Adam Leitman Bailey Articles

Adam Leitman Bailey Articles

An online resource of real estate law articles

  • Home
  • Real Estate Q & A

Development—Court Grants Petitioner License to Temporarily Enter Adjacent Property To Facilitate Construction of Petitioner’s Construction Project Pursuant to Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law §881, Subject to Terms and Conditions

  • Adam Leitman Bailey, License Agreements and Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law (“RPAPL) § 881 Actions, Real Estate Litigation

The court granted the petitioner’s property owner a license, pursuant to Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law (RPAPL) §881, “to enter upon a portion of the land of respondent (adjacent property owner), subject to several terms and conditions.”

The respondent was ordered to grant the petitioner, a limited non-exclusive license for access to the adjacent property by the petitioner and its construction team.

The terms and conditions of the license addressed, inter alia, a pre-construction survey, temporary protections, water-proofing work, monitoring equipment, the petitioner’s sole responsibilities at the petitioner sole cost and expense, for repairs to respondent’s property, a license fee of $2,500 per month, and a pro-rata per day for each partial month while any part of the “temporary protections” remained installed upon the respondent’s property or cantilevered over the property line. Subject to unavoidable delays, including delays related to weather, additional work required by regulatory and governmental inspections, labor shortages or strikes, governmental orders and all matters outside the control of the petitioner, the term for the license was limited to 24 months, “time being of the essence.”

However, the court provided that such time may be “extended pursuant to a written amendment to this License executed by all of the Parties hereto, of which consent shall not be unreasonably delayed, withheld or conditioned by” the respondent owner. The license included provisions for insurance, indemnification, notices and arbitration, etc.

The court acknowledged that RPL §881 does not permit the petitioner to “permanently encroach” upon the respondent’s property. The court also explained that “the sections of any boundary wall in which joists of (petitioner’s) building are encased constitute the wall shared by (petitioner) and (respondent owner’s) buildings (i.e., the party wall).” The court stated that the petitioner’s construction, “upon its own side of any such party wall, subject to the easement for the support of a (respondent’s) building, would not constitute a permanent encroachment upon a (respondent’s) building.”

Thus, the court held that the petitioner was “entitled to a license to conduct waterproofing as to any such section, as it will not constitute permanent encroachment upon a (respondent’s) property.”

However, court further stated that “whether the portions of the wall that do not encase the joists of petitioner’s building constitute an independent masonry wall belonging wholly to (the respondent) or are part and parcel of the party wall shared equally by both parties must be resolved in a declaratory judgment action.” The respondent had not yet served an answer and counterclaim seeking declaratory judgment relief.

Comment: This case is of interest since so many people who renovate buildings or construct new buildings need to encroach upon their neighbor’s property in order to do their construction work and to protect their neighbor’s property. This decision is helpful because it incorporates the provisions of the subject license agreement.

Adam Leitman Bailey, counsel for the petitioner, expressed gratitude for the court taking the time to address, inter alia, his adversaries’ “land bullying” and allowing his client to “build their dream home.” Adversary counsel did not comment.

Original Article

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