A lease can expand the 'Roommate Law'.The landlord of a building on West 91st Street in Manhattan prepared a lease with a provision dealing with the "Roommate Law," Section 235 of the Real Property Law of New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . This is the statute that allows a tenant to have a roommate in the apartment, even if the lease does not permit such an addition occupant occupant n. 1) someone living in a residence or using premises, as a tenant or owner. 2) a person who takes possession of real property or a thing which has no known owner, intending to gain ownership. (See: occupancy) . The landlord commenced eviction The removal of a tenant from possession of premises in which he or she resides or has a property interest done by a landlord either by reentry upon the premises or through a court action. proceedings against the tenant because the tenant had not one roommate, but three separate individual roommates. The landlord claimed that the tenant, in permitting three roommates in the apartment, violated vi·o·late tr.v. vi·o·lat·ed, vi·o·lat·ing, vi·o·lates 1. To break or disregard (a law or promise, for example). 2. To assault (a person) sexually. 3. the lease provision, as well as the Roommate Law itself. The tenant's position was that while he admitted having three roommates in the apartment, it was not a violation of the lease and it was permissible per·mis·si·ble adj. Permitted; allowable: permissible tax deductions; permissible behavior in school. per·mis under the statute. Judge Lucy Billings of the Civil Court, New York County, who conducted the trial, stated that this case required his determination as to the extent to which a residential lease may limit roommates consistent with the Roommate Law. The lease provision which was before Judge Billings stated "You shall use the Apartment for living purpose only. The Apartment may be occupied by the tenant or tenants named above and by the immediate family of the tenant or tenants and by occupants as defined in and only in accordance Accordance is Bible Study Software for Macintosh developed by OakTree Software, Inc.[] As well as a standalone program, it is the base software packaged by Zondervan in their Bible Study suites for Macintosh. with Real Property Law, Section 235-f." The Judge stated that if the Roommate Law protects the conduct of the tenant, then such conduct cannot be a breach of the lease, because the lease cannot prohibit pro·hib·it tr.v. pro·hib·it·ed, pro·hib·it·ing, pro·hib·its 1. To forbid by authority: Smoking is prohibited in most theaters. See Synonyms at forbid. 2. conduct protected by the statute. The statute states that any provision in a lease purporting to waive To intentionally or voluntarily relinquish a known right or engage in conduct warranting an inference that a right has been surrendered. For example, an individual is said to waive the right to bring a tort action when he or she renounces the remedy provided by law for such a provision of this stature is null A character that is all 0 bits. Also written as "NUL," it is the first character in the ASCII and EBCDIC data codes. In hex, it displays and prints as 00; in decimal, it may appear as a single zero in a chart of codes, but displays and prints as a blank space. and void. Therefore, a determination of whether a violation of the lease occurred depends upon the statute's interpretation and application. The statute defines an occupant as a person, other than the tenant or a member of the tenant's family, who occupies the apartment with the tenant's consent. Since the tenant had three roommates, the landlord's claim for eviction is valid only if the three roommates are not "occupants" as defined by the statute. The Court stated that the statute, on its face, does not limit the number of roommates, as long as they are unrelated persons living with the tenant and with his consent. Thus, under the definition of "occupants," the lease was not breached by the tenant. Judge Billings went on to say that even if the lease provision is construed not solely on the basis of the definition of "occupant," the result is the same. Section 235-f (3) provides: "Any lease or rental agreement A rental agreement is a contract, usually written, between the owner of a property and a renter who desires to have temporary possession of the property. As a minimum, the agreement identifies the parties, the property, the term of the rental, and the amount of rent for the term. for residential premises entered into by one tenant shall be construed to permit occupancy by the tenant, one additional occupant, and dependant children of the occupant provided that the tenant or the tenant's spouse occupies the premises as his primarily residence." The landlord had the right under the statute to limit the number of roommates to one, if he chose to do so. Instead, the landlord's lease provided that the apartment may be occupied by occupants as defined in the Roommate Law. While the statute's provision concerning the number of occupants allows the landlord to restrict roommates to one, it is not a prohibition against a tenant having more than one unrelated roommate. The statute merely limits a landlord's ability to restrict a tenant from having a roommate at all. The statute was enacted to protect tenants and occupants, not landlords. Nor was the law enacted to provide a right to landlords to enforce occupancy limitations. Thus, if the lease expressly limited the number of "occupants" to one, such a clause would be enforceable. While limiting the occupants to one would be permissible and consistent with the Roommate Law, a greater number is equally "in accordance with" the statute, as provided in the lease involved in this case. (Roxborough Apts Corp. v Becker NYLJ NYLJ New York Law Journal Sept 15, 1999, Pg 27, Col 1). In the light of this decision, it is important that care be taken in preparing a residential lease so that it properly reflects the intention of a landlord to restrict roommates to only one. |
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