, 1067

            [1979]). Once this burden has been met, the burden shifts to the opposing party to

                   "produce evidentiary proof in admissible form sufficient to require a trial of material
                   questions of fact on which he rests his claim or [to] demonstrate acceptable excuse for his
                   failure to meet the requirement of tender in admissible form; mere conclusions,
                   expressions of hope or unsubstantiated allegations or assertions are insufficient"
                   (Zuckerman v City of New York, 49 NY2d 557, 562 [1980]; De Lourdes Torres v Jones,
                   26 N.Y.3d 742, 763 [2016]).

                   The function of the summary judgment procedure is issue finding, not issue

            determination (Vega v Restani Constr. Corp., 18 NY3d 499, 505 [2012] ["It is not the function of

            a court deciding a summary judgment motion to make credibility determinations or findings of

            fact, but rather to identify material triable issues of fact"). When considering a motion for

            summary judgment, the "facts must be viewed in the light most favorable to non-moving party

            (Jacobsen v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp., 22 NY3d 824, 833 [2014] [internal quotation

            marks and citation omitted]; De Lourdes Torres, 26 NY3d at 763).

                   The Court will treat defendant's cross-motion as a motion for summary judgment

            pursuant to CPLR 3211 (c). Notice is not required in the instant case because defendant has

             151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                           Page 6 of 21
             Motion No. 001

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            revealed its proof and has requested for the motion to be treated as one for summary judgment

            despite moving pursuant to CPLR 3211 in its notice of motion, clearly charting a summary

            judgment course (NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo of law in support of defendant's cross-motion at

            8, 11) (see Mic Prop. & Cas. Ins. Corp. v Custom Craftsman of Brooklyn, 269 AD2d 333, 334

            [1st Dept 2000]).

                      Rent Stabilization and Overcharge

                      Plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief: deeming the apartment rent-stabilized;

            ordering defendants to supply leases on DHCR lease forms; and precluding defendants from

            commencing holdover and ejectment proceedings based on any alleged expiration of a month-to-

            month tenancy. Plaintiffs also seek a finding that defendant overcharged them when it offered

            plaintiffs market rate leases at $5,700 and $5,900 per month. The threshold issue here is whether

            apartment 18C is subject to rent regulation under the Rent Stabilization Law (RSL) and pursuant

            to the provisions of the Rent Stabilization Code (RSC).

                      CPLR 3001 provides, in relevant part, that the "court may render a declaratory judgment

            having the effect of a final judgment as to the rights and other legal relations of the parties to a

            justiciable controversy whether or not further relief is or could be claimed." While declaratory

            judgment is an appropriate remedy in an action concerning rents, in this case numerous issues of

            fact exist that preclude the issuance of summary judgment in favor of either party in the instant

            matter.

                      At the outset, there is an issue of fact regarding the configuration of apartment l 8C and

            the now defunct apartment 18CD. Plaintiffs argue that 18C is not a newly created apartment, but

            that defendant merely restored two formerly existing rent-stabilized apartments to their original

            states when defendant subdivided l 8CD into apartments 18C and 18D, returning apartment 18C

             151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                             Page 7 of 21
             Motion No. 001

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  NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                        RECEIVED NYSCEF: 03/14/2024

           to rent-stabilized status (NYSCEF Doc No. 17, memo oflaw in support of plaintiffs' motion for

           summary judgment at 18-19). Plaintiffs insist that the subject premises remains substantially

           unchanged, besides a small newly erected non-weight bearing wall that was installed to

           subdivide the two apartments (id at 13). Plaintiffs argue that there have been no significant

           dimensional changes or extensive and substantial work constituting the requisite reconfiguration

           and obliteration of the apartment's particular identity (id. at 19). In support, plaintiffs point out

           that the certificate of occupancy dated September 30, 1965, the year in which the building was

           constructed, lists seven apartments on the 17th story, where the subject premises is located,

           which is identified as the 18th floor of the building since there is no 13th floor (NYSCEF Doc

           No. 15, Taubes aff at 4 ~ 25; NYSCEF Doc No. 24, exhibit G). Plaintiffs assert that there are

           currently and have always been seven separate apartments on the 18th floor/I 7th story (NYSCEF

           Doc No. 15, Taubes aff at 4 ~~ 26-27). Plaintiffs attach the DHCR building rent roll in support

           and additionally point out that every year between 1984 and 2016, defendant dutifully registered

           apartment 18C and apartment 18D with DHCR not as a single apartment l 8CD but as two

           separate units (id. at 4 ~~ 28-29; NYSCEF Doc No. 29, exhibit L).

                     Plaintiffs also argue that pursuant to RSC§ 2526.1 (a) (3) (iii), 2 which had not yet been

           repealed by the HSTPA at the time of plaintiffs' occupancy, the first tenancy after a vacancy

           following a temporary exemption should be rent-stabilized, regardless of whether the monthly

           rental rate exceeded the threshold for deregulation-$2,700 at the time of plaintiffs' occupancy

           (NYSCEF Doc No. 17, memo oflaw in support of plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment at

           20-22). Plaintiffs insist that the Rent Act of 2015 (L 2015, ch 20, part A, § 10) amended RSL §

           2
            The Rent Stabilization Code is promulgated by the DHCR pursuant to the Rent Stabilization Law (RSC
           § 2520.1) and is construed to carry out the intent of the Rent Stabilization Law (RSC§ 2520.3).
               151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                          Page 8 of 21
               Motion No. 001

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                                                                                ,F 3 h 9 /G#F   ;;;w.,,.. JL   ,,,INDEX NO. 151605/2020
  NYSCEF DOC. NO. 69                                                                               RECEIVED NYSCEF: 03/14/2024

            26-504.2 3 to clarify that an apartment could only be deregulated due to high rent vacancy when

            the rental amount reached the threshold amount of $2,700 and only while the subject premises

            were occupied, not during vacancy (NYSCEF Doc No. 17, memo oflaw in support of plaintiffs'

            motion for summary judgment at 21 ). Thus, according to plaintiffs, 18C could not have been

            properly deregulated during the vacancy that followed the temporary exemption. Plaintiffs insist

            that even if $5,700 was the proper first rent, they should have been offered a rent-stabilized lease

            (NYSCEF Doc No. 15, Taubes aff at 3, ,r 19).

                      In opposition, defendant contends that the subject premises has always been part of a

            larger apartment 18CD with one external door (NYSCEF Doc No. 34, Cacaj aff at 2-3, ,r,r 6-9

            and NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo oflaw in support of defendant's cross-motion at 14-15).

            Defendant insists that the DHCR rent roll showing 18C and 18D registered as separate

            apartments is "merely a formality, which is clarified by looking at the four-comers of the

            document as a whole" (NYSCEF Doc No. 34, Cacaj aff at 3, ,r 9). Defendant also attaches

            copies of the certificate of occupancy and the I-card for the building, purporting to show that

            there were previously six apartments, not the seven apartments that plaintiffs claim, on the 18th

            floor, where the subject premises is located (id. at 2-3, ,r,r 6-8; NYSCEF Doc Nos. 37, exhibit C

            & NYSCEF Doc No. 38, exhibit D). Defendant insists that 18C was completely reconfigured

            after 18CD became vacant following a long-term owner occupancy (NYSCEF Doc No. 34,

            Cacaj aff at 3-4, ,r,r 12-14 & NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo oflaw in support of cross-motion at

            15). Defendant claims that, among other things, it erected a new perimeter wall, subdividing

            18CD for the first time, which allowed defendant to charge a first rent above the $2,700

            3
             At the applicable time, RSL § 26-504.2 permitted high rent vacancy deregulation for, as is relevant here,
            "any housing accommodation that becomes vacant on or after the effective date of the rent act of 2015
            where such legal regulated rent was two thousand seven hundred dollars or more."                      '
                151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                                     Page 9 of 21
                Motion No. 001

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            threshold for deregulation (id.). Defendant attaches copies of invoices, receipts, and canceled

            checks, as well as memoranda purporting to show the extensive work done in apartments 18C

            and 18D (NYSCEF Doc No. 41, exhibit G).

                   Plaintiffs oppose defendant's cross-motion and characterize the alleged work in the

            apartment as mere renovation or improvement, insufficient to support a finding of first rent

            (NYSCEF Doc No. 48, Gribben affirmation dated January 19, 2022 at 3, ,i 11). Plaintiffs

            question the validity and sufficiency of the receipts and invoices provided by defendant, alleging

            that many of them are duplicates and that some of the work was performed after plaintiffs had

            already moved in (id. at 5123; NYSCEF Doc No. 63, memo oflaw in opposition to cross-

            motion at 16). Notably, plaintiffs point out that none of the receipts are actually for the

            installation of an external door in 18C, but only for repair of a door after they were already

            occupying the subject premises (NYSCEF Doc No. 47, Taubes aff at 3, 1 10). Plaintiffs also call

            attention to the fact that defendants have not attached architect plans or Department of Building

            permits (NYSCEF Doc No. 63, memo oflaw in opposition to cross-motion at 11-12).

                   While, in its reply, defendant concedes that the certificate of occupancy correctly lists

            seven apartments on the 18th floor/17th story (NYSCEF Doc No. 64, memo of law in reply at 4

            & 8), defendant stops short of admitting that apartment 18CD originally existed as two separate

            apartments that were combined into a single unit during the lengthy owner occupancy period.

            Defendant insists that plaintiffs are overlooking the fact that one larger unit was subdivided into

            two smaller units, which is the kind of reconfiguration that would allow a first rent to be set (id.

            at 5 & 9). Defendant alleges that 18CD was designed to facilitate any future reconfiguration into

            two smaller units and already had the potential for two external doors, one of which was "shored

            -off' during the period of owner's use (id. at 8-9). Defendant, among other things, argues that

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             Motion No. 001

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           the DHCR rent roll showing the registration of 18C and 18D as two distinct apartments is

           irrelevant because 18CD was temporarily exempt due to owner occupancy (id. at 12).

                     The inquiry regarding the original configuration of apartment l 8CD is central to the

           determination of the apartment's regulatory status.

                     Prior to the passage of the HSPTA, at the time plaintiffs took possession of the subject

           premises, it was well-settled that4

                     "A landlord may charge first rent, pursuant to the [RSC], where the landlord
                     'substantially alters the outer dimensions of a vacant housing accommodation, which
                     qualifies for a first rent equal to or exceeding the applicable amount qualifying for
                     deregulation' (9 NYCRR 2520.11 [r] [12]) ... Stated somewhat differently, first rent is
                     permitted when the perimeter walls of the apartment have been substantially moved and
                     changed and where the previous apartment, essentially, ceases to exist, thereby rendering
                     its rental history meaningless .... This Court has described the test for whether
                     alterations qualify for first rent as reconfiguration plus obliteration of the prior
                     apartment's particular identity." (Dixon v 105 W 75 th St., LLC, 148 AD3d 623, 627 [1st
                     Dept 2017], quoting Matter of Devlin v New York State Div. of Haus. & Community
                     Renewal, 309 AD2d 191, 194 [1st Dept 2003] [internal quotation marks and additional
                     citations omitted]).

                     Courts have consistently held that the reconfiguration of a vacant rent-stabilized

           apartment from one multiroom unit into two smaller units or from two units into a larger

           combined apartment was sufficient to allow a landlord to set a first rent (Dixon, 148 AD3d at

           627; Devlin, 309 AD2d at 194; Matter of 300 W 49th St. Assoc. v New York State Div. of Haus.

           & Community Renewal, Off. of Rent Admin., 212 AD2d 250, 253-254 [1st Dept 1995]; Feltman v

           106th Realty LLC, 2023 NY Slip Op 31592[U], *5 [Sup Ct, NY County 2023]; Brookes v 157th

           St. Assoc., LLC, 2023 NY Slip Op 31257[U], *5-6 [Sup Ct, NY County 2023]).

                     RSC§ 2526.1 (a) (3) (iii) was amended in 2014 and, at the time 18C became vacant,

           provided that

           4
            RSC§ 2520.11 [r] [12] was repealed by the HSTPA and high rent vacancy deregulation is generally no
           longer applicable.
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               Motion No. 001

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                  "Where a housing accommodation is vacant or temporarily exempt from regulation
                  pursuant to section 2520.11 of this Title on the base date, the legal regulated rent shall be
                  the prior legal regulated rent for the housing accommodation, the appropriate increase
                  under section 2522.8, and if vacated or temporarily exempt for more than one year, as
                  further increased by successive two year guideline increases that could have otherwise
                  been offered during the period of such vacancy or exemption and such other rental
                  adjustments that would have been allowed under this Code."

                  The prior version of RSC § 2526.1 (a) (3) (iii), which defendants urge the Court to apply

           in the event the Court finds that the apartment is rent-stabilized, provided that

                  "Where a housing accommodation is vacant or temporarily exempt from regulation
                  pursuant to section 2520.11 of this Title on the base date, the legal regulated rent shall be
                  the rent agreed to by the owner and the first rent stabilized tenant taking occupancy after
                  such vacancy or temporary exemption, and reserved in a lease or rental agreement; or, in
                  the event a lesser amount is shown in the first registration for a year commencing after
                  such tenant takes occupancy, the amount shown in such registration, as adjusted pursuant
                  to this Code."

                  For the purposes of determining whether an apartment is rent-stabilized, "each version

           [of RSC§ 2526.l (a) (3) (iii)] contemplates that when a once temporarily exempt apartment ...

                  returns to the marketplace, it resumes its rent-stabilized status, because it was the status it

                  had before the temporary exemption" (Matter ofAEJ 534 E. 88 th · LLC v New York State

                  Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 194 AD3d 464,470 [1st Dept 2021]. However,

                  the 2014 version of the regulation in effect when 18C became vacant and plaintiffs

                  moved in, "must be read in conjunction with the appliable version of RSC§ 2520.11 (r)

                  (5), which exempts from rent stabilization housing accommodations that 'became or

                  become vacant on or after June 24, 2011, with a legal regulated rent of $2,500 or more

                  per month"' (Connors v Kushner Companies LLC, 2021 WL 3468142, *3 [Sup Ct, Kings

                  County, Aug. 6, 2021, index No. 522076/2017]). Thus, under the 2014 amendment, if

                  the rent of a vacant previously exempt apartment properly calculated in accordance with

            151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                            Page 12 of 21
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                   the RSC did not exceed the threshold amount of $2,500, the apartment would

                   unequivocally be subject to rent-stabilization (id). But, as the Connors court found,

                   "there is no language in either the amended RSC§ 2526.1 (a) (3) (iii) or RSC§ 2520.11
                   (r), ... nor has this court located any pertinent case law expressly prohibiting the high-
                   rent vacancy deregulation of an apartment following the expiration of a temporary
                   exemption where the legal regulated rent (properly determined under amended RSC§
                   2526.1 [a] [3] [iii]) surpasses the relevant threshold." (id)

                   While plaintiffs insist that the Rent Act of 2015 clarified that an apartment could only be

            deregulated due to high rent vacancy when the rental amount reached the threshold amount for

            deregulation prior to a vacancy, the case they cite in support of this proposition was reversed.

            (see People's Home Improvement, LLC v Kindig, 77 Misc 3d 136 [A], 2022 NY Slip Op

            51350[U], *3 [App Term, 2d Dept, 2nd, 11th, & 13th Jud Dists 2022], revg 65 Misc 3d 1016

            [Civ Ct, Kings County 2019]). In that case, the Appellate Term, Second Department held:

                   "We find that since the apartment had a legal regulated rent of more than $2,700 'at any
                   time on or after the effective date ofrent act of2015' which apartment 'bec[a]me[]
                   vacant after the effective date of the rent act of 2015,' high rent deregulation was allowed
                   pursuant to the Rent Act of 2015" (id).

                   Similarly, in 326 Starr, LLC v Martinez, 74 Misc 3d 77 [App Term, 2d Dept, 2nd, 11th,

            & 13th Jud Dists 2021 ], the Appellate Term, Second Department held that for vacancies that

            occurred after the effective date of the Rent Act of 2015 and before RSL § 26-504.2 was

            repealed by the passage of the HSTPA effective June 19, 2019,

                   "apartments can be removed from rent stabilization based upon the rent 'at any time on or
                   after the effective date of the rent act of 2015, which becomes vacant after the effective
                   date of the rent act of 2015' without 'reference to the rent at the time' of the vacancy
                   (quoting Altman v 285 W Fourth LLC, 31 NY3d 178, 185 [2018]), and that would
                   include any available post-vacancy statutory increases" (326 Starr, LLC, 74 Misc 3d at
                   81; see also Perugini v 162-164 82nd St., LLC, 2022 NY Slip Op 32643[U], **6 [Sup
                   Ct, NY County Aug. 5, 2022, index No. 150450/2019]).

                   As is relevant here, if the subject premises was always part of a single multiroom

            apartment previously known as apartment 18CD, then under the circumstances in this case as

             151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                          Page 13 of 21
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            alleged by defendant, the newly created l 8C may no longer be subject to rent stabilization, as

            contemplated by the now repealed RSC§ 2520.11 (r) (12) and the relevant caselaw. Under those

            parameters, defendant may have been permitted to set a first rent exceeding the $2,700 high rent

            deregulation threshold in effect at the time. However, numerous issues of fact exist here, such as

            whether apartment 18CD was always maintained as a single unit or whether it was combined

            from two smaller apartments during the owner occupancy period for the benefit of the occupying

            owner and later subdivided and returned to its original configuration as two smaller rent-

            stabilized units. While the DHCR registration and the certificate of occupancy tend to support

            plaintiffs' assertions, it is possible that l 8CD had been maintained as one apartment occupied by

            the owner even prior to the premises becoming subject to rent stabilization.

                             There are also issues of fact regarding the existence of any external doors and the degree

            of the other changes that were made to the apartment now known as 18C. At this stage, the

            Court cannot determine as a matter of law whether l 8C should be deemed rent-stabilized based

            on the record laid bare before it alone. Accordingly, plaintiffs are not entitled to a declaratory

            judgment that apartment 18C is rent-stabilized.

                             Based on the foregoing, the Court cannot reach the merits of plaintiffs' overcharge

            claims, and the Court declines to order defendant to supply plaintiffs with rent-stabilized lease

            renewals. To do otherwise would require a finding that apartment 18C is subject to rent

            stabilization. Thus, at this stage of the proceeding, the Court declines to issue a declaratory

           judgment on these issues as no determination has been made as to the subject premises'

            regulatory status.

               151605/2020 TAUBE$, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                                Page 14 of 21
               Motion No. 001

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                  Use and Occupancy

                  RPL § 220 provides, in relevant part, that a "landlord may recover a reasonable

           compensation for the use and occupation of real property, by any person, under an agreement."

           The First Department has held that

                  "(t]he reasonable value of use and occupancy is the fair market value of the premises
                  after the expiration of the lease ... and it is the landlord, not the tenant, who has the
                  burden of proving reasonable value of use and occupancy .... In determining the
                  reasonable value of use and occupancy, the rent reserved under the lease, while not
                  necessarily conclusive, is probative" (Mush/am, Inc. v Nazar, 80 AD3d 471,472 [1st
                  Dept 2011] [internal citations omitted]).

           A court may award use and occupancy where it would be patently unfair for a tenant to remain in

           possession without paying rent (Brookes, 2023 NY Slip Op 31257[U] at * 17). A court may

           award use and occupancy retroactively and prospectively (id.).

                  The Court also retains broad discretion in deciding whether to compel payment of use

           and occupancy pendente lite (see Alphonse Hotel Corp. v 76 Corp., 273 AD2d 124, 124 [1st

           Dept 2000]). An award of ongoing use and occupancy for the duration of a proceeding

           "'accommodates the competing interests of the parties in affording necessary and fair protection

           to both' and preserves the status quo until a final judgment is rendered" (MMB Assoc. v Dayan,

           169 AD2d 422,422 [1st Dept 1991] [internal citations omitted]).

                  Defendant seeks an order awarding past use and occupancy in defendant's favor in the

           amount of$158,209.31 for the period of July 11, 2019, through November 1, 2021, as well as

           use and occupancy pendente lite, or ongoing use and occupancy (currently in the amount of

           $171,100), for the duration of the proceeding. Defendant urges that an award of use and

           occupancy is within the discretion of the Court and is an equitable measure to prevent a tenant or

           an occupant from living rent-free during the pendency oflitigation (NYSCEF Doc No. 45, memo

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           of law in support of defendant's cross-motion at 28). Defendant asks the Court to set the use and

           occupancy at the rate reserved in the parties' last agreement (id.).

                  Plaintiffs oppose and allege that defendant's claims that it created a new unit in

           contravention of the building's certificate of occupancy are alone enough to deprive defendant of

           an award of use and occupancy (NYSCEF Doc No. 63, memo of law in opposition to cross-

           motion at 23). Additionally, plaintiffs allege that there are twelve apartments on the 14th floor,

           where there should be 11 according to the certificate of occupancy, and IO apartments on each

           floor on floors 15 through 17, where there should be nine according to the certificate of

           occupancy (id. at 24). Plaintiffs insist that defendant's operation of the building in contravention

           of the certificate of occupancy deprives defendant of the right to maintain an action for use and

           occupancy pursuant to MDL§§ 301 and 302 (id.).

                  In its reply, defendant concedes that there are seven units on the 18th floor/17th story and

           maintains that the use of the 18th floor is in compliance with the certificate of occupancy.

           (NYSCEF Doc No. 64, memo of law in reply at 17). Defendant asserts that the building has

           operated with a valid certificate of occupancy for the duration of plaintiffs' tenancy (id.).

           Defendant insists that the fact that the certificate of occupancy has never been revoked is proof

           that it has complied with all Department of Buildings' requirements (id.). Defendant does not

           rebut plaintiffs' allegations that floors 14 through I 7 operate with a greater number of apartments

           than the numbers allotted in the certificate of occupancy. Defendant simply argues that even

           assuming there are discrepancies between the number of apartments on other floors and the

           certificate of occupancy, "which remains unresolved," this does not affect the health and safety

           of the building and does not relieve plaintiffs from paying their rental obligations (id).

            151605/2020 TAUBE$, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                            Page 16 of 21
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                    The crux of plaintiffs' argument that 18C is rent stabilized revolves around the allegation

            that there have always been seven apartments on the 18 th floor/17 th story. The parties agree that

            there are currently seven apartments on the 18th floor/17th story of the building and have been

            seven since plaintiffs began to occupy 18C. Therefore, there is no dispute that the operation of

            the 18th floor/17th story complies with the certificate of occupancy. Even if defendant is

            operating the building with four additional units in contravention of the certificate of occupancy,

            defendant is not precluded from collecting use and occupancy for 18C since plaintiffs have not

            alleged that 18C is affected by the alleged certificate of occupancy violations (see De La Cruz v

            676 Miller Ave. LLC, 2023 NY Slip Op 32895[U], *6 [Sup Ct, Kings County 2023].

                    Balancing the equities and exercising its broad discretion to award use and occupancy,

            the Court finds that defendant is entitled to ongoing monthly use and occupancy pendente lite at

            the rate of $5,900 per month, the last agreed upon amount in the renewal lease, from the date of

            the filing of defendant's cross-motion beginning in December 2021 (Feltman v 106th Realty

            LLC, 2022 NY Slip Op 32592[U], *5 [Sup Ct, NY County 2022]). While plaintiffs have not

            paid any rent since June 2019 (amounting to an additional $158,209.31), the Court declines to

            order retroactive use and occupancy at this juncture. If it is determined at trial that the subject

            premises is rent stabilized, plaintiffs will be entitled to a credit based on any paid use and

            occupancy.

                   Attorney's Fees

                   Plaintiffs seek attorneys' fees pursuant to RPL § 234, which provides a reciprocal right to

            tenants to recover attorneys' fees whenever there is a clause in a lease allowing a landlord to

            recover attorneys' fees. Plaintiffs also seek attorneys' fees pursuant to their last existing lease,

            which states in relevant part that "[owner] agrees that ... [y]ou have the right to collect

             151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                            Page 17 of 21
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           reasonable legal fees and expenses incurred in a successful defense by [y ]ou of a lawsuit brought

           by Owner against [y ]ou or brought by [y ]ou against Owner to the extent provided by Real

           Property Law, section 234." (NYSCEF Doc No. 20, lease agreement dated March 18, 2016, 'ii

           19[8]). It is well-established that "[o]rdinarily, only a prevailing party is entitled to attorney's

           fees" (Nestor v McDowell, 81 NY2d 410,415 [1993]). Here, neither party has prevailed. In

           light of the foregoing, plaintiffs' motion seeking attorneys' fees is denied.

                  Affirmative Defenses

                  Pursuant to CPLR 3211 (b), "[a] party may move for judgment dismissing one or more

           defenses, on the ground that a defense is not stated or has no merit."

                  Dismissing defendant's first, second, and third affirmative defenses alleging,

           respectively, that all rents charged have been lawful, that all lease renewals have been for lawful

          rents, and that there has been no rent overcharge, is not warranted here, as there are issues of fact

           regarding the regulatory status of the subject premises, that, ifresolved in defendant's favor,

           would potentially make all rents paid to defendant lawful. Plaintiffs have not established that the

           first, second, and third affirmative defenses are devoid of merit. Accordingly, these affirmative

          defenses are not subject to dismissal.

                  With respect to the fourth affirmative defense asserting that plaintiffs' claims are barred

          by the doctrine of estoppel, this Court finds that it is not a meritorious defense in this case.

          Although plaintiffs agreed to pay a monthly rent to defendant in a rental agreement, defendant

          provides nothing showing that any of the issues or claims were litigated in a prior proceeding.

          Thus, plaintiffs are permitted to challenge the rents as unlawful. Further, defendant does not

          offer any argument in opposition to dismissal of this affirmative defense.

            151605/2020 TAUBE$, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                            Page 18 of 21
            Motion No. 001

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                  Defendant's fifth, sixth, and ninth affirmative defenses allege that: plaintiffs failed to

          timely commence the instant action and are thus barred by the doctrine of laches and the statute

          of limitations; and that they are not entitled to retroactive remedies of relief. Plaintiffs

          commenced this action within four years of moving into the subject premises, which is within the

          four-year lookback period contemplated by the statute applicable at the relevant time to the case

          at bar. Additionally, defendant does not oppose dismissal of these affirmative defenses.

          Accordingly, they are devoid of merit and are dismissed.

                 Defendant's seventh affirmative defense that any award ofretroactive damages would

          violate defendant's constitutional rights is not subject to dismissal, as issues of fact exist

          regarding the regulatory status of the apartment and any determination concerning damages is

          premature.

                 Defendant's eighth affirmative defense that it relied on promulgated provisions, rules,

          guidelines and opinions of the RSC by DHCR and the Department of Housing and Development

          is not without merit. The issue central to the resolution of this case is whether the subject

          premises was sufficiently reconfigured to such a degree that its particular identity was

          obliterated. Here, the factual circumstances of the case are at issue. Defendant may well have

          lawfully relied on the complicated statutory scheme surrounding rent stabilization when it

          deregulated the apartment.

                 Defendant's tenth affirmative defense that plaintiffs will receive a windfall is meritless.

          In the event that plaintiffs prevail in this proceeding, the damages plaintiffs seek are statutory.

          This defense is therefore dismissed.

           151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                                              Page 19 of 21
           Motion No. 001

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                         Plaintiffs may not test the sufficiency of their own claims by moving to strike the

          affirmative defense of failure to state a cause of action. Accordingly, the eleventh affirmative

          defense alleging that the complaint fails to state a cause of action is not without merit.

                         The twelfth affirmative defense claiming that the leases do not contain clauses providing

          for the payment of legal fees is patently false. The copies of leases supplied by the parties

          provide for an award of legal fees under certain circumstances. Therefore, the Court dismisses

          the twelfth affirmative defense.

                         Dismissal of the thirteenth affirmative defense alleging that plaintiffs are not entitled to

          treble damages is not warranted here, as there are issues of fact regarding the regulatory status of

          the subject premises. Plaintiffs have not established that the thirteenth affirmative defense is

          devoid of merit. Accordingly, this affirmative defense is not subject to dismissal.

                         CONCLUSION

                         Accordingly, it is

                         ORDERED that the motion by plaintiffs Jon Taubes and Lisa Taubes for summary

          judgment is denied except that the branch of plaintiffs' motion seeking to dismiss defendants'

          affirmative defenses is granted to the extent that defendant's fourth, fifth, sixth, ninth, tenth, and

          twelfth affirmative defenses are dismissed; and it is further

                         ORDERED that the portion of the cross-motion by defendant seeking use and occupancy

          is granted, and plaintiffs shall post a bond for use and occupancy from November 2021 through

          March 2024 at $5,900 per month, amounting to $171,100, no later than April 1, 2024; and it is

          further

            151605/2020 TAUBE$, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                                  Page 20 of 21
            Motion No. 001

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                  ORDERED that the cross-motion by defendants is granted to the extent of awarding

          ongoing use and occupancy pendente lite at $5,900 per month due by the 5th of each month; and

          it is further

                  ORDERED that other unpaid use and occupancy owed to defendant, if any, or

          overpayments by plaintiffs, if any, will be determined at trial; and it is further

                  ORDERED that the cross-motion is otherwise denied.

                  This constitutes the decision and order of the Court.

                   3/14/2024
                                                                                                                 .
                     DATE                                                        James d'Auguste, J.S.C.

                                   ~
           CHECK ONE:                  CASE DISPOSED                    NON-FINAL DISPOSITION

           APPLICATION:

           CHECK IF APPROPRIATE:
                                       GRANTED

                                       SETTLE ORDER
                                                       □ DENIED

                                       INCLUDES TRANSFER/REASSIGN
                                                                    8   GRANTED IN PART

                                                                        SUBMIT ORDER

                                                                        FIDUCIARY APPOINTMENT
                                                                                                   0     OTHER

                                                                                                   □ REFERENCE

           151605/2020 TAUBES, JON vs. YORKSHIRE HOUSE ASSOCIATES LLC                                Page 21 of 21
           Motion No. 001

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