The British human rights activist and ex-wife of Rolling Stones singer Mick Jagger was evicted in December from the Upper East Side apartment she rented for 20 years. She hasn't lived in the apartment for the past few years because of a dispute over asbestos and fungus contamination that led to a lawsuit against landlord Katz Park Avenue Corp.
Jagger's lawyer, Dan Bryson, said they were disappointed, but that the case against the landlord over water and mold damage should reach trial court next spring.
"It took her filing suit to get them to come in and fix the apartment," Bryson said.
Jagger was renting the 18th-floor Park Avenue space for $4,614 a month when a judge imposed a fine in 2006 and ordered her to pay months of back rent, though she said the apartment was uninhabitable because of the contamination. The apartment has since been leased to another tenant.
As that dispute wore on, the landlord evicted Jagger, saying she wasn't entitled to rent control protections.
Court of Appeals Judge Robert Smith wrote that Jagger failed to explain how she could have a valid tourist visa and a primary residence in New York City.
"Perhaps there are cases in which a tenant could show that her principal dwelling place for immigration purposes is in one place, and her primary residence for rent regulation purposes in another, but defendant has not even tried to make such a showing," he wrote.
New York's Rent Stabilization Code allows landlords to reclaim an apartment after the lease expires if it isn't occupied as a primary residence, which has been defined in case law as "an ongoing, substantial, physical nexus with the ... premises for actual living purposes," Smith wrote.
Because she holds a B2 visa, Jagger is required to have a "principal, actual dwelling place" outside the United States. A native of Nicaragua and now a British citizen, she keeps an apartment in London.
Cruz said she didn't know how much the New York apartment is now going for.
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