This opinion says it all.
One Wythe LLC v Elevations Urban Landscape Design Inc, 2020 NY Slip Op 50437(U), Decided on April 17, 2020, Civil Court, Kings County, Roper, J.
"…….
NYC ADMIN. CODE 22-902
To redress this real-world practical dilemma for the small business
non-residential commercial tenant the City of New York Legislature
responded. U.S. public policy acknowledges small businesses [FN16]
as the lifeblood of its functioning society which builds communities
both local as well as national and therefore must be protected, fostered
and any undue interference with such may be regulated by the
legislature [FN17]
, notwithstanding the private [*8]right to contract in our capitalistic
society. Therefore, as a matter of public policy the New York City
legislature exercised its authority to enact the relatively new
Non-Residential Tenant Harassment Law based upon its foundational
legislative history [FN18]
. Section 1 was amended to add a new Chapter 9 to Title 22 of the
Administrative Code of the City of New York, effective June 28, 2016,
titled, The Harassment Law, to redress the real-world practical effect
on small business commercial tenants of these sort of strained tenuous
stretched hyper-technical legal arguments that may pass muster pursuant
to NYS Sanctions Statute, NYS 22 NYCRR 130 -1.1. More so explicitly, to
redress the effects of these sort of strained tenuous stretched
hyper-technical legal arguments brought repeatedly against the small
business tenant, such as Ms. Cara White and her 10 employees.
New York City Non-Residential Tenant Harassment Law was first
introduced July 23, 2015 with the title "A Local Law to amend the
administrative code of the City of New York, in relation to curtailing
harassment of small businesses and other non-residential tenants" by
Small Business Committee Chair Councilperson Robert E. Cornegy, Jr.
(representative of Bedford Stuyvesant, Brooklyn — an area of explosive
real estate speculation with attendant explosive rent increases, both
residential and commercial tenancies, significant gentrification as
well as suffering erosive loss of displaced brick and mortar
multigenerational mom and pop small businesses that are exponentially
ceding to high-end high-rises). The proposed legislation, Chapter 9 was
to include: § 22-901, Definitions; § 22-902, Commercial Tenant
Harassment; § 22-903, Private Right of Action; and § 22-904, Affirmative
Defenses and was approved June 21, 2016 by unanimous Council present
(save for two absent Council Members) and signed into law by Mayor Bill
DeBlasio on June 28, 2016. In part, the text of Admin Code § 22-902 (a)
as signed into law:
"A landlord shall not engage in commercial tenant harassment.
Except as provided in subdivision b of this section, commercial tenant
harassment is any act or omission by or on behalf of a landlord that (i)
is intended to cause a commercial tenant to vacate covered property, or
to surrender or waive any rights under a lease or other rental
agreement or under applicable law in relation to such covered property,
and (ii) includes one or more of the following "[FN19]
Schulman was in part brought under the initial 2016 Harassment Law
mandating intent as an element (Schulman, Blitz & Williamson, LLP v
VBG 990 AOA LLC, 2018 NY Misc LEXIS 5612, 2018 NY Slip Op 32993 [U] [Sup
Ct, NY County 2018]). Small business law firm, plaintiff, sought
equitable relief in form of an injunction against defendant, new
landlord as successor in interest of lease, which had made attempts to
terminate leases of all tenants in its newly purchased building. Small
business law firm was the sole remaining tenant in building and argued
that landlord subjected it to commercial tenant harassment pursuant to
Harassment Law. It argued that under the landlord's guise of alleged
required legitimate renovations pursuant to Local Law 11, work approved
by City of New York Buildings Department, was a pretext. [*9]Those
pretextual renovations caused business interruptions preventing small
business law firm from conducting its business to meet with clients.
Court denied injunctive relief to small business tenant finding no
harassment based upon the mandated element of intent, which is indeed a
high bar (see id.). "Defendant also contends that plaintiff fails to
show an intent to cause it to vacate the building or waive its rights
under the lease and that not only does the lease allow for the work,
but the Department of Buildings (DOB) approved the renovation plans"
(id. at 3-4). This element of intent under the Harassment Law actually
compounded the deleterious effect of landlord's offending conduct under
pretext of legitimate conduct against the small business tenant.
Schulman clearly exposed an unintended gaping loophole in the 2016
version of Harassment Law, to wit, the element of intent. The mandated
intent was found too high a bar that actually frustrated the legislative
intent of the Harassment Law in the first instance (see id.).
Once again in its exercise of its public policy authority, New York
City Legislature sought to redress this gaping loophole in the
Harassment Law, to wit, the deleterious effect on small business tenant
of such pretextual conduct under guise of legitimate purposes by
offending landlord. Legislature found that "intent" requirement of the
2016 Law lent itself readily to pretextual reasoning for landlord's
offending conduct that causes harassment upon the small business tenant.
Therefore, law as codified was not fulfilling its legislative purpose
because of too readily crafted pretextual defenses that were being
successfully used by landlords to frustrate its legislative purpose.
Consequently, to close the gaping loophole exposed by Schulman, the
Legislature proposed amendment to Harassment Law Chapter 9 on February
23, 2019 sponsored by Bronx Councilperson Vanessa L. Gibson of the
Housing and Buildings Committee under the title: "Requiring a
certification of no harassment prior to the approval of construction
documents or the issuance of permits for demolition or renovation of
certain commercial buildings" with the following Introduction Summary:
"This bill would redefine commercial tenant harassment as an act or
omission by a landlord that would reasonably cause a commercial tenant
to vacate, or surrender or waive their rights under a rental agreement.
The bill would also broaden the acts and omissions that constitute
commercial tenant harassment. The bill would raise civil penalties for
landlords that commit commercial tenant harassment to $10,000-50,000 for
each property in which the tenant was subject to harassment. Finally,
when a landlord has been found to have engaged in commercial tenant
harassment, the bill would clarify that courts can order the Department
of Buildings not to approve, issue or renew documents for certain types
of construction work the landlord wishes to perform at the property in
which the tenant was subject to harassment."[FN20]
This proposed amendment in relevant part explicitly replaces the
language in § 22-902 (a) from "(i) is intended to cause" to "(i) would
reasonably cause".[FN21]
By majority, City Council voted to approve amendment on September 25,
2019 and though it was returned unsigned by Mayor Bill [*10]DeBlasio on
November 13, 2019, amendment became law by City Charter Rule Adopted
October 26, 2019, to take effect "immediately"[FN22]
. In addition, it amends the civil penalties pursuant to § 22-903 (a)
from "an amount not less than one thousand dollars and not more than ten
thousand dollars" to "an amount not less than ten thousand dollars and
not more than fifty thousand dollars." Of particular note, the title of
this proposed 2019 amendment contained explicit language of demolition,
Department of Building approvals, and renovation which directly
evidences Schulman's influence on the Legislature.
Clearly, the enactment of October 26, 2019 legislative amendment
conclusively established that the landlord's intent is no longer to be
an element nor a determinative factor for the amended Harassment Law.
Rather, it is the effect on the small business tenant that becomes the
focus on the determination of harassment under the current amended state
of the Law: whether or not landlord's conduct would reasonably cause
the small business tenant to vacate leasehold premises or to surrender
or waive any rights under the lease or other rental agreement. Prior to
the vote on the amendment on September 25, 2019, Legislative City
Council Speaker stated:
"[O]ur small businesses are the backbone of our economy and I'm so very
happy the Council is acting on this item today.Introduction 1410-B
sponsored by Council Member Vanessa Gibson would strengthen the
commercial tenant harassment law by changing the current standard of
an act or omission that is quote, "intended to cause a tenant to vacate
the premises" to an or omission that would quote, "reasonably cause a
commercial tenant to vacate the property" or surrender or waive rights
as a lawful tenant. Further the bill adds to the current list of behaviors
that constitute tenant harassment which include continued interruption
of a essential services to now also include discrimination based on a
protected class and inquiring to a tenant's immigration status or
threatening a tenant based on such status "[FN23].
Obviously, Legislature as a matter of public policy redressed
the gaping loophole of pretextual conduct by landlord. The realization
being made, that there may be crafted pretextual seemingly legitimate
reasons for landlord's offending conduct against the small business
tenant who adversely feels the crushing harassing effect of such
offending conduct brought by the landlord's undue duress and burden
ultimately resulting in a premature vacatur or surrender or waiver of
rights under lease or other rental agreement.
This immediate effective date of October 26, 2019 [FN24]
of the Harassment Law amendment occurred during the pendency of this
instant matter in which Respondent sought redress pursuant to Harassment
Law. "In determining whether statutory enactments should be given
retroactive effect, there are two axioms of statutory interpretation"
(Clean Earth of N. Jersey, Inc. v Northcoast Maintenance Corp., 142 AD3d
1032, 1036-1037, 39 NYS 3d 165, 170 [App Div 2016] citing Marrero v
Crystal Nails, 114 AD3d 101, 111, 978 NYS2d 257 [2013], quoting Nelson v
HSBC Bank USA, 87 AD3d 995, 997, 929 NYS2d 259 [2011]). "Amendments are
presumed to have prospective application unless the Legislature's
preference for retroactivity is explicitly stated or clearly indicated.
However, remedial legislation should be given retroactive effect in
order to effectuate its beneficial purpose'" (id. citing Nelson v HSBC
Bank USA, 87 AD3d at 997, quoting Matter of Gleason [Michael Vee, Ltd.],
96 NY2d 117, 122, 749 [*11]NE2d 724, 726 NYS2d 45 [2001]; see Majewski v
Broadalbin-Perth Cent. School Dist., 91 NY2d 577, 584, 696 NE2d 978,
673 NYS2d 966 [1998]; Marrero v Crystal Nails, 114 AD3d at 111). "These
axioms are helpful guideposts, but 'the reach of the statute ultimately
becomes a matter of judgment made upon review of the legislative goal"
(id. citing Nelson v HSBC Bank USA, 87 AD3d at 997, quoting Matter of
OnBank & Trust Co., 90 NY2d 725, 730, 688 NE2d 245, 665 NYS2d 389
[1997]; see Matter of Marino S., 100 NY2d 361, 371, 795 NE2d 21, 763
NYS2d 796 [2003]; Marrero v Crystal Nails, 114 AD3d at 112)." The
Appellate Division Second Department further decided that in determining
legislative intent as to the remedial retroactive effect of a statutory
amendment, its chosen effective date is determinative. "The
Legislature's six-month postponement of the effective date indicates
that it did not intend for the amendment to be given retroactive effect"
(Matter of Joyner v New York State Div. of Parole, 114 AD3d 792, 793,
980 NYS 2d 267, 268 [App Div 2014]). Here, the October 26, 2019 enacted
amendments to The Harassment Law were to take "effect immediately"[FN25]
. Therefore, in applying the Appellate Division Second Department's
standards, these amendments are to be given retroactive effect
notwithstanding law changed during the pendency of instant matter.
Although this instant matter was commenced as a summary holdover
proceeding, NYC Admin. Code § 22-902 (a) creates a private right of
action that may have been brought as a plenary action allowing for jury
demand. Further, where tenant seeks equitable relief pursuant to the
Harassment Law as in Schulman, it must be brought in Supreme Court, as
court of competent jurisdiction, and not Civil Court with very limited
equitable jurisdiction (see Schulman, Blitz & Williamson, LLP v VBG
990 AOA LLC, 2018 NY Misc LEXIS 5612, 2018 NY Slip Op 32993 [U] [Sup Ct,
NY County 2018]). Herein, Tenant has chosen to seek redress, inter
alia, in Civil Court pursuant to Harassment Law in this pre-answer
motion to dismiss for summary holdover proceeding. It would be wholly
inconsistent with the spirit of the law through its legislative history
as detailed above and not in the interest of justice to hold as a matter
of law that redress pursuant to Harassment Law may not be sought
procedurally in a summary proceeding brought by the landlord, as said
summary proceeding in and of itself may be wholly or in part thereof the
alleged offending act or omission that constitutes a basis for the
harassment at issue. Two elements are required to be proven by a
preponderance of evidence pursuant to the Harassment Law. First, Tenant
bears the burden of proof to demonstrate that the landlord's offending
act or omission would reasonably cause the tenant's vacatur of the
covered property or to surrender or waive any rights under a lease,
other rental agreement or applicable law, NYC Admin. Code 22-902(a); to
reasonably cause requires this determination to be made pursuant to the
reasonable person standard, to wit, would a reasonable person as fact
finder find that landlord's act or omission would more likely than not
cause the tenant to vacate, surrender, or waive any rights under the
lease or other rental agreement at issue. Second, landlord's offending
act or omission must comprise or be the basis of one or more of the
explicitly enumerated offending acts in the Harassment Law, NYC Admin.
Code § 22-902 (a) (1-13).
Enumerated in NYC Admin. Code § 22-902 (a) (1-13) are varied diverse
offending acts or omissions [FN26]
that may be redressed by other penal as well as civil laws, ranging from
threats of [*12]violence to discrimination of protected classes [FN27]
. While cross-examining Ms. White, Petitioner erroneously implied that
Harassment Law required some sort of physical strong-arm techniques,
such as threatened or actual breaking of limbs or destruction of
leasehold property. However, in this case of first impression pursuant
to this October 26, 2019 newly amended Harassment Law, Ms. White argues
that each and every summary proceeding commenced by Petitioner against
Respondent were based upon pre-textual strained tenuous stretched
hyper-technical legal arguments and not based upon fact, and were
frivolous even where the strained tenuous stretched hyper-technical
legal arguments may not rise to frivolous as explicitly defined pursuant
to 22 NYCRR 130-1.1 (c). This Court finds that while "frivolous" is
determined as a matter of law pursuant to 22 NYCRR 130-1.1 (c);
"frivolous" pursuant to Admin Code § 22-2902 (a) (5) is determined as a
material issue of fact. However, Harassment Law failed to explicitly
define "frivolous" pursuant to Admin Code § 22-2902 (a) (5). Where a
word or explicit language was undefined within a law, the common law
principle from the Kings Bench, the "plain meaning rule"[FN28]
of statutory construction was applied. However, U.S. common law has
rejected the plain meaning rule in applying the literal or commonplace
meaning of an undefined word within a law. Rather, the present state of
U.S. law bases the meaning of that undefined word upon the legislative
intent or the spirit of the law at issue. The spirit of the law is
determined by its legislative history:
"It is said that when the meaning of language is plain we are not to
resort to evidence in order to raise doubts. That is rather an axiom of
experience than a rule of law and does not preclude consideration of
persuasive evidence if it exists. If Congress has been accustomed to use
a certain phrase with a more limited meaning than might be attributed
to it by common practice, it would be arbitrary to refuse to consider
that fact when we come to interpret a statute. But, as we have said, the
usage of Congress simply shows that it has spoken with careful
precision, that its words mark the exact spot at which it stops"
(Boston
Sand & Gravel Co. v United States, 278 US 41, 48-49, 49 S Ct 52,
54, 73 L Ed 170, 177 [1928]).
"To the extent that the Court of Appeals excluded reference to the
legislative history of the FWPCA in discerning its meaning, the court
was in error. As we have noted before: 'When aid to construction of the
meaning of words, as used in the statute, is available, there certainly
can be no 'rule of law' which forbids its use, however clear the words
may appear on 'superficial examination'. n this case, as we shall see,
the legislative history sheds considerable light on the question before
the Court"
(Train v Colorado Public Interest Research Group,
Inc., 426 US 1, 9-10, 96 S Ct 1938, 1942, 48 L Ed 2d 434, 441 [1976]
quoting United States v American Trucking Assns., 310 US 534, 543-544
[1940]; citing Cass v United States, 417 US 72, 77-79 [1974]; see United
States v Dickerson, 310 US 554, 554, 60 S Ct 1034, 1035, 84 L Ed 1356,
1358 [1940]; see also Association of Westinghouse Salaried Employees v
Westinghouse Electric Corp., 348 US 437, [*13]444, 75 S Ct 489, 492, 99 L
Ed 510, 516 [1955]; see also Greater NY Metro. Food Council, Inc. v
Guiliani, 1998 US Dist LEXIS 19498, 27 Media L Rep 1417). Therefore,
where "frivolous" is undefined as used in NYC Admin. Code § 22-902 (a)
(5), it is the spirit of the law through legislative history that must
be applied to determine its meaning as intended by the legislators in
the enactment of the law at issue.
Legislator Mark Levine stated at legislative hearing held on September 25, 2015:
"And the most unscrupulous among them are resorting to really despicable
tactics to push out commercial tenants before their lease is up because
they know that there is higher rents on the back side." [FN29]; " .
they're also sometimes engaging in shenanigans " [FN30]
; " And frankly until now there just haven't been strong enough
protections and sanctions on this kind of behavior ."[FN31]
; " seeks to provide some penalties with teeth so hat tenants who are
subjected to this kind o[f] harassment and it is harassment can resort
to the courts and win damages to compensate for lost business, to
compensate for legal fees, etcetera"[FN32]
Here, legislative history may indeed be summed up in the regard
as to repeated commencement of frivolous matters by the term
"shenanigans" (see City Council Meeting Committee on Small Business
September 25, 2015 tr at 12, line 2).Although repeated commencement of
frivolous matters as shenanigans may not rise to the gravity of physical
violence, threat of physical violence, or pretextual demolition of
property that satisfy "unscrupulous" or "really despicable tactics,"
nevertheless said repeated commencements of frivolous court proceedings
may reasonably cause tenant's vacatur or surrender or waiver of rights
under lease or other rental agreement. It is shenanigans such as
repeated commencement of frivolous matters with its attendant buildup of
expenditure of time away from tenant's business and expenditure of
money by tenant for defense thereto which could cause a reasonable
person to find by a preponderance of evidence that the repeated
commencement of these frivolous actions whether or not seemingly
legitimate, are actual shenanigans to deflect tenant from conducting its
business causing business disruption and expenditure of moneys to
defend said frivolous matters in costs, disbursements and attorney fees.
All of which, constituting financial injury in the form of loss of
revenues and in expenditure of time in defending repeated frivolous
actions as well as defense litigation expenses to ultimately result in
the effect of small business tenant being bludgeoned into submission by
landlord by giving up to vacate, or to surrender or to waive legitimate
contractual rights under a lease or other rental agreement. Thus,
whether there were repeated commencement of frivolous proceedings
pursuant to Administrative Code § 22-902 (5) which constitute harassment
is a matter of fact for the factfinder applying a reasonable person
standard in accordance with the legislative history's spirit of the
Harassment Law.
Procedurally, where, as here, Harassment Law redress is sought as
counter in a landlord's commenced summary proceeding, tenant's testimony
is required to bear its burden of proof for the alleged harassment and
its effects upon tenant by preponderance of the evidence and its
damages. In the instant matter, Harassment Law Hearing was held on March
4, 2020 in which tenant's testimony was taken with landlord's
cross-examination. Landlord failed to provide witness. Respondent's
principal, Ms. White, testified: Respondent is a woman owned small
[*14]business [FN33]
for design landscaping services with 10 employees; entered into lease
February 2016 for 5 years to occupy 11 Wythe which she uses as office
and warehouse for her materials; she is mother of 2 small children as
she runs her small business; predecessor owner with whom she had an
amicable relationship with did tell her that he may sell property and
Sale Termination Lease Clause 15 was included for that contingency; the
lease was drafted by the predecessor owner's son who was a lawyer and
she was not represented by counsel; upon Petitioner's purchase of the
property Petitioner's agent introduced himself at 11 Wythe and reminded
her as to the previously sent letter regarding its new online site for
rent payment; new online site for her rent payment explicitly stated
leasehold premises as "11 Wythe" and not "9 Wythe"; when she received
#1Notice on January 14, 2019 by email to evict her from the wrong
address of 9 Wythe, she called Petitioner who told her to "call lawyer"
and then "radio silence"[FN34]
; even though wrong address and notice not properly sent based upon
Clause Eighteen of the lease, she was forced to engage a lawyer to
defend #1Notice; she was forced to expend time away from her business to
look for and engage services of an attorney to defend against obviously
defective #1Notice; after court on July 15, 2019, judge dismissed
Petitioner's case and quite stridently admonished Petitioner for its
breach of lease in its failure to comply with Sale Termination Lease
Clause 15 and mandating any further proceedings to evict her must be in
compliance; she then felt a sense of relief that she had at least until
April 2020 before Petitioner can seek to again evict her and Petitioner
had to abide by lease and give her notice on or before December 31,
2019;
" I felt okay. Great. We gone to court done what we have need to do. We
have been granted. We would have another - - we would potentially
notified again for future year, but for now we were safe. That was
great. We got another notice. We don't have a lease. I don't understand
that.[FN35]
Ms. White was taken aback and confused when Petitioner served
her again with #2Notice about a week after judge's decision dismissing
#1Notice; This time, #2Notice to evict her alleged that she had no lease
and was merely a month to month tenant; she was absolutely confused and
again engaged the same lawyer and was very worried as to having to
vacate earlier than April 2020; she was not sure what to do so she began
to look for other rental space notwithstanding that she knew that lease
explicitly stated she had to receive notice by the 31st day of December
in the previous year in order to be evicted by the end of April in the
succeeding year as per Sale Termination Lease Clause 15; In the midst of
Ms. White fending off eviction from #2Notice in which Petitioner
alleged no lease, landlord again served a Third Notice to Terminate
#3Notice this time alleging the complete opposite fact - that she did
have a lease which caused even heightened level of frustration and
confusion; she then realized that she would have to pay more legal fees
for #3Notice; she could not understand why Petitioner was repeatedly
bringing these cases against her under inconsistent theories when she
dutifully paid her rent without incident;
"I think that it just been series of confusions, you know, from my
perspective I sign lease, I feel like I have a lease. Now I'm back in
court for in - - of another notice saying I do [*15]have a lease - - now
I'm back in court for that. Confusion would be appropriate term."[FN36]
The inconsistency and repeated proceedings to evict caused
stress upon Ms. White;
"It's a constant stress point. We have been, you know, I've been running
base for number of years. I could foresee lot of the business stress
that come our way. This is one that I feel like I'm kind of in a world
no control over it. I feel I received lease in court."[FN37]
This Court as fact-finder paraphrases witness' testimony to
include its interpretation of said testimony adduced by Ms. White's body
language and speech patterns that cannot be captured by mere reportable
text of transcript. This Court finds witness was nervous, worried and
anxious about the future of her small design landscaping business. This
Court finds Ms. White quite credible.
Applying reasonable person standard This Court as fact-finder finds
#1Notice and #2Notice are repeated commencement of frivolous court
proceedings, bolstered by the evidence of #3Notice. Pursuant to the
legislative history and spirit of the Harassment Law using Legislator
Levy's language, it is found that commencement of both proceedings are
indeed shenanigans and therefore repeated frivolous proceedings.
Petitioner knew or should have known that Ms. White's small business
leased premises is 11 Wythe and not 9 Wythe in #1Notice: Its agent
visited her at 11 Wythe after purchase of building on October 24, 2018;
same agent reminded her as to the new online payment system which it
created and stated for leasehold of 11 Wythe and not 9 Wythe. Still,
even after she called Petitioner upon receipt of #1Notice after December
31, 2018, to wit, by email on January 14, 2019, instead of curing its
defective #1Notice it doubled down and told her to get a lawyer and so
she was forced to do exactly that. After expending monies for attorney
fees and time away from her business, on the very same basis that she
spoke to Petitioner about, the court dismissed #1Notice on July 15, 2019
and specifically stated in its decision,
" the court is hereby putting the parties on notice that if another case
is commenced, Article 15 of the lease instructs, directs, governs etc.
how the parties must proceed. If not done in accordance with Article 15,
the court may make a determination of frivolity."[FN38]
Nevertheless, Petitioner sought a different argument in another
attempt to evict her with #2Notice; This time, incredibly claiming that
Ms. White had no lease but was rather a month to month tenant arguing
that because of the internal conflict within the lease stating both 11
Wythe and 9 Wythe as leasehold premises that Petitioner of its own
volition is invalidating the lease as of no existence; Although, well
established law holds where any ambiguities or errors in said contract
as a lease will inure to the detriment of drafter and to the benefit of
non-drafter.[FN39]
Therefore, Petitioner as landlord errs in its attempt to shift burden
unto Ms. White for its error as drafter, re-emphasizing that Petitioner
stands in the shoes of its predecessor in interest. Moreover, it was
clear that July 15, 2019 court decision established as a matter of law
the validity and existence of the lease for 11 Wythe and not for 9
Wythe, notwithstanding the internal conflicting leasehold premises.
This Court further finds that #1Notice and #2Notice are repeated
frivolous proceedings commenced against Ms. White's small business
tenancy which could reasonably cause and actually did cause Ms. White to
attempt to cede possession of the leased premises of 11 Wythe [*16]and
to surrender and waive her rights under Sale Termination Clause 15 as
well as Notice Lease Clause 18 based upon the preponderance of evidence.
The commencement of these repeated frivolous proceedings did deflect
Ms. White from conducting her landscaping design business, causing
business disruption and expenditure of moneys to defend, which caused
financial injury. It is uncontroverted that Ms. White had not breached
any of her obligations under the lease, having been a dutifully timely
paying tenant, bar none. As Ms. White testified, fact-finder found that
she appeared so very put upon, most certainly seemingly bludgeoned into
submission by Petitioner-landlord that she actually did seek to vacate,
to surrender, and to waive legitimate contractual rights and protections
that she has under the valid lease.
"Every time you get notice you stop, know where you stand, you're
looking for new space, you're stressed out, you're finding space. You
are finding far more expenses. I've been lucky, I live and work in the
same space. I have two little kids that's been monumental. It is hard
when that sort of situation get upended. We're looking at space, not
same neighborhood. All of this it effect your business. Your spending
time, effort not to do what you should do for business growth."[FN40]
"Other than the number of notices and court experiences that I have been
made to make. Elements we are here today. All of those collectively, in
addition to the third notice which I can foresee, you know proceeding
regarding that."[FN41]
Further, Petitioner's harassment upon Ms. White's small business
caused financial injury in the form of business interference, loss of
time away from her clients, unnecessary money paid for attorney fees
amounting to $19,509.32 to defend these repeated frivolous proceedings
of #1Notice and #2Notice, as well as stress.
"Interference of business. I'm sole proprietor of this business. My job
is with clients it is not managing staff. Every hour I'm spending is a
hour I'm not doing my operation of business. Looking for spaces, calling
landlord, that all comes into play as well. Responding to, you know,
e-mail, getting to this point."[FN42]
For all the foregoing reasons, Re-Argument Granted; vacating of
dismissal order Denied; Costs and Sanctions pursuant to 22 NYCRR 130-1.1
(c) Denied; and Judgment in the amount of $19,509.32 for attorney's
fees in favor of Respondent, ELEVATIONS URBAN LANDSCAPE DESIGN INC
Granted.
…….
Footnote 16:An independent business with less than 500 employees (see
2019 Small Business Profile [US Small Business Administration],
https://cdn.advocacy.sba.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/23142719/2019-Small-Business-Profiles-US.pdf.).
Parenthetically, it is timely that at the writing of This Court's
Decision, Federal, State and City governments likewise, as a matter of
public policy, are concomitantly redressing deleterious effects of the
tragic Coronavirus Pandemic of 2020 encroaching on private rights of
contract for small businesses. "Small businesses are the lifeblood of
the U.S. economy: they create two-thirds of net new jobs and drive U.S.
innovation and competitiveness. A new report shows that they account for
44 percent of U.S. economic activity [GDP]" (Small Businesses Generate
44 Percent Of U.S. Economic Activity [U.S. Small Business
Administration],
https://advocacy.sba.gov/2019/01/30/small-businesses-generate-44-percent-of-u-s-economic-activity/
[Jan. 30 2019].
Footnote 17:Quite timely as to the imperative national public policy
legislative interest in the protection of small businesses, inter alia,
in the midst of This Court's decision, was enacted the historically
unprecedented two trillion dollar stimulus package titled Coronavirus
Aid, Relief and Economic Securities Act (CARES Act) to redress the
decimation of our economy by force majeure of Coronavirus Pandemic of
2020.
Footnote 18:"Just as residential tenants are protected from harassment
so they can stay in their homes and contribute to the diversity and
vibrancy of New York City small business owners deserve protection"
(City Council Meeting Committee on Small Business September 25, 2015 tr
at 7, lines 20-24); "And the most unscrupulous among them are resorting
to really despicable tactics to push out commercial tenants before their
lease is up because they know that there is higher rents on the back
side"(id. at 11, lines 12-16); "they're also sometimes engaging in
shenanigans" (id. at 11, line 25; at 12, line 2); "And frankly until
now there just haven't been strong enough protections and sanctions on
this kind of behavior" (id. at 12, lines 5-8); "seeks to provide some
penalties with teeth so hat tenants who are subjected to this kind of
harassment and it is harassment can resort to the courts and win damages
to compensate for lost business, to compensate for legal fees,
etcetera"(id. at 12, lines 9-14).
Footnote 19:Local Law No. 77 (2016) of City of New York § 22-902.
Footnote 20: Summary of Int. No. 1410-B [New York City Council]
https://legistar.council.nyc.gov/LegislationDetail.aspx?ID=3860325 &
GUID=77C59AE5-3675-48E1-81B6-97F7B26616D4 & Options=ID%7cText%7c
& Search=Int+1410 [2019].
Footnote 21:See City Council Stated Meeting September 25, 2019 tr at 36,
lines 24-25; at 37, line 2. (Transcript in error states "2018").
Footnote 22:Local Law No. 185 (2019) of City of New York § 22-902.
Footnote 23:City Council Stated Meeting September 25, 2019 tr at 45, lines 12-16.
Footnote 24:See n 22, supra.
Footnote 25:Id.
Footnote 26: " the harassment can take many forms and other acts or
omissions that disrupt business operation" (City Council Meeting
Committee on Small Business June 20, 2016 tr at 3, line 22; at 4, line
3); " landlord will be guilty of non-residential tenant harassment if he
engages in acts or omissions with the intent to deprive a covered
tenant of any rights in a lease or other rental agreement, which may
include a month-to month agreement and a holdover tenancy" (id. at 4,
lines 6-11).
Footnote 27:NYC Admin Code § 22-902 (a) (11).
Footnote 28:Also referred to as the Literal Rule of statutory
construction: where the court applies the literal, ordinary or
commonplace meaning of an undefined word used in a law, even if in such
application fails to reflect the law's legislative intent or the spirit
of the law. "If the words of the Statute are in themselves precise and
unambiguous, then no more can be necessary than to expound those words
in that natural and ordinary sense. The words themselves alone do, in
such a case, best declare the intention of the law giver" (Sussex
Peerage Case, 11 Cl & Fin 85 [1844]; see Whiteley v Chappel, LR 4 QB
147 [1868;] [defendant acquitted where penal statute prohibiting
impersonation of a "person" to vote, where court applied Plain
Meaning/Literal Rule decided that a dead man is not a "person"]).
Footnote 29:City Council Meeting Committee on Small Business September 25, 2015 tr at 11, lines 12-16.
Footnote 30:Id. at 11, line 25; at 12, line 2.
Footnote 31:Id. at 12, lines 5-8.
Footnote 32:Id. at 12, lines 9-14.
Footnote 33:Women owned small businesses are at all levels of
government, federal, state and municipal, qualified as protected class
of businesses and special protections are promulgated as a matter of
public policy to encourage women owned small businesses, which have been
historically under-represented based upon archaic de jure and still
existing de facto glass ceiling limitations imposed upon such businesses
based upon gender inequality. As such, there is an even higher scrutiny
placed upon any harassment interfering with women owned small
businesses. Therefore, amended October 26, 2019 Harassment Law included
NYC Admin Code § 22-902 (a) (11) to redress harassment threats against
protected classes, including women owned small business as Ms. White's
small design landscaping business.
Footnote 34:Hearing tr at 29, line 10.
Footnote 35:Id. at 31, lines 3-8.
Footnote 36:Id. at 33, lines 12-16.
Footnote 37:Id. at 33, lines 21-25.
Footnote 38:Respondent Attorney's Affirmation in Support of Motion to Dismiss, Exhibit D.
Footnote 39:See Jacobson v Sassower, 66 NY2d 991 (Ct App 1985).
Footnote 40:Hearing tr at 34, lines 7-15.
Footnote 41:Id. at 58, lines 16-20.
Footnote 42:Id. at 35, lines 10-15."