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Succession Rights to Rent Stabilized Apartments

Can a Landlord Evict a Family Member or Partner After the Lease Tenant Leaves?

Generally, if the tenant of record vacates an apartment or dies, everyone else in the apartment must move out. This is not true for apartments subject to rent stabilization and rent control.

Rent stabilization and rent control regulations provide for a two-year rule: any family member living with the tenant for two years keeps the apartment after the tenant dies or leaves.

But what if you are not a blood relative? What if you simply lived with the tenant? What if you were in a common law relationship?

In the case of Braschi v. Stahl, 74 NY2d 201, 544 NYS2d 784 (1989), the New York Court of Appeals expanded the concept of family under the code to include the nontraditional family member. A nontraditional family member is defined as "any person residing with the tenant as a primary resident who can prove emotional and financial commitment and interdependence between such person and the tenant." Among the relevant factors to this determination are:

      1. Longevity of relationship;
      2. Sharing of household and other necessary expenses;
      3. Intermingling of finances;
      4. Engaging in family-type activities and holding out publicly as family members;
      5. Formalizing legal obligations (e.g. in a will);
      6. Any other pattern of behavior that evidences the intention to create a long-term, emotionally committed relationship.
      7. 9 NYCRR § 2520.6(o)(2) (Rent Stab.); 9 NYCRR § 2204,6(d)(3)(I) (Rent Control).

Having a long-term relationship is one thing; proving it is another. Outside of the specifics of each case and the predilections of the particular judge, it is impossible to tell how much proof will be enough. Documentary evidence is extremely important, but so are vacation photos where the tenant and the family member flew to Costa Rica one summer. A good approach is to have many different types of evidence (financial documents, testimony, photos, grocery receipts, personal letters, etc.) going back as far as possible (two-year minimum).

 

 

 

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Steven De Castro © January 1, 2007. Copyright protected. All rights reserved. Manhattanfirm.com and The De Castro Law Firm are common law trademarks of Steven De Castro.