Roberts v. Tishman Speyer Properties, L.P.
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION OF THE COURT
In this lawsuit, nine plaintiff tenants of Peter Cooper Village and Stuyvesant Town, two adjoining Manhattan apartment complexes comprising 110 buildings and occupying roughly 80 acres between 14th and 23rd Streets along the East River (the properties or the apartment complexes) contend that defendants Tishman Speyer Properties, L.P, and PCV ST Owner LP
I.
In New York City, multiple dwellings may qualify for tax incentives designed to encourage rehabilitation and improvements (see Administrative Code of City of NY § 11-243 [previously § J51-2.5]). Specifically, the Cityâs J-51 program, authorized by Real Property Tax Law § 489, allows property owners who complete eligible projects to receive tax exemptions and/or abatements that continue for a period of years. Eligible projects include moderate and gut rehabilitations; major capital improvements (for example, asbestos abatement or boiler replacement); and conversions of lofts and other nonresidential buildings into multiple dwellings (see Administrative Code § 11-243 [b] [2], [3], [8]; 28 RCNY 5-03 [a]). Rental units in buildings receiving these exemptions and/or abatements must be registered with the State Division of Housing and Community Renewal (DHCR), and are generally subject to rent stabilization for at least as long as the J-51 benefits are in force (see 28 RCNY 5-03 [f|). The Department of Housing Preservation and Development administers the J-51 program in the City of New York.
MetLife apparently first applied for and received J-51 benefits for the properties in 1992. At the time, the apartment complexes, which MetLife built in the 1940s, had already been rent-stabilized since at least 1974.
In 1993, the Legislature enacted the Rent Regulation Reform Act (RRRA) (L 1993, ch 253), which provided for the luxury decontrol or deregulation of certain rent-stabilized apartments. The RRRA identified two circumstances in which deregulation was warranted: (1) in vacant apartments where the legal regulated rent was $2,000 per month or more; and (2) in occupied apartments where the legal regulated rent was $2,000 per month or more and the combined annual income of all occupants exceeded $250,000 per year (RSL [Administrative Code]
On January 16, 1996âprior to the 1997 amendments to the RRRAâDHCR issued an advisory opinion, which stated that participation in the J-51 program only precluded luxury decontrol âwhere the receipt of such benefits is the sole reason for the accommodation being subject to rent regulationâ (emphasis added). On its face, the DHCR advisory opinion relies exclusively on a textual interpretation of the RRRAâs relevant provisions. Further, DHCR took the position that
âwhere Luxury Decontrol is applied before the âJ-51â tax benefit period has expired, the abatement should be reduced proportionately. That the Legislature recognized the inherent inequity of an ownerâs continuing to enjoy tax benefits after decontrol is apparent from RPTL Section 489 7 (b) (1), which provides that as to . . . [â]any multiple dwelling, building or structure which is decontrolled subsequent to the granting of such benefits, the local legislative body or other governing agency may withdraw such benefits from such dwelling.â â
In April 2000, DHCR proposed changes to the Rent Stabilization Code (RSC) in order to âconform regulations to statutes, particularly the RRRAs of 1993 and 1997, judicial determinations and . . . agency practiceâ (22 NY Reg [issue 14], Apr. 5, 2000, at 17). After public hearing and comment, DHCR adopted these changes, which became effective on December 20, 2000 (see 22 NY Reg [issue 51], Dec. 20, 2000, at 18-20 [notice of adoption]). As relevant to this appeal, DHCR amended section 2520.11 of the RSC, titled âApplicability,â to provide that
â[luxury decontrol] shall not apply to housing*282 accommodations which became or become subject to the RSL and this Code:
â(i) solely by virtue of the receipt of tax benefits pursuant to . . . section 11-243 (formerly J51-2.5) or section 11-244 (formerly J51-5) of the Administrative Code of the city of New York, as amendedâ (RSC [9 NYCRR] § 2520.11 [r] [5]; [s] [2] [emphasis added]).
And in February 2004, DHCR issued (and subsequently reissued in January 2007) Fact Sheet 36, entitled âHigh-Rent Vacancy Decontrol and High-Rent High-income Decontrol,â which similarly specified that â[a]partments that are subject to rent regulation only because of the receipt [of J-51 benefits] do not qualify for high-rent vacancy decontrolâ (emphasis added).
At some point after the RRRA was enacted, MetLife, with DHCRâs approval (see RSL § 26-504.3 [b]), began charging market-rate rents for those rental units in the properties where the conditions for high rent/high income luxury decontrol were met. In late 2006, MetLife sold the properties to PCV/ST for $5.4 billion.
Months after the sale, plaintiffsânine individuals who reside in seven apartments in the apartment complexâsued MetLife and PCV/ST on behalf of a putative class of all current and former tenants who allegedly were, or will be, charged rents that exceed rent stabilization levels for any period during which the landlord receives real estate tax benefits under the J-51 program. Specifically, plaintiffs claimed that âin or about 2001 or 2002, and continuing through the present time,â defendants have âimproperly and unlawfully charged thousands of tenants market rents, even as [defendants] have collected . . . tax benefits under the J-51 program,â amounting to ânearly $25 millionâ; they alleged that about one quarter of the 11,200 apartments in the apartment complex had been luxury decontrolled. Plaintiffs sought a declaration that units in the properties would remain rent-stabilized âuntil the last applicable J-51 tax benefits period . . . has expired [in or about 2017 or 2018],â and that defendants would âcomply with all appropriate legal requirements to deregulate the units.â Plaintiffs also sought relief in the form of rental overcharges totaling $215 million and attorneysâ fees.
PCV/ST and MetLife moved to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a cause of action, arguing that the RRRAâs
In a decision dated August 16, 2007, Supreme Court dismissed the complaint, reasoning that âthe clear and unambiguous language of the RSL states that the luxury decontrol âexclusion shall not apply to housing accommodations which became or become subject to this law (a) by virtue of receiving [J-51] tax benefitsâ â (2007 NY Slip Op 32639, *10, quoting RSL §§ 26-504.1, 26-504.2 [a]). Because the properties became subject to the RSL â18 years before applying for J-51 tax benefits,â the court concluded that âdefendants did not become subject to rent stabilization by virtue of receivingâ these benefits (id. at *11).
Supreme Court further noted that this interpretation, adopted by DHCR, was consistent with the luxury decontrol laws, which were intended to ârestore some rationality to a system which provides the bulk of its benefits to high income tenantsâ (id., quoting Noto v Bedford Apts. Co., 21 AD3d 762, 765 [1st Dept 2005] [internal quotation marks omitted]); that DHCRâs interpretation of the statute, if not unreasonable or irrational, was entitled to deference; and that the Legislatureâs failure to amend the RSL in response to DHCRâs interpretation when subsequently amending the luxury decontrol provisions showed that it acquiesced in this construction. Plaintiffs appealed.
The Appellate Division unanimously reversed Supreme Courtâs decision and order, and reinstated the complaint. The court concluded that building owners who receive J-51 benefits forfeit their rights under the luxury decontrol provisions even if their buildings were already subject to the RSL. According to the Appellate Division, the words âby virtue ofâ did not confine the exclusion from luxury deregulation to buildings that became subject to the RSL only because they received J-51 benefits; DHCRâs interpretation of this provision was not entitled to deference because a pure issue of statutory reading and analysis was involved; if the Legislature had intended the provision to mean âsolely by virtue of,â as DHCR concluded, it would have used the word âsolelyâ; its interpretation was âmore consistent with the overall statutory scheme,â which made no overt
The Appellate Division subsequently granted defendantsâ motion for leave to appeal, certifying the following question: âWas the order of this Court, which reversed the order of the Supreme Court, properly made?â For the reasons that follow, we answer affirmatively.
II.
PCV/ST and MetLife argue principally that the relevant exception to luxury decontrol applies only to accommodations that âbecame or becomeâ subject to the RSL âby virtue of receiving tax benefits pursuant to section . . . four hundred eighty-nine of the real property Tax Law [J-51 benefits]â (RSL §§ 26-504.1, 26-504.2 [a]). And since the word âbecomeâ means to âpass from a previous state or conditionâ or to âtake on a new role, essence, or natureâ (Websterâs Third New International Dictionary of the English Language 195 [1963]), a rental unit can âbecomeâ subject to the RSL only when it passes from being unregulated to being regulatedâi.e., when its status changes on account of the ownerâs receipt of J-51 benefits. By contrast, a rental unit does not âbecomeâ subject to the RSL by virtue of receiving J-51 benefits if it was already subject to rent stabilization. According to PCV/ST and MetLife, if the Legislature had intended to preclude luxury deregulation for all rent-stabilized apartments receiving J-51 benefits, it would have omitted the phrases âbecame or becomeâ and âby virtue ofâ from the statute, and simply written that the exception did not apply to accommodations âreceivingâ such tax benefits. They note that the Legislature used this latter phraseology in RSL § 26-504 (c) (referring to âDwelling units in a building or structure receiving the benefits of [J-51]â).
PCV/ST and MetLife emphasize that since 1996 DHCRâthe state agency entrusted with administering rent stabilizationâ has interpreted the luxury decontrol provisions in the manner they advocate. This is not, however, entirely correct; DHCRâs interpretation and the one PCV/ST and MetLife now offer are different. DHCR has interpreted âby virtue ofâ to mean âsolely by virtue of,â while PCV/ST and MetLife rely on the âbecame or becomeâ language of the statute. The two interpretations would lead to the same result in this case, but not in every case. For example, under DHCRâs interpretation, a building that first became subject to the RSL due to receipt of J-51 benefitsâbut is also subject to the provisions of the RSL for some other reason (see RSL § 26-504)âwould be subject to luxury decontrol because it would not be stabilized âsolelyâ because of J-51 benefits. On the other hand, under the argument made by PCV/ST and MetLife, the same building would be exempt from luxury decontrol because it âbecameâ subject to stabilization when the first triggering eventâreceipt of the J-51 benefitsâ occurred.
It is understandable that PCV/ST and MetLife prefer not to defend DHCRâs reading, because it is contrary to the plain text of the statute. âBy virtue ofâ and âsolely by virtue ofâ simply do not mean the same thing. Nor do we owe deference to DH-CRâs reading, for this appeal does not call upon us to interpret a statute where âspecialized knowledge and understanding of underlying operational practices or . . .an evaluation of factual data and inferences to be drawn therefromâ is at stake such that we should âdefer to the administrative agencyâs interpretation unless irrational or unreasonableâ (Matter of KSLM-Columbus Apts., Inc. v New York State Div. of Hous. & Community Renewal, 5 NY3d 303, 312 [2005], quoting Kurcsics v Merchants Mut. Ins. Co., 49 NY2d 451, 459 [1980] [internal quotation marks omitted]). Rather, where
âthe question is one of pure statutory reading and analysis, dependent only on accurate apprehension of legislative intent, there is little basis to rely on any special competence or expertise of the administrative agency and its interpretive regulations . . . And, of course, if the regulation runs counter to the clear wording of a statutory provision, it should not be accorded any weightâ (Kurcsics, 49 NY2d at 459).
Here, we conclude that defendantsâ interpretation of the exception to luxury decontrol for units that âbecame or becomeâ subject to rent stabilization âby virtue of receivingâ J-51 benefits conflicts with the most natural reading of the statuteâs language. Defendants essentially read these words as recognizing two categories of J-51-benefĂtted buildingsâthose, like the properties, that were rent-stabilized prior to receiving J-51 benefits, for which luxury decontrol became available in 1993; and those that only became rent-stabilized as a condition of receiving J-51 benefits, for which luxury decontrol is unavailable (at least during the benefit period). But there is no language anywhere in the statute delineating these two supposed categories, and we see no indication that the Legislature ever intended such a distinctionâone that never occurred to anyone, so far as this record shows, until after the present lawsuit was brought. Contrary to PCV/STâs and MetLifeâs argument, there is nothing impossible, or even strained, about reading the verb âbecomeâ to refer to achieving, for a second time, a status already attained.
Even assuming that the reading given to âbecame or becomeâ by PCV/ST and MetLife is a possible one, the RRRAâs legislative history better supports our interpretation of the statute. The RRRAâs sponsor stated that luxury decontrol was unavailable to building owners who âenjoy[ed] another system of general public assistanceâ such as J-51 benefits (NY Senate Debate on Assembly Bill A8859, July 7, 1993, at 8214). Although the dissent accuses us of âpluck[ing] a snippetâ of the sponsorâs words to support our conclusion (dissenting op at 291), in response to a question posed by a colleague exploring the very issue presented here, he said that
âshould the exemptions contained in section 489 end, thatâsâthose J.51s and 489s end, then they would be subject so that at no point do you have the [luxury] decontrol provisions applying to the buildings which have received the tax exemptions that I just mentionedâ (Senate Debate at 8214).
Nor will we infer, as defendants suggest, that the Legislatureâs inactivity in the face of DHCRâs interpretation of the statute constitutes its acquiescence thereto. Legislative inactivity is inherently ambiguous and â âaffords the most dubious foundation for drawing positive inferencesâ â (Clark v Cuomo, 66 NY2d 185, 190-191 [1985], quoting United States v Price, 361 US 304, 310-311 [I960]). It is true that, where the practical construction of a statute is well known, the Legislature may be charged with knowledge of that construction and its failure to act may be deemed an acceptance (Brooklyn Union Gas Co. v New York State Human Rights Appeal Bd., 41 NY2d 84, 90 [1976]). However, at the time the Legislature most recently considered the statute, there is no indication that the specific question presented hereâthat DHCRâs interpretation is improper and conflicts with the plain language of the statuteâhad been brought to the Legislatureâs attention (see Kurcsics, 49 NY2d at 459 n 4).
IV
Defendants predict dire financial consequences from our ruling, for themselves and the New York City real estate industry generally. These predictions may not come true; they depend, among other things, on issues yet to be decided, including retroactivity, class certification, the statute of limitations, and other defenses that may be applicable to particular tenants. If the statute imposes unacceptable burdens, defendantsâ remedy is to seek legislative relief. Moreover, the dissent predicts that our decision will cause âyears of litigation over many novel questions to deal with the fallout from todayâs decisionâ (dissenting op at 295). That the courts and litigants may experience some additional burden, however, is no reason to eschew what we view as the only correct interpretation of the statute (cf. Matter of Gross v Perales, 72 NY2d 231, 237 [1988]).
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and the certified question answered in the affirmative.
. The RSL is codified at Administrative Code of City of NY §§ 26-501 to 26-520.
. PCV/ST and MetLife also suggest that if we affirm the Appellate Divisionâs decision and order, we should apply the statute prospectively rather than retroactively because they reasonably relied on DHCRâs unambiguous and long-standing interpretation of the RSLâs luxury decontrol provisions. Because the lower courts did not consider this issueâas defendants acknowledgeâwe do not consider it at this time.