| Mango v Muscat |
| 2025 NY Slip Op 25088 [87 Misc 3d 361] |
| March 24, 2025 |
| Black-Kelly, J. |
| District Court of Suffolk County, Third District |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| As corrected through Wednesday, October 22, 2025 |
| Camillo A. Mango, as Trustee of the Charles W. Harrison Family Trust, Petitioner, v John Muscat, Also Known as John J. Muscat, Respondent. |
Landlord and Tenant
- Summary Proceedings
- RPAPL 741 (5-a) Pleading Requirements Not Applicable
- No Real Property Law § 231-c Notice Required Where Petitioner Not Receiving or Entitled to Receive Rent, and Therefore Not Landlord
Peter Morra, Garden City, for respondent.
Richard M. Gordon, Huntington, for petitioner.
It is ordered that this motion by respondent to dismiss the petition is denied. In this landlord tenant summary holdover{**87 Misc 3d at 362} proceeding (RPAPL 711 [1]), respondent seeks dismissal on the ground the petition fails to state a cause of action (see CPLR 3211 [a] [7]). The gravamen of his motion is the petition is not in compliance with the pleading requirement contained in RPAPL 741 (5-a), which reads in pertinent part:
"Every petition shall . . .
"[a]ppend or incorporate the notice required pursuant to section two hundred thirty-one-c of the real property law, which shall state the following: (i) if the [*2]premises are or are not subject to article six-A of the real property law, the 'good cause eviction law', and if the premises are exempt, such petition shall state why the premises are exempt from such law."
Real Property Law § 231-c (1) reads in pertinent part: "A landlord as defined in subdivision two of section two hundred eleven of this chapter shall append to or incorporate into any . . . petition pursuant to section seven hundred forty one of the real property actions and proceedings law, the following notice" (emphasis added).
The undisputed allegations of the petition are that petitioner is landlord and owner of the subject premises, which respondent occupies as a tenant at will (Oct. 9, 2024 petition ¶¶ 1, 6). Also undisputed is petitioner's assertion in his opposition papers that respondent does not pay rent. The petition does not contain a rent demand or any payment demand other than the costs and disbursements of this proceeding (id., Wherefore clause).
A Real Property Law § 231-c notice is not appended to or incorporated into the petition. Petitioner takes the position that he is not, to use the language of Real Property Law § 231-c (1), "[a] landlord as defined in subdivision two of section two hundred eleven," which is required for the notice provision of Real Property Law § 231-c to apply.
A landlord is defined in Real Property Law § 211 (2) as "any fee owner, lessor . . . or any other person or entity receiving or entitled to receive rent." For purposes of the notice requirement of Real Property Law § 231-c, petitioner is not a landlord, since he is not "receiving or entitled to receive rent," and because he is not a landlord for purposes of the statute, the Real Property Law § 231-c notice is not required.
RPAPL 741 (5-a) only applies when the Real Property Law § 231-c notice is required. It is not required here, so the failure to append or incorporate it is not a pleading defect.{**87 Misc 3d at 363}
The petition states a cause of action pursuant to RPAPL 711 (1). Respondent's motion is denied. This proceeding is returned to the landlord/tenant trial calendar.