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Do I Have a Right to a Jury?
What is the single most important thing you can do to help
your housing court case? It is to file a jury demand and pay the jury
fee to the court clerk on the very first day you show up in the courthouse.
Article I of the New York State Constitution gives you the
right to a jury of six persons in most civil trials. RPAPL § 745
gives you the same right in any housing court case. Most tenants prefer
to present their cases to juries. One judge can make a mistake, but it
is unlikely that six people are going to make the same mistake at once.
Most tenants, however, have unknowingly signed away this
right. Look on your first lease; there is probably a clause that waives
the jury trial. In some circumstances, this waiver will be disregarded,
and the courts have allowed the tenant to go to a jury anyway.
Most subletters (in Manhattan, at least) still have
the right to a jury, because they never signed the lease containing the
jury waiver. Other court decisions have held that occupants claiming
succession rights are not bound by the jury waiver clause.
In Harlington Realty v. Eager, NYLJ, December 13,
1991, p. 21, col.2 (1991), a panel of judges of the Appellate Term, First
Department (Manhattan) unanimously held that a co-tenant who failed
to sign a residential renewal lease is not bound by a valid jury waiver
in the original lease.
In Halbor Realty Co. v. Torrecilla, NYLJ, March 26,
1992, p. 25, col. 2, the same (Manhattan) court held that a lease containing
a jury waiver was inapplicable to a tenant who succeeded to a rent-controlled
tenancy.
Manhattan Housing Court Judge Doris Ling-Cohan denied a
motion to strike jury demand of an occupant claiming succession rights
to a rent-stabilized apartment. "It is well settled," wrote
Judge Ling-Cohan "that a jury waiver clause is not enforceable
against non-signatories to a lease." ACP 301 East 69th Street
Associates, L.P. v. Blake, NYLJ, October 29, 1997, p. 30, col. 1 (Civ.
Ct. N.Y. County).
A lot of landlord's attorneys ignore tenants' jury demands,
because they doubt that the tenants have paid their jury fees, or they
mistakenly believe that the jury waiver in a lease is "self-executing." These attorneys are often unpleasantly surprised to discover on the day
of trial that they are going, not to the courtroom, but to the jury selection
room.
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