Malafis et al. v. Shannon

On May 2, 2002, in Malafis et al. v. Shannon, Index No. L&T 101887/01 (Civ. Ct. Kings Co., May 2, 2002) (Marton, J.H.C.), a notable ruling was issued recognizing the right of an owner to recover a rent stabilized apartment for use by his son. Kucker, Marino, Winiarsky, & Bittens, LLP represented the landlord/owner in this owner-occupancy summary holdover case. Ultimately, the court held that the landlord had proved his prima facie case and owners were entitled to possession of rent stabilized apartment unit for use by owners’ son. The court determined the landlord established good faith since eviction was sought with honest intention and desire to gain possession of the subject premises for use by their son. The availability of other apartments renting for higher sums did not establish lack of good faith. Court also explained that owner was not required to occupy an apartment that was not controlled and thus diminish its income.

Nativ Winiarsky Writes on Rent-Stabilization in Illegal-Use Buildings

Nativ Winiarsky, a partner at Kucker, Marino, Winiarsky, & Bittens LLP, writes that in the race to rehabilitate old manufacturing buildings in now-fashionable neighborhoods, zoning codes are sometimes overlooked – codes that may then be used to eject tenants of noncompliant lofts. Counsel for these tenants often turn to the Emergency Tenant Protection Act, but until the Legislature steps in, that protection should remain unavailable. An article printed in the New York Law Journal on April 10, 2007.

Three East Third Corp. v. 351 Bowery Assoc., LLC, et al.

On December 22, 2009, in Three East Third Corp. v. 351 Bowery Assoc., LLC, et al., Index 101479/09 (Sup.Ct., N.Y. Co.), Justice Charles Ramos of the Commercial Division of the Supreme Court, New York County, ruled in favor of two independent motions which Kucker, Marino, Winiarsky, & Bittens, LLP had filed in a complex civil action in which the firm sought recovery for the substantial damages suffered by five clients due to negligent construction in three adjoining lots on which a 22-floor apartment building was built. The Court issued an Order which granted Kucker, Marino, Winiarsky, & Bittens’s motion to amend one of the civil actions to include additional defendants, and issued another Order which granted Kucker, Marino, Winiarsky, & Bittens’s motion to consolidate the three extant civil actions.