Judges: Patterson
Filed Date: 12/11/2006
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
OPINION OF THE COURT
Memorandum.
Appeal from so much of the order dated October 8, 2004 as awarded tenant partial summary judgment Hmiting landlord to
Order dated October 8, 2004, insofar as reviewed, affirmed without costs.
Order dated April 29, 2005 modified by striking the direction to landlord to accept tenant’s tender of checks totaling $5,932.40; as so modified, affirmed without costs.
Landlord commenced this nonpayment proceeding seeking to recover arrears in rent and/or use and occupancy for the period from July 1999 through February 2004 from tenant, who succeeded to the rent-stabilized apartment upon her mother’s death in March 2001. In the order dated October 8, 2004, tenant was awarded partial summary judgment dismissing landlord’s claim for the arrears accruing prior to her mother’s death and limiting landlord to seeking a nonpossessory judgment for the period from March 2001 until December 2003. With respect to the latter period, the court found that landlord had deliberately refused to give tenant a proper renewal lease until December 2003, despite a July 2002 order of the Division of Housing and Community Renewal directing landlord to do so. It further found that landlord’s failure to give tenant a proper renewal lease resulted in tenant’s inability to arrange for the Department of Social Services (DSS) to pay the arrears. In the order of April 29, 2005, the court directed landlord to accept tenant’s tender of DSS checks for all arrears from December 2003 to date and dismissed the proceeding.
On this appeal, landlord does not specifically challenge the court’s dismissal of its claim for the arrears accruing prior to tenant’s mother’s death. In any event, this determination was correct (see Edelstein & Son, LLC v Levin, 8 Misc 3d 135[A], 2005 NY Slip Op 51190[U] [App Term, 1st Dept 2005]). The appeal from the remainder of the October 8, 2004 order, which limited landlord to seeking a nonpossessory judgment for use and occupancy for the period from March 2001 through December 2003, has been mooted by the subsequent dismissal of the proceeding, which dismissal we affirm.
The dismissal of this nonpayment proceeding based upon tenant’s tender of all arrears accruing from December 2003 was correct. Because landlord refused to offer tenant a proper lease prior to December 2003, there was no agreement and no landlord-tenant relationship between the parties prior to that date (see 245 Realty Assoc. v Sussis, 243 AD2d 29, 35 [1998]
The court’s direction to landlord to accept tenant’s tender is stricken because the court did not have jurisdiction to enjoin landlord to accept such funds (CCA 209 [b]; Wren Props, of Nassau v Taveras, NYLJ, Oct. 4, 1999, at 32, col 3 [App Term, 2d & 11th Jud Dists]), and landlord was within its rights in refusing to do so.