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Re: Succession rights to rent stabilized apartment

Posted by Mark Smith on July 29, 1999 at 19:25:36:

In Reply to: Succession rights to rent-controlled apartmen posted by Dan on July 29, 1999 at 16:13:13:

Your apartment is rent stabilized, not rent controlled. If you choose not to renew your lease, the landlord has the option of offering your roommate/co-tenant a vacancy lease, with an 18% increase for one year or 20% for two years, but he doesn't have to offer that to your roommate/co-tenant. He can evict both of you if your roommate/co-tenant refuses to move at the end of the lease, and you could be on the hook for the use and occupancy charges and the landlord's attorneys' fees, if the landlord has to go to housing court to remove your roommate/co-tenant.


: I have lived in a rent controlled apartment in Manhattan for five years. I was the original signer of the lease, and I have shared the apartment with a steady stream of roomates. My current roomate has lived in the apartment for six months, and the landlords allowed him to add his name to the current lease a few months ago, on the condition of my verbal agreement that I was still responsible for the full amount of the rent. I plan to move when the current lease expires, but my roomate wishes to stay in the apartment. I do not intend to sign my name to another lease on this apartment. (i.e. I don't want to sublet) My big question is as follows
: : can my roomate, whose name is now on the lease, sign a renewal lease on this apartment, with the 2% increase (or whatever it is for a rent controlled apartment?) Or is there a distinction between my rights as the signer of the original lease, and my roomate's rights as a recently added name? Can the landlord force him to vacate the apartment? Does he have any succession rights?

: An answer to this question would be very helpful!!

: --Dan


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