LIEB BLOG

Legal Analysts

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Suffolk County's First Time Homeownership Down Payment Assistance Funds

Applications must be submitted by September 30, 2012

To read the program guidelines, click here.

The program provides a zero-interest deferred loan of $10,000 to assist with the down payment toward the purchase of an owner occupied, single family residence.

To qualify, the applicant, must not have owned a home during the 3-year period immediately prior to this purchase; have annual income <= 80% of the area median income; have annual household income of >= $30,000; attend mortgage counseling; occupy the property as a principal residence; among others.

Maximum FMV of residence bought under this program must be <= $362,790.

A great program that is worth taking a look at.

Suffolk Bar Meeting - Ronkonkoma HUB Discussion - 7/18/12

Reminder

Tonight, the Suffolk Bar Association is hosting representatives from the Town of Brookhaven, including Tullio Bertoli, Commissioner of Planning, and Robert Quinlan, Town Attorney, who will both comment on Brookhaven's aspects of the HUB. If you are a member of the Bar Association, please attend at 6:30pm in the Board Room. 


Andrew M. Lieb
Real Property Committee Chair 

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Residential Landlord's Duty to Mitigate Damages

In an issue often debated and recently re-visited by the Civil Court, Kings County, a residential landlord does not have a duty to mitigate damages when a tenant breaches the lease by vacating the premises prior to the expiration of the term.  See Kings Holding, LLC v. Terrick, 2012 NY Slip OP 51153U. The Court cited to the previous holding of Holy Properties v. Cole Products, which found that the duty to mitigate does not exist concerning commercial premises, and additionally cited to Rios v. Carrillo, which subsequently adopted the holding of Holy Properties by finding that the duty to mitigate does not exist concerning residential premises. It is important to note that in Holy Properties and Rios, both holdings of the Second Department, the leases governing each respective premises specifically provided that the landlord was under no duty to mitigate damages or that the tenant remained liable to landlord for rent upon the cancellation of the lease except as provided by law.
Furthermore,  the landlord is not entitled to rent until the lease term has expired and there is a surrender of the premises by operation of law. In Kings, the surrender occurred after the landlord had submitted a "move out form" to the tenant after the tenant had moved out without notice, notified the tenant of the amount owed in arrears and informed the tenant that it was withholding the security deposit. This date of surrender actually occurred one month after the tenant physically left the premises. The date of surrender will be case specific, but may be interpreted from the conduct of the parties, the abandonment of the premises by tenant and the landlord's acceptance of tenant's surrender.