New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Deborah Koplovitz and Andrew B. Freedland | August 31, 2022
It seems that a recent case has tacitly recognized that noise from other neighbors and their children in apartment buildings is not unexpected, and unless it is so unreasonable that it precludes a tenant from enjoying the intended function of the apartment, a warranty of habitability claim may not make the kind of good fence that some neighbors wish it would.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Mollen | August 30, 2022
Scott Mollen discusses "133 E. 58th Street, LLC v. Honors New York Center for Bridge," where plaintiff's who operated a bridge club attempted to be excused from rent due to impossibility of performance but the court determined to club to be a 'non-essential retail establishment, and "Moody v. The Related Companies," where an FHA discrimination claim was dismissed against the developer of Hudson Yard's affordable rental units.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Nativ Winiarsky | August 30, 2022
As seminal a case as 'Regina' may have been, there has been a sharp divergence of opinions in regard to its application as seen by recent decisions issued from both the Appellate Division and Trial Court levels.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Mollen | August 23, 2022
Scott Mollen discusses "Family Health Mgmt. v. Rohan Dev.," and "Neighborhood Housing Assoc. LLC v. Covington."
By Jason Grant | August 18, 2022
In a news release that linked the "Assurance of Discontinuance" agreement, James pointed to the Housing Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019, which "outlawed efforts to deny housing to renters with a history of landlord-tenant court cases."
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Mollen | August 16, 2022
Scott Mollen discusses Lemberg Found. v. Shuttleworth Artists," and "Boston LLC v. 35 West Realty Co., LLC."
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By David Hershey-Webb | August 10, 2022
There are good landlords and bad tenants. But there's a big difference. When a landlord loses, he or she or they (or in most cases large impersonal entities) may lose money. When a tenant loses, he or she or they loses a home.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Mollen | August 9, 2022
Scott Mollen discusses two commercial landlord-tenant cases, "525 Del. v. CSCO," and "Strycker's Bay Apartments, Inc. v. Han-Bae Corp."
By Andrew Denney | August 8, 2022
As the new attorney-in-chief for the provider's Queens Neighborhood Office, Julia McNally will oversee a staff of 60 that includes 39 attorneys.
New York Law Journal | Expert Opinion
By Scott Mollen | August 2, 2022
In his Realty Law column, Scott Mollen discusses 'Marlow v. Greene,' 'Andre v. Invenergy LLC,' and 'MH Rental LLC v. Zani.'
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