Page 5 - CooperatorNews July 2021
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COOPERATORNEWS.COM 
COOPERATORNEWS — 
JULY 2021   
5 
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS 
Legal 
Q 
A& 
Disclaimer: Th  e answers provided in this Q&A  
column are of a general nature and cannot  
substitute for professional advice regarding your  
specifi c circumstances. Always seek the advice of  
competent legal counsel or other qualifi ed profes- 
sionals with any questions you may have regard- 
ing technical or legal issues. 
Bi-Coastal Blues 
Q 
I have a two-bedroom co-op in  
Manhattan. I also have a town- 
house in Los Angeles because  
that is where I pursue acting for TV and  apartment passed away. Will her apartment  
fi lm mostly. I have had roommates in my  remain rent stabilized, or can the owner  
New York apartment as I come in 1-2 times  transfer it to market value? 
a year. My current roommate is leaving at  
the end of June, and I have a new roommate  
who wants to move in the fi rst week of Au- 
gust. Th  e management company is trying  
to tell me that it constitutes a sublet. I told  
them no, he is a roommate. My bedroom  
is mine and my clothes and furniture are  Manhattan-based Schwartz Sladkus Reich  
there. Plus I pay the utilities. Th  ey are say- 
ing that I should be there more than I am in  Stability and Tenant Protection Act of 2019  
Los Angeles. What are the legalities of this?  
             —I Only Play a Landlord on TV 
A 
Lucas A. Ferrara, a partner  more easily and usually under one of two  
at Newman Ferrara LLP and  processes; that is, either a high rent regu- 
an adjunct professor at New  lation (e.g., the rent exceeded the then rate  
York Law School, says: “Th  e distinction be- 
tween a roommate and a subtenant is sim- 
ply this: If you are residing in an apartment  legally permitted).  
with another person, then that other indi- 
vidual can be characterized as a roommate.  hibition against deregulation is when the  
If you are allowing someone to live in your  apartment is located in a building receiv- 
unit, in your place and stead, or in your ab- 
sence, you probably have a sublet (or an as- 
signment). 
“According to New York State’s Unlaw- 
ful Restrictions on Occupancy Law—popu- 
larly called the ‘Roommate Law’—you are  the 421a tax benefi ts, one can check with  
usually  permitted  to take on  a  roommate  the New York City Department of Finance,  
without a landlord’s or co-op board’s ap- 
proval. But, for that law to apply, there are a  owner of the apartment (here, the Holder of  
few restrictions, including a ‘simultaneous  Unsold Shares) as well.  
occupancy’ requirement.  
“In 2019, a New York City Civil Court  to her death, had a family member (as de- 
judge defi ned a ‘roommate’ as ‘a long-term  fi ned by the law) or those in a family like  
co-occupant of an apartment with the lease- 
holder, with whom the entire living area is  in the apartment prior to the death of the  
shared,’ further noting, ‘[Th  e Roommate  tenant of record, they may be permitted to  
Law] contemplates that the occupant reside  become the tenant of record. Th  ere are vari- 
in the apartment  
together with the tenant. 
’  ous  tests to determine whether  the party  
(Emphasis added.) 
“Th  us, even if clothes, furniture, or other  ly become the new tenant of record of the  
personal belongings remain, the arrange- 
ment the letter writer describes may be con- 
strued as a sublet (or assignment), which— 
depending on the co-op’s bylaws and other  ment to inquire, presumably as an inquiry  
governing documents—may have required  to rent the apartment.”  
prior board approval. Any failure to abide  
by those strictures would arguably be viola- 
tive of the governing proprietary lease and  
could potentially subject the letter writer to  
a termination, and possible eviction, if the  
unauthorized occupancy is not remedied.” 
The Instability of Rent Stabilization 
Q 
I live in a co-op with some unsold  
share apartments. Th  is month  
a woman in a rent stabilized  
                                                 —Wondering 
A 
“Th  e question is not as sim- 
ple as it would appear,” says  
attorney Mark Hakim of  
Greenberg Atlas LLP. “First, the Housing  
(the ‘Act’) eliminated, with a few exceptions,  
the majority of the deregulation protection  
for  those  who own  rent  stabilized  apart- 
ments. Before the Act, one could deregulate  
permitted by law) or high income deregula- 
tion (e.g., the tenant’s income exceeded that  
“Now, the main exception to the pro- 
ing Section 421a tax abatements, which are  
abatement/exemptions granted to develop- 
ers of properties considered to be under- 
utilized or unused. To know if the building  
where the apartment is located is receiving  
and then you would have to check with the  
“If, however, the tenant of record, prior  
situation (again, defi ned by law) living  
seeking these succession rights may lawful- 
apartment when the tenant of record dies.  
Regardless, the best way to fi nd out the sta- 
tus is to reach out to the owner of the apart- 
n 
continued on page 5  
“FirstService Residential has been our  
managing agent for decades. Whether finance,  
day-to-day problems or getting through a  
big capital project, the team shows up with  
great ideas and solutions. Our property  
manager’s leadership, coupled with the rest  
of our FirstService Residential team, makes  
our staff and our board function better. The  
email I just received from FirstService Energy  
double assured me that being under the big  
FirstService Residential umbrella is the only  
way to go. I sent it out to everyone on the board  
telling them the same.”  
>> Stephanie G., Board President  
     200+ unit cooperative  
     Upper East Side 
www.fsresidential.com/new-york 
LetsTalk.NY@fsresidential.com 
212.324.9944 
New York’s Property  
Management Leader 
Making a Difference. 
Every Day.
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