The Arduous Art of Evicting a Serial Subletter

Dale J. Degenshein in Legal/Financial on January 21, 2019

Yorkville, Manhattan

Case Notes
Jan. 21, 2019

Can a co-op shareholder who repeatedly rents an apartment to short-term guests be evicted based on objectionable conduct? The court considered this question in 340 East 93rd Street Corp. vs. Kasachkoff.

Alisa Kasachkoff owned the shares allocated to Apartments 7L, 7M, and 7H at 340 East 93rd Street in Manhattan. After she repeatedly rented apartment 7H to short-term visitors, the co-op board terminated her tenancy based upon an alleged violation of the proprietary lease.

At court, there were discussions of the applicable statute, which provides that a landlord (the co-op, in this case) must demonstrate objectionable conduct to the satisfaction of the court. However, in the landmark case of 40 West 67th Street Corp. vs. Pullman, New York’s highest court determined that in a co-op the court should defer to the co-op board’s determination of whether the shareholder engaged in objectionable conduct.

The proprietary lease in this co-op provided that a “yes” vote by two-thirds of the board was sufficient to end a tenancy based on objectionable conduct. A vote of shareholders was not required, as it is in some buildings.

Kasachkoff argued that the holding in Pullman did not apply. She claimed that the shareholder in that case was not a long-time shareholder, as she was, and that his misconduct was egregious. Further, in Pullman, it was the shareholders – not the board – who were obligated to vote against the tenancy. The court here held that Kasachkoff’s arguments ignored the basic rule established by the Pullman court – that a board’s decision to end a lease can be challenged only if the tenant-shareholder can demonstrate that the board violated the Business Judgement Rule by acting outside the scope of its authority, in a way that did not legitimately further the corporate purpose, or in bad faith. 

Under that test, Kasachkoff alleged that the board acted outside the scope of its authority because two members of the board were real estate brokers, at least one of whom advertised listings in the building. She argued that another board member – the president – was conflicted because he denied Kasachkoff’s request to sublet. The court was not swayed, however. The board vote was unanimous – seven in favor of terminating Kasachkoff’s lease, none opposed. Even if the president and the brokers abstained, there would still have been enough votes to terminate the lease. As to the board president, the court noted that there was no allegation that his refusal to permit her to sublet was improper. 

Kasachkoff next claimed that the board’s decision to evict her did not further the corporate purpose. She argued that because she was willing to take action at her own expense to evict her subtenants and list apartment 7H for sale, the board should not have acted. She also insisted that she would get a better price for the apartment than the cooperative would.

However, the court noted, Kasachkoff’s last-minute offer to evict her subtenants did nothing to address her repeated rentals of the apartment without approval. Further, speculation about the price has no bearing. Kasachkoff’s final argument – that the board had acted in bad faith – was similarly unpersuasive. Her allegations were speculative and not specifically related to the issues. The court awarded possession of the apartment to the cooperative. 

A charge of objectionable conduct is a powerful weapon in a board’s arsenal, but most boards are reluctant to use it. Notices must be sent. Upon receipt, shareholders are well-advised to try and open a dialogue with the board or managing agent so that the situation does not escalate. If it does, a meeting will be held, and the shareholder will be invited to address the board or shareholders, depending on the lease terms, Finally, there will be a vote as to whether to terminate that shareholder’s lease. Evicting a shareholder for objectionable conduct is an arduous art, but it can be done.

Dale J. Degenshein is special counsel at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan.

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