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Crooked Landlords

Started by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012
Discussion about
Landlord trying to pull a fast one on a rent stabalized apt in a small building here in manhattan by saying my friend doesn't really live there full time. How do you prove otherwise ? He shares time staying with his fiance half of the time just a few blocks away.
Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

Then the landlord is correct. He doesn't live there full time. Tell him to move out.

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Response by yikes
over 13 years ago
Posts: 1016
Member since: Mar 2012

in case beagle's not joking, full time residency sdoesn't require one not travel and or sleep elsewhere from time to time. more than half time might be a problem. others will knowe better the specifics of this.

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Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

Yikes, I was not joking. While it would be difficult to evict this individual (and I hate to see anyone lose their home), this is clearly a violation of the "spirit" of the law and he should take that into consideration when he cries victim of landlord harassment. I don't know what the inflection point should be. Certainly not 10% of time away but also not >50%.

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Response by aboutready
over 13 years ago
Posts: 16354
Member since: Oct 2007

uwsbeagle, I seriously doubt a judge would see it that way. he doesn't have another lease, or own another home. he has no other primary residence, which I believe is the "spirit" of the law.

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Response by NWT
over 13 years ago
Posts: 6643
Member since: Sep 2008

Here's a good overview of the primary-residence requirements: http://www.tenant.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=6788

If the guy loses, he'd still be a contender for a Darwin Award. He'd have had a valuable asset -- an under-market RS lease -- but out of ignorance or folly just threw it away.

Safe to say the landlord wouldn't bother if she didn't have the evidence lined up.

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Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

I disagree. Keeping within the "spirit" of the law, according to the doc NWT provided, would include being away from your home for extended periods of time due to work, family obligations, or other such obvious factors. Spending time with a fiance doesn't qualify. My opinion only: Get out of the way and let someone else benefit from this govt largesse. I, for one, am not fortunate to have ever had a rent controlled/stabilized apt. And I certainly wouldn't whine about losing it to an audience which, by and large, suffers from increased market rents and inflated RE prices due to so many of these units being kept off the open market in perpetuity. On a personal level, I'm sure he's a fine human being and, as I stated, hope he doesn't lose his home.

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Response by caonima
over 13 years ago
Posts: 815
Member since: Apr 2010

the market rate to let the tenant go is at least 50K in new york now

ask the landlord if he's hiding under the tenant's bed, otherwise how can he count the time to be so accurate of <50%?

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Response by w23rd
over 13 years ago
Posts: 46
Member since: Jan 2012

So, a person who has a rent stabilized apartment is not allowed to have relationships where-in a few nights a week are spent at the other person's apartment? Assuming the original post is telling the truth and the tenant "lives" in the regulated apartment-- but occasionally sleeps a few blocks away overnight--it's ridiculous to suggest he should lose his home. To do so would, basically, mean that only free market tenants are allowed non-platonic romantic relationships.

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Response by aboutready
over 13 years ago
Posts: 16354
Member since: Oct 2007

one of the few times I agree with caonima. short of highly intrusive monitoring I don't have any idea how a landlord could make that assessment, unless maybe he/she lives in the apartment next door and noise travels extremely easily.

anyway, he is not away for extended periods, he is away intermittently. perhaps I'm wrong, but I doubt a judge would be sympathetic to the landlord under these circumstances. uwsbeagle, the merits of rent stabilization can be argued to death, and have been, but they have no bearing on whether or not legally his friend ought to lose his RS apartment. i agree entirely with w23rd.

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

w23rd ... that is exactly whats going. He spends a few nights at his ladies apt a few blocks away. Nobody wants to give up their place here in the city or move in together unless they are absolutely sure.

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Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

w23rd: Phrases such as "Landlord trying to pull a fast one" and "He shares time staying with his fiance half of the time" don't compute for me. It's either one or the other and I'm certainly not taking up the landlord's case on this thread. You use the word "occasionally"; by my definition occasionally is far less than "half the time". Maybe I'll engage in a bit of self-reflection and call myself an embittered purchaser/renter of market-rate Manhattan units.

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Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

so now "half the time" is "a few nights." Make up your mind so people can debate the facts.

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Response by NWT
over 13 years ago
Posts: 6643
Member since: Sep 2008

No big deal. You sleep at home more than 183 nights.

The OP said "half the time", not "occasional".

There're lots of these cases. The judge weighs everything, not just one factor. E.g., the recent case where the tenant lost at first, lost on appeal, but finally won her second appeal 3-2.

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Response by w23rd
over 13 years ago
Posts: 46
Member since: Jan 2012

i hear you. That's why I prefaced with "assuming this is true". I know and have known many, many people who abuse the stabilization system by subletting/holding/airbnb-ing apartments they no longer truly live in. But I've also known folks who've been bullied by landlords dying to evict long-term tenants who've done nothing wrong. It all comes down to what the truth of his living situation is and I'm taking the post at face value. If what the o.p. wrote is valid, the landlord is totally out of line.

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Response by w23rd
over 13 years ago
Posts: 46
Member since: Jan 2012

I hear you. That's why I prefaced with "assuming this is true". I know and have known many people who abuse the stabilization system by subletting/holding/airbnb-ing apartments they no longer truly live in. But I've also known folks who've been bullied by landlords dying to evict long-term tenants who've done nothing wrong. It all comes down to what the truth of his living situation is and I'm taking the post at face value. If what the o.p. wrote is valid, the landlord is totally out of line.

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Response by ss400k
over 13 years ago
Posts: 405
Member since: Nov 2008

MIBNYC.. just curious as to how the landlord "found out" he wasn't sleeping/lining there full - time??

does landlord live on 1st floor by doorway so he can see traffic (or lack thereof) or did a neighbor rat him out/etc? just curious to these things, thanks.

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Response by MAV
over 13 years ago
Posts: 502
Member since: Sep 2007

"Crooked"? HA! It seams like its the other party taking advantage of the RS program's widely abused and not otherwise verified or enforced rules. Who can blame him though? I am willing to bet the tenant stays at his fiance's much nicer place a few blocks away, and she would not be caught dead in his old RS apartment. He does not want to give it up, and I will even go as far as predicting that they have been engaged for at least a year, with no wedding date planned. Just another set of "golden handcuffs' of Rent Stabilization! Way to "protect the middle class".

Like I said before, if there was a way to verify who gets (and keeps) RS apartments, it would benefit those on both sides who play by the rules, and punish those on both sides who do not.

(Disclaimer, I am a LL)

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

@ss400k .. Management just said they were told he wasn't living there. He works 6 days a week 12hr days and he hardly sees any of his neighbors also. His drivers license, Amex, car registration, cell bill all are mailed to his apt. He does spend a few nights at his ladies apt to naturally maintain a relationship. Landlord does live on first floor but he never sees him

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Response by yikes
over 13 years ago
Posts: 1016
Member since: Mar 2012

i have no reason to believe the op or his friend to be a liar--so i will add that given what op has said ll is a douche

its fing tiresome all the whining about the govt largesse of RS/RC apts--they comprise a tiny percentage of rental units in the city, miniscule in manhattan--the law allows for LL's to verify income via tax returns and not renew leases for those who exceed parameters--and properties are priced to reflect all of this

sounds like ll is a scumbag who bought a RS bldg on the cheap and wants to windfall by pressuring unknowing tenants to leave--were i the tenant id tell the ll to f off (figuratively, that is) until he provides a legit legal filing, then fight--and do it all with email to retain record of communiocations

reminds me of the idiotic indignants who bitch about people using food stamps to buy beer--all when it's fact that the amount of fraud/improper use of food stamps is <2%--but hey, we can starve the 98% to root out them beer drinkers

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Response by NYCMatt
over 13 years ago
Posts: 7523
Member since: May 2009

"sounds like ll is a scumbag who bought a RS bldg on the cheap and wants to windfall by pressuring unknowing tenants to leave--were i the tenant id tell the ll to f off (figuratively, that is) until he provides a legit legal filing, then fight--and do it all with email to retain record of communiocations"

So the landlord is a "scumbag" because he tries to hold his tenants to the letter of the law?

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Response by ss400k
over 13 years ago
Posts: 405
Member since: Nov 2008

thanks MIBNYC.. please keep us updated with what happens, my gut says even if LL has a case it will be tough for him to prove since NYC is generally pro-tenant, but please keep us updated w interesting case! thnks

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Response by NWT
over 13 years ago
Posts: 6643
Member since: Sep 2008

yikes, it's rent-controlled that's the miniscule percentage: less than 4%.

Rent-stabilized is about 45% in Manhattan. Apartments fall out, apartments are added due to landlords signing up for it in return for tax breaks, but the general trend is down. (The Roberts decision threw a wrench in the works, so we'll see that play out over the next several years.)

E.g., in 1999 for Manhattan, it was 4.2% controlled and 62.4% stabilized.

Lots of interesting statistics at http://furmancenter.org

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Response by huntersburg
over 13 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

1 why is this an issue for a friend of the tenant?
2 the landlord is not a "douche" or crooked but I don't see the landlord being the correct party here.
3 won't the tenant be leaving anyway with a year when he gets married?
4 not sure why landlords aren't installing cameras in the common areas for security that may have a dual purpose?

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Response by yikes
over 13 years ago
Posts: 1016
Member since: Mar 2012

i stand corrected nwt--it is the RC stock that has become very small

i will say that the relevance of RS has declined significantly, given verifiable income limits for tenants; given that rents have actually gone down in a few recent years, regardless of whatever the authorized max increase had been determenined to be; and given that ll's can easily game such that they can effect greater increases than authorized.

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Response by gcondo
over 13 years ago
Posts: 1111
Member since: Feb 2009

That a RS or RC lease can be considered an "asset" is a huge issue.

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Response by NWT
over 13 years ago
Posts: 6643
Member since: Sep 2008

Of course it's an asset.

The landlord paid less for the building because of the RC/RS apartments. The amount of "less" is more or less the value of the leases to the tenants.

It can also factor in divorce or bankruptcy: http://www.shakedandposner.com/Articles/Court-Rules-That-Rent-Stabilized-Leases-Have-Value-in-Bankruptcy.shtml

The issue is whether the state can give to some and take from others. It's been settled that yes, it can. If you try to see it as a sort of lottery, it's easier to stomach.

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Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

NWT said is well: "If you try to see it as a sort of lottery, it's easier to stomach." I recall reading that the genesis of these laws was to allow returning servicemen from WWI a reasonable place to live while they got on their feet after the War: return, get a job, move on. It was never designed to be passed on for generations. A lottery, however, implies that everyone has an equal chance of "winning". I will never have a chance of hitting the RS/RC lottery so it's a rigged game.

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

Its amazing in manhattan how hard maintaining a relationship can be when keeping your rent stabilized apt can make or break being with someone if you need to abide by the housing rules.

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Response by uwsbeagle
over 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

MIB: is this a new topic? Your OP was a very linear discussion about LL trying to remove tenant who "half of the time" lives with fiance(e). If abiding by RS guidelines results in relationships being torn asunder then this thread is veering off onto a new topic and not one that's as interesting to me, personally, as the OP.

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

Umm Beagle ... maybe I went a little sex in the city on my last comment but its a reality that does happen here in the city. Who wants to give up a nice RS in manhattan over a relationship and a LL possibly watching tenants like a hawk ?

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Response by NWT
over 13 years ago
Posts: 6643
Member since: Sep 2008

The post-WWII housing shortage led to rents going so high that the legislature had to do something to appease the voters. Subsequent legislatures have continued to extend RC/RS, while sometimes tossing the landlords a bone. Market-rate tenants don't form the solid voting block that regulated tenants do, so it'll go on being chipped at until the only RS apartments will be those already at market.

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Response by columbiacounty
over 13 years ago
Posts: 12708
Member since: Jan 2009

by which time there will be 4,328,567 threads at SE dedicated to this topic.

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Response by Snuffles
over 13 years ago
Posts: 173
Member since: Apr 2010

why can't she stay in his place?

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

@ Snuffles ... She has a nicer RS and if the relationship goes south, big headache

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Response by NWT
over 13 years ago
Posts: 6643
Member since: Sep 2008

Right, you'd think after spending three or four nights together for however long, they'd be ready to either shit or get off the pot.

33 years ago, I moved in in record time, but for some Psych 101 reason rather than the $180 rent....

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

@ NWT for $180 many would rather stay alone and keep a relationship with their RIGHT HAND

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Response by huntersburg
over 13 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

The story and subsequent comments from the OP do nothing to justify the existence of rent stabilization on a broad basis.

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

Thanks guys .. I really appreciate your insight and comments on the subject. This is a good board

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Response by Tomnevers
over 13 years ago
Posts: 97
Member since: Mar 2012

they should evict him and give him the chair!!!

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Response by MAV
over 13 years ago
Posts: 502
Member since: Sep 2007

So, how long have they been engaged for? Golden handcuff'd

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Response by MIBNYC
over 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

@ MAV ..2 years

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Response by REMom
about 13 years ago
Posts: 307
Member since: Apr 2009

I know a man who has lived with his father his entire life, waiting to inherit the RS apt. The father is in his 90s now and the man is in his 60s. The son never married and moved out because he didn't want to lose his "inheritance".

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Response by uwsbeagle
about 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

sounds like junior may have to put daddums on an ice floe pretty soon.

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Response by MAV
about 13 years ago
Posts: 502
Member since: Sep 2007

Do they have a wedding date?

This (broader subject, not just this individual one) is a very interesting sociological issue, and yes, one that maybe deserves its own thread aside from the legal discussion.

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Response by MIBNYC
about 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

No wedding day yet but i believe they will just share spaces. One lives in Sutton place and the other on the upper west side

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Response by uwsbeagle
about 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

"He shares time staying with his fiance half of the time just a few blocks away". Sutton Place is not a few blocks away. This is the Mitt Romney of OPs.

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Response by MIBNYC
about 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

@ Beagle ..sry meant upper eastside JACKASS

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Response by uwsbeagle
about 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

hahaha. Name calling when one's errors are pointed out. Or was it the comparison to Romney that got under your skin? If that sets you off, you've got pretty thin skin. You may run out of CAPPED curse words pretty darn quickly.

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Response by aboutready
about 13 years ago
Posts: 16354
Member since: Oct 2007

Comparing somebody to Romney is pretty low. Especially today.

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Response by MIBNYC
about 13 years ago
Posts: 421
Member since: Mar 2012

@ Beagle .. you are being a jackass. All politicians to me are liars and crooks. The best prez ever was NIXON

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Response by uwsbeagle
about 13 years ago
Posts: 285
Member since: Feb 2012

for some reason being name called in small caps is much more palatable. Thank you for that. Tomato/Tomahto. Nixon brought us the EPA which I'm a fan of. I enjoy being able to breath. Whether he is the BEST PRES EVER can remain your opinion. I'm a Clinton fan ('92-'00) and look forward to Hilary 2016 after Obama's second term.

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Response by aboutready
about 13 years ago
Posts: 16354
Member since: Oct 2007

Nixon also had a decent idea for health care reform. Still.

beagle, here's to hoping.

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Response by huntersburg
about 13 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

Is the OP related to Brooks or Caonima?

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