Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Rain Clouds Hover Over Big NYC Landlords, Tenants, Bondholders, Housing Agency After State High Court Ruling Declaring Stuy Town Rent Hikes Illegal

In New York City, The New York Times reports:

  • Tenants and landlords spent much of [last] Thursday struggling to figure out what the state high court’s ruling on the future of Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village meant for all types of New Yorkers.(1) Real estate moguls feared the news would cripple their industry, and tenants worried about their rents.

  • Despite the lack of clarity, the ruling by the New York Court of Appeals had an immediate chilling effect on real estate in New York: Landlords questioned whether they could raise rents, and some even went so far as to cancel plans to buy more apartments in buildings with tax subsidies.

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  • While tenant groups who had spent the last several years fighting the owners of Stuyvesant Town welcomed the news, they also recognized that the ruling may complicate and extend how long it takes for current or past tenants to receive rent rebates. They also feared that conditions would deteriorate as owners deferred maintenance and repairs.

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  • The problem extends beyond Stuyvesant Town to buildings in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens. “They’re not the only landlords who did this,” said Daniel Alpert, managing partner of Westwood Capital, a New York investment bank that was part of a tenants’ bid for Stuyvesant Town in 2006.

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  • Government agencies scrambled to figure out how they would carry out changes the ruling would require. The state housing agency, the Division of Housing and Community Renewal, could be inundated with petitions from tens of thousands of tenants claiming they had been overcharged by landlords receiving tax breaks, as well as from landlords disputing the claims.

For more, see Stuyvesant Town Ruling Worries Tenants and Landlords Alike.

For the ruling, see Roberts v. Tishman Speyer Properties, L.P.

See also:

(1) Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village are a combined 56-building, 11,000-unit apartment complex in Manhattan.

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