Adam Leitman Bailey Articles

Adam Leitman Bailey Articles

An online resource of real estate law articles

  • Home
  • Real Estate Q & A

Appellate Division Rules on Commercial Leasing

  • Appellate Litigation

Contents

  1. By Adam Leitman Bailey and Jeffrey R. Metz
  2. Equity in Leasing?
  3. Tenant Engendered Goodwill

By Adam Leitman Bailey and Jeffrey R. Metz

Many times, cooperatives and condominiums have commercial retail spaces connected to or below their building. These are immensely valuable as a result of the income generated by these stores and restaurants. Ergo, the importance of a new decision from the Appellate Division. Two decades ago, New York Courts allowed equity to trump the law and case precedents in  many of its commercial leasing decisions. During the new millennium, the pendulum swung back to enforcing contracts and leases as they have been written no matter how painful and obtrusive the result. According to a recent commercial leasing decision by one of the Appellate Division’s most reputable judges, this pendulum may be swinging back to allowing empathy  and sympathy override a contractual provision.

Equity in Leasing?

Is “equity” more powerful than enforcing the terms of a renewal lease option in a lease between two sophisticated business entities? In 135 East 57th Street LLC v. Daffy’s Inc., the Appellate Division, First Department, signaled that it is.

It has long been the law that a notice exercising an option to renew a commercial lease is ineffective if it is not given within the time specified in the lease between the landlord and tenant. However, since the result—termination of the leasehold at the expiration date—can be extremely harsh, over the years the courts have created certain exceptions to the rule. Thus, a commercial tenant can be relieved of its failure to timely exercise its renewal option when (i) the failure to timely renew is caused by an honest mistake or inadvertence (ii) the landlord will not be prejudiced by the renewal and (iii) the non-renewal will result in a substantial forfeiture to the tenant. Regarding the third prong, courts will usually look to whether the tenant has made any substantial improvements to the space with the intent to renew in mind.

In Daffy’s, the lease provided the tenant with two five year renewal lease option periods. The option had to be exercised one year before the term was set to expire. The tenant provided notice four days late due to an error made by its comptroller. The landlord rejected the late exercise and immediately brought suit for a judgment declaring that the option terminated and that the lease would terminate at the expiration of its term. After a trial, where the court found for Daffy’s, the landlord appealed to the Appellate Division, First Department.

The Appellate Division framed the issue as “whether [the lower court’s] exercise of equitable authority was proper, given that the tenant did not provide that it had made substantial improvements in anticipation of continued occupancy.”

The Appellate Division found that Daffy’s had not made substantial improvements to the space in anticipation of renewal.  While that should have ended the inquiry, the Appellate Division, in a ruling that is harmful to commercial landlords, nevertheless found that Daffy’s could renew its lease.

Tenant Engendered Goodwill

Initially, the Court found, that “the four-day delay in providing the one-year’s notice required by the lease did not prejudice the landlord.” But more important, the Appellate Division had found that “Daffy’s 57th Street store in particular had garnered substantial good will in its approximately 15 years at the location…” This conclusion was based upon evidence that the “57th Street store in particular had become highly successful and popular, that  the company had searched for alternative space into which to relocate and had  not identified any prospects, and that even if it found a viable site, it would  require the better part of a year to open a new store.” The Court also looked to loss of jobs for the 114 employees of the location and the fact that the site was one of Daffy’s top producing rental locations.

Daffy’s is a particularly troubling decision for commercial landlords. The Appellate Division vitiated the landlord’s contractual rights under the lease because it appeared to fell “sorry” for the tenant and was angry at the landlord for bringing its declaratory judgment action almost immediately after it had rejected Daffy’s late notice of renewal. Whether Daffy’s will provide future commercial tenants with the authority to excuse their  failure to timely exercise a renewal option if their “tale of woe” is found persuasive by some judge is not presently known. What is known, however, is that such a ruling leads to uncertainty in the commercial real estate market, a result to be avoided at all cost.

It will be interesting to see whether the landlord attempts to appeal to the Court of Appeals, and, if so, whether permission will be granted. The higher court has long taken the view in cases such as Holy Props. V. Cole Productions and Maxton Bld’s v. LoGalbo that in the area of real property law, certainty in an established rule trumps reliance upon another rule and that precedent should be followed.

Read more about Adam Leitman Bailey

Original Post can be found at: http://cooperator.com/articles/2376/1/Appellate-Division-Rules-on-Commercial-Leasing/Page1.html

Appellate Division Rules on Commercial Leasing

ARTICLES BY TOPIC

  • Appellate Litigation
  • Buyouts and Sale of Apartment Lease
  • Commercial Landlord Representation
  • Commercial Leasing Services
  • Commercial Tenant Representation
  • Condominium & Cooperative Board & Building Representation
  • Condominium & Cooperative Litigation
  • Condominium & Cooperative Owner & Shareholder Representation
  • Condominium & Cooperative Representation
  • Condominium/Board of Managers Representation of Newly Constructed Buildings & Conversions
  • Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR)
  • Fire and Building Violations
  • Foreclosure Litigation Group
  • Homeowner and Tenant Associations
  • Insurance Defense Litigation
  • Landlord Representation
  • About Mitchell-Lama/ Housing Development Fund Corporation (HDFC) & Third Party Transfer Representation
  • Mortgage Finance Practice Group
  • Purchase & Sale of Homes
  • Purchase and Sale of Multi-Family Dwellings and Buildings
  • Real Estate Administrative Proceedings/Environmental Control Board
  • Real Estate Litigation
  • Tenant Representation
  • Q & A
  • Title Insurance Claims Group

RECENT POSTS

  • Adam Leitman Bailey P.C. Obtains Summary Judgment Ruling Dismissing Complaint Seeking Payment Of Exterminator Fees Where No Contract Was Shown To Exist To Provide Authority For Such Payment
  • Adam Leitman Bailey, P.C. Overcomes Son’s Succession Claim and Wins Holdover Proceeding and Monetary Judgment for Landlord After Trial
  • Adam Leitman Bailey, P.C., Wins Trial and $100,000 Monetary and Possessory Judgment in Residential Non-Payment Case, Overcoming Laches and Breach of Warranty of Habitability Defenses
  • Adam Leitman Bailey, P.C. Secures Substantial Early Termination Payment for Tenant of Foreclosed Building in Receivership
  • Coop Board Forced To Obey The Law

TOP CONTRIBUTORS

Adam Leitman Bailey

Dov Treiman

John Desiderio
  • Popular
  • Comments
  • Tags
  • FDA’s Poison Prevention Packaging Rule: A Bitter Pill the FDA is Forced to Swallow
  • The New Rules of Seeking a Buyout of a Rent-Regulated Tenant
  • Rules Governing Anticipatory Repudiation of Contracts
  • New Rules of Substantial Rehabilitation to Remove Units from Rent Regulation Part II
  • Building Sold Before Violation Notice Issued
  • Public Health and Law : Assignment Essays | Assignment Essays: […] FDA’s Poison Prevention Packaging ...
  • Public Health and Law : Solution Essays - Solution Essays: […] FDA’s Poison Prevention Packaging ...
  • Who are the parties in the case and what are their respective interests? - Excelwriters: […] FDA’s Poison Prevention Packaging ...
  • Nutritional Health Alliance v. Food and Drug Administration - Longbeach Writers: […] FDA’s Poison Prevention Packaging ...
  • Public health and law | Law homework help – Hero Papers: […] FDA’s Poison Prevention Packaging ...
Adam Leitman Bailey apartment rent Appellate Division Case Co-op board member rights Co-op issues commercial landlord commercial lease commercial tenant condominium Condominium & Cooperative Representation contract cooperative board court of appeals Dov Treiman foreclosure Foreclosure law foreclosure litigation group Home purchase Insurance Jeffrey Metz John Desiderio landlord Landlord and tenant landlord law Landlord Representation Lease Lease Provision License Agreement Mortgage New Construction Representation nonprimary residence NY state law property owner Purchase & Sale of Homes Real estate real estate litigation rent Rent stabilization rent stabilized Rosemary Liuzzo Mohamed RPAPL tenant law tenant rights violation notice

Read more from Adam Leitman Bailey

Huffington Post

The Cooperator

Apartment Law Insider

Commercial Observer

Adam Leitman Bailey, P.C.

Twitter Twitter

Follow @alb_pc on Twitter

Twitter Twitter

Follow @Aleitmanbailey on Twitter

LinkedIn

Adam Leitman Bailey on LinkedIn

Adam Leitman Bailey, P.C. on LinkedIn

Adam Leitman Bailey Articles © 2025. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by WordPress. Designed by Woo Themes