New York Real Property Code § 231-C

Good cause eviction law notice
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* § 231-c. Good cause eviction law notice. 1. A landlord as defined in\nsubdivision two of section two hundred eleven of this chapter shall\nappend to or incorporate into any initial lease, renewal lease, notice\nrequired pursuant to paragraph (a) of subdivision one of section two\nhundred twenty-six-c of this article, notice required pursuant to\nsubdivision two of section seven hundred eleven of the real property\nactions and proceedings law, or petition pursuant to section seven\nhundred forty one of the real property actions and proceedings law, the\nfollowing notice:\nNOTICE TO TENANT OF APPLICABILITY OR INAPPLICABILITY OF THE NEW YORK\nSTATE GOOD CAUSE EVICTION LAW\nThis notice from your landlord serves to inform you of whether or not\nyour unit/apartment/home is covered by the New York State Good Cause\nEviction Law (Article 6-A of the Real Property Law) and, if applicable,\nthe reason permitted under the New York State Good Cause Eviction Law\nthat your landlord is not renewing your lease. Even if your apartment is\nnot protected by Article 6-A, known as the New York State Good Cause\nEviction Law, you may have other rights under other local, state, or\nfederal laws and regulations concerning rents and evictions. This\nnotice, which your landlord is required to fill out and give to you,\ndoes not constitute legal advice. You may wish to consult a lawyer if\nyou have any questions about your rights under the New York State Good\nCause Eviction Law or about this notice.\nNOTICE (THIS SHOULD BE FILLED OUT BY YOUR LANDLORD)\nUNIT INFORMATION\nSTREET:\n_______________________________________________________________________\nUNIT OR APARTMENT NUMBER:\n_______________________________________________________________________\nCITY/TOWN/VILLAGE:\n_______________________________________________________________________\nSTATE:\n_______________________________________________________________________\nZIP CODE:\n_______________________________________________________________________\n1. IS THIS UNIT SUBJECT TO ARTICLE 6-A OF THE REAL PROPERTY LAW, KNOWN\nAS THE NEW YORK STATE GOOD CAUSE EVICTION LAW? (PLEASE MARK APPLICABLE\nANSWER)\nYES ___\nNO ___\n2. IF THE UNIT IS EXEMPT FROM ARTICLE 6-A OF THE REAL PROPERTY LAW,\nKNOWN AS THE NEW YORK STATE GOOD CAUSE EVICTION LAW, WHY IS IT EXEMPT\nFROM THAT LAW? (PLEASE MARK ALL APPLICABLE EXEMPTIONS)\nA. Village/Town/City outside of New York City has not adopted good cause\neviction under section 213 of the Real Property Law ___;\nB. Unit is owned by a "small landlord," as defined in subdivision 3 of\nsection 211 of the Real Property Law, who owns no more than 10 units for\nsmall landlords located in New York City or the number of units\nestablished as the maximum amount a "small landlord" can own in the\nstate by a local law of a village, town, or city, other than New York\nCity, adopting the provisions of Article 6-A of the Real Property Law,\nknown as the New York State Good Cause Eviction Law, or no more than 10\nunits, as applicable. In connection with any eviction proceeding in\nwhich the landlord claims an exemption from the provisions of Article\n6-A of the Real Property Law, known as the New York State Good Cause\nEviction Law, on the basis of being a small landlord, the landlord shall\nprovide to the tenant or tenants subject to the proceeding the name of\neach natural person who owns or is a beneficial owner of, directly or\nindirectly, in whole or in part, the housing accommodation at issue in\nthe proceeding, the number of units owned, jointly or separately, by\neach such natural person owner, and the addresses of any such units,\nexcluding each natural person owner's principal residence. If the\nlandlord is an entity, organized under the laws of this state or of any\nother jurisdiction, then such landlord shall provide to the tenant or\ntenants subject to the proceeding the name of each natural person with a\ndirect or indirect ownership interest in such entity or any affiliate

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