Citation Numbers: 3 A.D.3d 440, 772 N.Y.S.2d 4, 2004 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 739
Filed Date: 1/27/2004
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Plaintiff landlord commenced a breach of contract and fraud action against its tenants in Supreme Court. About two years later, plaintiff commenced a summary holdover proceeding in Civil Court. The parties moved and cross-moved for summary judgment on the claims and counterclaims in the Supreme Court action. The resulting order is not at issue on appeal. Defendants also moved in the Supreme Court for an injunction staying the summary holdover proceeding and to strike the notice of termination. Although observing that “there is not perfect coincidence between the Civil Court proceeding[ ] and th[is action],” the court nevertheless found that “there is certainly a great deal of coincidence” and that the essence of both was “improper alterations and the like.” Consequently, the Supreme Court granted a stay conditioned upon defendants’ payment of use and occupancy in addition to monthly maintenance and apparently did not address that branch of the motion to strike the notice of termination.
We reverse. The Civil Court is the preferred forum for resolving landlord-tenant issues (see Post v 120 E. End Ave. Corp., 62 NY2d 19 [1984]; Cohen v Goldfein, 100 AD2d 795 [1984]). Indeed, “[o]nly where Civil Court is without authority to grant the relief sought should the prosecution of a summary proceeding be stayed” (Scheff v 230 E. 73rd Owners Corp., 203 AD2d 151, 152 [1994]). Thus, given the strong preference for resolving landlord-tenant disputes in Civil Court due to its unique ability to resolve such issues, the Supreme Court erred in staying the summary holdover proceeding. Even if there were no strong preference for adjudicating landlord-tenant proceedings in Civil Court, defendants here did not make the requisite prima facie showing to obtain an injunction staying the summary holdover proceeding (see CPLR 6301, 6312; Koultukis v Phillips, 285 AD2d 433 [2001]).