What are some of the risks that co-op and condo boards have to consider in the coronavirus era? Skip to main content
Fulltext search
FILTER RESULTS BY:
RECOMMENDED IN RENT
Moving to NYC after college? Here's how to find a rental apartment
RECOMMENDED IN BUY
How buying real estate in NYC is unlike anywhere else
RECOMMENDED IN SELL
A guide to using a no-fee renovation loan from a NYC real estate firm
RECOMMENDED IN IMPROVE
How to make your NYC renovation more pet-friendly
BEST REAL ESTATE WEBSITE!
National Association of Real Estate Editors
BEST REAL ESTATE WEBSITE! National Association of Real Estate Editors
Brick Underground
Social Links
follow:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Flipboard
  • search
Brick Underground
☰ Brick Underground
Brick Underground
Brick Underground
☰
Brick Underground
  • Buy
    • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
    NYC rowhouses
    Live
    New state legislation would tax 'predatory' home flippers in NYC
    Hermitage Amangansett
    Beach
    How to buy a Hamptons hotel condo or co-op unit as an investment property
    New residential buildings in Long Island City, Queens
    New Construction + Condos
    Changes to lending rules from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac alarm NYC condo buildings
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
    Dylan in his Murray Hill apartment
    Rent
    Why I moved to NYC from Ohio: I wanted to feed my passion for karaoke, art, and vintage décor
    Renters rallied before the RGB vote
    Rent
    A rent freeze or small increase? RGB preliminary vote leaves room for both
    165 Willoughby St.
    Affordable Housing
    Housing lottery launches for 20 rent-stabilized units in Downtown Brooklyn
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
    Condo buildings near Hudson Yards
    Sell
    Manhattan co-op and condo deals above $3 million doubled in the first quarter
    Apartment buildings in New York City
    Sell
    What is a pied-à-terre? What makes it different from a typical NYC apartment?
    renovating before selling
    Renovation
    How much should you renovate your NYC apartment or house before selling?
  • Live
    • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
    FlatRate moving brick underground
    Live
    How to troubleshoot your move in advance
    Sponsored By flatrate
    Julius Boekell's 1877 238 East 6th St
    Live
    Julius Boekell's 1877 238 East 6th St: A striking neo-Grec design
    NYC rowhouses
    Live
    New state legislation would tax 'predatory' home flippers in NYC
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
    An ADU designed for a roof deck.
    Design + Architecture
    ADU curious? This site helps you navigate NYC’s new accessory dwelling unit rules
    air conditioning NYC co-ops and condos
    Products + Services
    Yes, you can install central AC in your co-op or condo unit. Here's how
    Blue cabinetry and window-paned interior doors
    Design + Architecture
    Who should you hire to renovate your Upper East Side luxury co-op?
    Sponsored By YossiG & Home Evolutions
  • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards
    • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Property Management
    • Structure & Systems
    • Sustainability
    Burned and Boarded Up Windows
    When should your board hire a public adjuster?
    Manhattan GM
    What should we consider when renewing insurance for our building?
    Facade of NYC buildings
    How much is insurance on a NYC co-op or condo building?
  • Advertise
    • Advertise with us
    • Sponsored Content
    • Experts
    FlatRate moving brick underground
    Live
    How to troubleshoot your move in advance
    Sponsored By flatrate
    Three women lounging amusingly upside-down on a couch in a clean, brightly lit apartment
    Rent
    How to find a sublet in NYC: The online platform connecting apartments and renters
    Sponsored By Ohana
    East 60 Street in Manhattan
    Rent
    Ask Altagracia: My roommate moved out. Can I replace them with someone not on the lease?
    Sponsored By Outerbridge Law P.C.
  • Brick Report
  • About Us
  • About Us
Email Address
Fulltext search
FILTER RESULTS BY:
New Main menu
  • Buy
    • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
  • Rent
    • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
  • Sell
    • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
  • Live
    • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
  • Improve
    • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide
  • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards & Buildings
    • Boards
    • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Property Management
    • Structure & Systems
    • Sustainability
  • Advertise
    • Advertise with us
    • Sponsored Content
    • Experts
  • Brick Report
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
  • About Us
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER →
Social Links Footer
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Search
Ask a Co-op & Condo Lawyer [ SPONSORED ]

What are some of the risks that co-op and condo boards have to consider in the coronavirus era?

By Wagner, Berkow, and Brandt  | April 28, 2020 - 2:30PM
image

“We may be entering a new frontier of premises and personal injury liability,” says Ian Brandt, partner at Wagner Berkow & Brandt.

iStock

SHARE:
Share to Facebook
Share to Twitter
Print
More...

What are some of the risks that co-op and condo boards have to consider in the Covid-19 era?

“Some of the issues buildings may need to consider in the current crisis would be premises liabilities, like warning the building community about a resident’s Covid-19 exposure, or where one or more shareholders did not pay their common charges due to financial hardship,” says Ian Brandt, a partner at the Manhattan real estate law firm Wagner, Berkow & Brandt.

“In the Covid-19 era, buildings have to think in terms of reasonable best practices to keep the place clean and how to notify the building community in the event boards come into knowledge about infected residents,” Brandt says.

In addressing these issues, Brandt advises that boards should also check the building’s insurance policy and consult with an attorney on best practices based on traditional premises liability and personal injury issues.

Checking your insurance policy

An attorney can help you review your building’s insurance policy.

“While insurance companies might have risk exclusions for contagions, when insurers considered these issues during the prior bird flu and SARS outbreaks, these exclusions have not been common. If buildings have financial issues arising from non-payment, they should look at their insurance for any covered losses,” Brandt says.  

Co-ops and condos usually carry business interruption coverage, which is a common endorsement in business insurance.  Unless the policy excludes losses from contagion, “there may be coverage for co-ops and condos, if shareholders or unit owners fail to pay their maintenance or common charges during this time of uncertainty,” Brandt says.

This would be an alternative route for recovering losses, rather than waiting for courts to re-open to sue for non-payment or to foreclose on condominium liens. 

The same might apply if your building is seeing losses from a commercial tenant within the building.  

“If a co-op is having any income flow problems and has a mortgage, they should consider an application to their lender for a mortgage deferment,” Brandt says. 

Premises and personal liability

“We may be entering a new frontier of premises and personal injury liability,” Brandt says. Liabilities for Covid-19 contamination and the duties to warn and protect will likely first be addressed in the courts in the context of the workplace and employment law.  These cases will not only affect building employees but may also have implications for housing laws and premises liabilities that would affect boards and their shareholders and residents.   

If a shareholder or building staff member becomes infected with the virus, which causes resulting injury, there may be building liability. Brandt points out there are some “commonalities between someone getting sick and someone slipping and falling in the premises, especially if they can prove unsafe conditions in the building causes or that you didn’t keep the building clean and didn’t identify a resident who had the virus.” 

Co-op and condo boards have no legal duty to maintain any confidentiality over a resident’s medical or Covid-19 status, if it is disclosed that he or she has been infected with the coronavirus. This only means that there is no board or association liability for disclosing that an individual is infected in the building. 

“Boards still have to choose the detailed disclosure based on moral and political decisions so as not to offend or malign one or more building constituents,” Brandt says.  

For instance, a board might choose to identify the location within the building where the infected individual lives, rather than identify him or her by name. However, proving it was the building that caused the virus is complicated. 

“You need to keep everything clean and if you have any known cases, do heavy-duty cleaning around those confirmed cases,” Brandt says. 

There are many professional remediation experts and industrial hygienists consulting on these matters with property owners, including webinars presented by leaders on these issues in the New York area. "Since there is still uncertainty about how this pathogen is spread in the community, boards may not be sure about what measures to implement in response to a confirmed Covid-19 case in a building. Boards and their managing agents should participate in these programs as they may guide on how to determine reasonable measures and policies," Brandt says.   

Ian Brandt is a partner at the New York City real estate firm Wagner, Berkow & Brandt. To submit a question for this column, click here. To arrange a free 15-minute telephone consultation, send Ian an email or call 646-780-7272.

You Might Also Like

image
Live My neighbor's deck is causing a leak in our apartment. No one can agree who is responsible. What happens next?
image
Live What are the do and don'ts for our board as we navigate the Covid-19 pandemic?
image
Live Why is a capital plan important, and how do we create one for our building?

 

Brick Underground articles occasionally include the expertise of, or information about, advertising partners when relevant to the story. We will never promote an advertiser's product without making the relationship clear to our readers.

topics:

Ask a Co-op & Condo Lawyer boards condos Coronavirus
SHARE
TWEET
BRICK’S PICKS
Governor Kathy Hochul announces proposed a pied-à-terre tax
Hochul unveils new pied-à-terre tax on NYC luxury second homes
harassment from a neighbor NYC
Is your neighbor harassing you? Follow these 4 steps to handle the problem
brooklyn apartments
No co-signer for your rental? No problem—try these 6 guarantor workarounds
Common space at Outpost Group's Williamsburg location.
Co-living 2.0: Proposed NYC law would legalize shared housing in new development to ease housing crisis
Manhattan apartment building
Cool homes for all: A guide to NYC’s new AC mandate for rentals
renovating before selling
How much should you renovate your NYC apartment or house before selling?
Follow Brick on Instagram
@brickunderground | #brickunderground
Brick UndergroundBRICK UNDERGROUNDREAL LIFE. REAL ESTATE. REAL NEW YORK.
Social Links Footer
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Search
Main menu footer
  • Buy
    • The Market
    • Investing
    • New Construction + Condos
    • Affordable Housing
    • Co-ops
    • Negotiating + Financing
    • How to Buy in NYC Guide
  • Rent
    • Affordable Housing
    • Roommates + Landlords
    • The Market
    • The Search
    • How to Rent in NYC Guide
  • Sell
    • Staging + Open Houses
    • Negotiations + Closings
    • Getting Ready
    • How to Sell in NYC Guide
  • Live
    • Neighbors
    • Kids + Pets
    • Neighborhood Intel
    • Products + Test-drives
    • Troubleshooting
  • Improve
    • Small Spaces
    • Small Projects + DIY
    • Renovations
    • Design + Architecture
    • Products + Services
    • How to Renovate in NYC Guide

Get more news you can actually use...

Email Address

Delivered to your inbox weekly - for free.

*By signing up you agree to receive occasional emails on behalf of our sponsors

Footer Menu
  • About Us
  • Advertise

Copyright 2009-2024 by BND Ventures Inc | Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Ad Choices | Login | Powered by Mortar CMS, the AI CMS