Opinion
2020-699 K C
05-07-2021
Rizpah A. Morrow, Esq., for appellant. Schwartsman Law Group, PLLC (Warren Beckerman and Marianna Schwartsman of counsel), for respondent.
Rizpah A. Morrow, Esq., for appellant.
Schwartsman Law Group, PLLC (Warren Beckerman and Marianna Schwartsman of counsel), for respondent.
PRESENT: THOMAS P. ALIOTTA, P.J., MICHELLE WESTON, DAVID ELLIOT, JJ.
ORDERED that the order is reversed, without costs, petitioner's motion for summary judgment is granted and occupant's cross motion to dismiss the petition is denied.
Petitioner, the executor of the estate of Leslie Baker, commenced this licensee proceeding (see RPAPL 713 [7] ) alleging that any license to occupy the cooperative apartment expired after the 2016 death of Leslie Baker, the proprietary lessee and owner of the shares appurtenant to the apartment. A 10-day notice to quit, which was served on Ewa Barry (occupant) and James Barry, who died prior to the commencement of this proceeding, asserted that both occupant and Mr. Barry were unauthorized to occupy the apartment.
Petitioner moved for summary judgment and occupant cross-moved to dismiss the petition. It is undisputed that Ms. Baker bequeathed her shares and proprietary lease to Mr. Barry, who had been living with Ms. Baker at the time of her death; that Mr. Barry's application to the cooperative board to transfer the shares and proprietary lease to him was denied and that Mr. Barry never became a proprietary lessee; and that occupant moved into the apartment and married Mr. Barry in 2018. The proprietary lease, annexed to petitioner's motion papers, states that any transfer of the shares or proprietary lease is subject to the cooperative board's approval, except in the case of a spouse. Ms. Baker's death certificate, which was annexed to petitioner's motion, listed Mr. Barry as Ms. Baker's "domestic partner." Occupant annexed to her cross motion a document that she identified as Mr. Barry's will, which stated that he bequeathed any rights he had to the shares and the proprietary lease to occupant. The Civil Court granted occupant's cross motion to dismiss the petition, finding that occupant is not a licensee, and implicitly denied petitioner's motion for summary judgment.
Petitioner established, prima facie, that Ms. Baker, now deceased, was the shareholder and proprietary lessee of the premises and that any license to occupy the apartment has been revoked. Occupant's position is that, as Mr. Barry's wife, she is entitled to be named as the proprietary lessee. However, Mr. Barry's application for the transfer of the proprietary lease to himself was denied, and occupant has not submitted any evidence that the proprietary lease should have been transferred to Mr. Barry without requiring the approval of the cooperative board. Thus, while there is no issue presented on this record as to Mr. Barry's right to ownership of the shares appurtenant to the apartment, occupant has not demonstrated her right to possession of the apartment or otherwise established that her motion to dismiss the petition was properly granted or that petitioner's motion for summary judgment was properly denied.
We note that any objection to the authentication of the proprietary lease is improperly raised for the first time on appeal (see Bank of Am., N.A. v Afflick , 172 AD3d 1146 [2019] ).
Accordingly, the order is reversed, petitioner's motion for summary judgment is granted and occupant's cross motion to dismiss the petition is denied.
ALIOTTA, P.J., WESTON and ELLIOT, JJ., concur.