Filed Date: 6/4/1997
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
OPINION OF THE COURT
Order entered February 16, 1996 reversed, with $10 costs, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is denied, and the second affirmative defense is stricken.
Defendant, a residential tenant of apartment premises at 350 East 52nd Street, Manhattan, vacated the premises in September 1990, prior to the expiration of the lease on December 31, 1990. In this action for rent arrears, Civil Court
As recently reaffirmed by a unanimous Court of Appeals in Holy Props. v Cole Prods. (87 NY2d 130, 133), the rule in this State remains that "[office the lease is executed, the lessee’s obligation to pay rent is fixed according to its terms and a landlord is under no obligation or duty to the tenant to relet, or attempt to relet abandoned premises in order to minimize damages”. In rejecting the opportunity to adopt the contract rationale of mitigation of damages, the Court pointed to the overriding benefit of applying "established precedents” in the field of real property law (Holy Props. v Cole Prods., supra, at 134).
While a commercial tenancy was the subject of the litigation in Holy Props, (supra), neither the language nor reasoning employed in the decision signals an intent on the part of the Court of Appeals to abrogate the no-mitigation rule in the context of residential landlord and tenant relationships
Ostrau, P. J., Parness and McCooe, JJ., concur.
The Court cites with approval to Becar v Flues (64 NY 518), an 1876 case where the lessee of a house died and the estate, after vacating the premises, was held responsible for the remainder of the lease term.