We may tell our children in years to come that there was a time, especially if it was during rush hour on a rainy day, when you couldn't get a cab in New York City for love or money. These days, the streets are mostly empty. It's estimated that 90% of the taxi business has dried up.That's part of the reason why the city, with help from the National Guard, started a program that pays cab drivers to deliver food to low-income housebound residents.Mouhamadou Aliyu, a yellow cab driver of many years standing, gets up before dawn to participate. He knows there's a health risk: "But this is my home, and yellow is what I do," he explained. "Right now, there is a pandemic. Our people, they are suffering. The city call us. We are answering the call."mouhamadou-aliyu-b-620.jpgYellow cab driver Mouhamadou Aliyu. CBS NEWS Drivers earn $53 a route. Each route entails about six deliveries, and it means waiting in line for hours to get fully loaded; lugging boxes of food up into crowded apartment complexes; and then cleaning up for the next run."It's very hard. It's very tough. Very challenging," Aliyu said.Nine hours, most of it waiting; two delivery runs = $106 for a day's work. Not even close to the amount he needs to pay even a fraction of his monthly expenses. "But, we're still hopeful," Aliyu told "Sunday Morning" special contributor Ted Koppel. "We're New Yorkers. We don't give up!"As a young immigrant from West Africa back in 1994, Aliyu saw Manhattan through rose-colored glasses: "I came here with nothing, nothing at all. This was my dream. As a yellow cab driver, to hold a medallion is like being on top of my game. This is where I want to be. This is the American dream."In 2003, he became an American citizen. By 2004, Aliyu had learned that you don't get rich just driving a cab; to make money, he was told, you need to own the taxi – and to own it, you need a special license: a medallion.taxi-medallion-620.jpg CBS NEWS The city paid for ads promoting the deal as essentially risk-free; and it was New York City that has made literally billions of dollars selling these medallions at auction. When there are more buyers than medallions, the price goes up. That, in theory, is where even an immigrant cab driver could get rich: "So I said, 'Why not?' But, in order for me to place a bid to go for the medallion, I have to raise $20,000. But I have only $7,000. So, I apply for credit card. I get approved. I call them, I say, 'Can I use it for anything I want?' They say, 'Yes, it's your money. You can do whatever you want with it.'"Koppel said, "Then you had $13,000 that you had on your two credit cards. $20,000 cash down, on a $331,000 bid.""Yes, that would be a loan. And you have to pay for the car, gas, maintenance, all that. But still, life was good. Even I would say life was great."Within about a year Aliyu's medallion had appreciated more than $100,000, and remarkably, the value kept rising. "Lucky me, I was able to buy a house here in the Bronx, a three-family house," He said. "So, things was good. And then, moving forward, the medallion value was going up. In 2013 the city auctioned medallion at $1,350,000."Seven years ago – in theory, on paper – Aliyu was a millionaire.taxi-medallion-headlines-620.jpg CBS NEWS"The only reason that it was worth over a million dollars was that there was some other immigrant who could be taken advantage of to pay that amount," said New York Times reporter Brian Rosenthal. "And not really even pay that amount, but be trapped in a loan that would shackle them in debt for the rest of their lives."Rosenthal won a Pulitzer Prize for his series exposing the taxi medallion scam. As he explained in the Times' documentary series "The Weekly," those medallions were money-makers … just not for the drivers."There was the city which sold the medallions, the brokers who collected commissions, and the bankers who wrote the loans and sold some of them for profit," he said. "And what we found in our reporting was that the value of the medallion went from $200,000 to over a million dollars, when the revenue that it had to bring in did not change at all.n Eventually, you realize that this wasn't by accident. Many insiders knew that the whole thing was a house of cards."The loans were never stable," Rosenthal said, "they were never sustainable, and they were always going to be a burden that was unpayable after this bubble popped. And that's what happened."Last summer, the New York City Council held a hearing on what was called the owner-driver crisis. Mouhamadou Aliyu was one of the witnesses:"Every single day, every single hour, I think about taking my own life," he told city officials. "I think about suicide. The only thing that stops me is my four kids. If I do so, what's going to happen to them? I'm supposed to be a millionaire today, and I'm proud of it. And you guys are trying to take that away from me. It's not acceptable. I'm calling on you: Please! Please! Have mercy on us. Help us."Koppel said of Aliyu's testimony, "He speaks rather plaintively of his status as a millionaire: I'm a millionaire. He's never gonna see that day again, is he?""No, he's not," Rosenthal said. "I mean, he deserves it. He works very hard. I've met hundreds of these cab drivers, and they all work extremely hard."Many of the drivers are convinced that ride-share companies – like Lyft and Uber – ruined their business. Even without them, though, said Rosenthal, the medallion bubble had to burst.Six months ago, said Aliyu, the medallion was worth less than $100,000. What he still owes on that medallion, however, is more than $600,000. The chances that he'll ever be able to pay that off? Slim and none.One slender ray of sunshine: New York State's Attorney General is preparing to sue the City of New York to the tune of more than $800 million for misleading medallion owners. It could take years, and even that sum wouldn't make the drivers whole again.And then, of course, there's the pandemic. Well over 50 cab drivers have died from the virus since March. Most drivers these days are staying home; the few available fares just aren't worth the health risk.Aliyu said, "There is no more sleep. There is no night. At night we chat on the WhatsApp group, we're so worried. If nothing is done, when this pandemic will be over, the yellow cab industry will be over, too, will be finished."
As the economy continues to struggle there are going to be plenty of debt collection agencies scrambling to make settlement offers. They will present these offers to you like they’re offering you an incredible deal. “You owe $350,” the letter will gush. “But if you pay us $285.72 we’ll consider the whole debt settled.” Does […] The post Is it a Good Idea for Bucks County Residents to Settle Debts? appeared first on .
June 29, 2020MarketplaceMany economists and bankruptcy lawyers expect a wave of bankruptcies coming this year. Giant bankruptcies of companies that owe more than $100 million, are up 40% from a year ago, which means they are up 120% from 2018. Chapter 11 bankruptcies of all kinds have increased 20% since last year. This is obviously traumatic for the people who work at those companies but there is a silver lining. “It’s an overstatement to say that bankruptcy is this deeply undesirable thing,” said Jared Ellias, professor of law at UC Hastings College of Law.“One of the great things that happens after bankruptcy is a company leaves, and they’re hopefully positioned to thrive,” he said. The post COVID-19 economy is going to be very different and a lot of businesses will need to radically reinvent and reinvest in themselves in order to adapt. Chapter 11 bankruptcy lets companies do that. Which is why Ellias and a group of academics are concerned that if there are too many bankruptcies, the courts might get overwhelmed and companies won’t get the help they need. “When a company is in financial trouble, they can’t invest, they can’t hire, they can’t give people pay raises, they can’t do the things that businesses need to do to be attractive places to work,” Ellias said. So if you slow down the process of transformation, it slows down the entire economy. “There have been proposals to bring back some retired bankruptcy judges, recently retired bankruptcy judges, and you also would need to add personnel at the clerk’s office level as well,” said Robert Keach, an attorney who specializes in business restructuring and insolvency at the Bernstein Shur law firm. Congress also made it a lot easier, faster, and cheaper for small businesses to go through the bankruptcy process through reforms in 2019 and through the CARES Act, according to Keach. But judges take time to hire, and there is only so much you can do, he said, so a lot will depend on just how bad the bankruptcy wave will be.
June 25, 2020ForbesThere are increasingly urgent signs that an unprecedented wave of student loan defaults could be arriving within a matter of months. A cratering economy and expanding pandemic are about to collide with the expiration of critical temporary student loan relief programs, and the end result could be catastrophic. Here’s what’s going on.The Economy Continues To Stagnate Unemployment remains at levels unseen since the Great Depression, with no signs of dramatic improvements. Last week, yet another 1.5 million Americans filed for unemployment benefits. Nearly 50 million Americans have filed for unemployment benefits over the past three months, and while this week’s numbers are far lower than initial jobless claims filed in March, the economy is not showing any signs of dramatic or rapid improvement. The Federal Reserve recently indicated that it expects unemployment to remain high through the end of the year and beyond.The Pandemic Appears To Be WorseningWhile the stay-home orders of March and April were successful in slowing the spread of the Coronavirus, those trends have now been reversed. Several states with large populations — Florida, Texas, and California — are seeing record increases in daily confirmed cases of Covid-19. Those three states contain over a quarter of the entire population of the United States. And Coronavirus cases are also increasing in two dozen other states, as well. Hospitalizations are also increasing in many localities. It is becoming quite clear to health experts that the pandemic is far from over, and we may be entering a new, even worse phase of the outbreak. Federal Student Loan Relief Under The CARES Act Ends SoonIn the wake of the pandemic and economic collapse, Congress passed the CARES Act. Although the implementation of the CARES Act has been hugely problematic, the stimulus bill has provided critical relief to student loan borrowers in the form of an automatic suspension of payments and interest for all government-held federal student loans.That suspension, however is scheduled to expire on September 30, 2020 — less than 100 days from now. Over 40 million student loan borrowers will be hit with student loan bills by October, and many will be unable to afford their payments. Others who may be directly impacted by Covid-19 may not be able to manage the act of making a payment, even if they could afford to do so. Temporary Private Student Loan Relief Expires ImminentlyCongress limited the student loan relief under the CARES Act to government-held federal student loans. This effectively left millions of private student loan borrowers without any relief at all. However, several states stepped in to negotiate voluntary relief programs with dozens of private student loan lenders and servicers. The resulting multi-state pact provided millions of private student loan borrowers with temporary relief in the form of suspended payments and a cessation of negative credit reporting.That temporary relief, however, was typically limited to 90 days. Private student loan borrowers who took advantage of those relief options in March or April may have no other options when that relief imminently expires. Since private student loans are not eligible for income-driven repayment programs or long periods of hardship-based forbearance, defaulting will be an inevitable outcome for many borrowers. Bottom LineAll signs point to a looming catastrophe for millions of student loan borrowers. To avoid disaster, Congressional action is likely required. The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives recently passed the HEROES Act, which would extend the CARES Act’s student loan provisions by a full year to September of 2021. But Senate Republicans have rejected this bill. A coalition of over 60 organizations have also called on Congress to extend the CARES Act for student loan borrowers and forgive a substantial amount of student loan debt, although Senate GOP leaders have shown no interest in such broad relief to date. Without a bipartisan solution, student loan borrowers will start falling into default at an ever-increasing rate. Time is running out.
…But the Car Still Has to Pay. When you file Chapter 7 bankruptcy, that means you don’t have to make the car payments. But that does not mean you get a free car. You don’t have to make the car payments, but the car still has to pay. That’s because the car finance company is […] The post After bankruptcy….the car still has to pay! by Robert Weed appeared first on Northern VA Bankruptcy Lawyer Robert Weed - .
The Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York had the opportunity to rule on the availability of sanctions for a discharge violation regarding collection of discharged taxes against both the IRS and a contractor for the IRS in In re Starling, 2020 Bankr. LEXIS 1627, Case No 13-36564 (CGM), (Bankr. S.D.N.Y., 19 June 2020). The case involved taxes discharged in a chapter 13 case where the discharge was entered on 21 May 2016. On 6 November 2017 the debtor received a notice that the tax debt was assigned to ConServe, a private collection agency. Debtor promptly sent a letter to the IRS dated 8 November 2017 warning of the violation of the automatic stay (sic). ConServe, undeterred by such warning, sent additional 'Annual Tax Delinquency' notices on 7 November 2018 and 7 November 2019. The IRS ceased collection activity on 22 November 2019 pursuant to 26 U.S.C. §6502 which limits the time the IRS may collect on an assessment. The Debtor filed a motion for contempt seeking to hold the IRS and Conserve in contempt for violation of the discharge injunction under 11 U.S.C. 524. Debtor sought compensatory damages, attorneys fees, and $10,000 of punitive damages. The IRS denied subject matter jurisdiction due to the failure of the debtor to exhaust his administrative remedies, and denied that the debt was in fact discharged. The court found that §7433 of the Internal Revenue Code does not limit the court's jurisdiction. Rather, federal subject matter jurisdiction is governed by 28 U.S.C. §1334 which provides district courts jurisdiction over 'all civil proceedings arising under title 11, or arising in or related to cases under title 11.' The court thus has subject matter jurisdiction under §1334(a), §157(b) and the standing order of reference by the district court. 26 U.S.C. §7433(e) codifies the power of the bankruptcy court to hear and determine sanctions matters against the IRS. This section provides that a petition made to the bankruptcy court is the exclusive remedy for a violation of the bankruptcy discharge. 26 U.S.C. §7433(e)(2)(A). Further, 11 U.S.C. §106(a)(2) permits the court to hear any issue arising with respect to the application of such sections to governmental units, and §106(b) states that a governmental unit that has filed a proof of claim (as it did in this case) is deemed to have waived sovereign immunity with respect to a claim against such governmental unit that is property of the estate and arose out of the same transaction or concurrence out of which the claim arose. As to exhaustion of administrative remedies, the court found a conflict between 26 U.S.C. §7433 which requires exhaustion of such remedies prior to bringing an action for violation of the discharge injunction, and 11 U.S.C. §106 which appears to allow such actions. Given that §7433 is the more specific statute, the rules of statutory construction require the court to give effect to such requirement. Debtor;s letter to the Commissioner of the IRS advising that Debtor's discharge was violated did not satisfy this requirement as it did not contain 'the dollar amount of the claim, including any damages that have not yet been incurred but which are reasonably foreseeable' as required by 26 C.F.R. §301.7533-2(e). Thus the court denied the request for damages against the IRS. The debtor had better luck with the claim against ConServe. As a private contractor, ConServe is not afforded the same protections as the IRS for violations of the discharge injunction. 26 U.S.C. §7433A(b)(4) permits taxpayers to bring actions for damages against contractors that violate the discharge injunction. The went on to find that the taxes were dischargeable in that the returns were filed almost 6 years prior to the date of the bankruptcy. While the IRS prepared a substitute for return pursuant to §6020(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, the 2005 amendments added a hanging paragraph to §523(a) providing that a return means a return that satisfied the requirements of applicable nonbankruptcy law but does not include a return made pursuant to §6020(b). While this did not resolve the split in the circuits regarding substitutes for returns, the court followed the 11th Circuit case, Mass. Dept. of Rev. v. Shek, 947 F.3d 770, 781 (11th Cir. 2020) finding that a late-filed return may still qualify as a return for bankruptcy purposes, and thus the taxes qualified as dischargeable in the chapter 13. Finally, the Court found that the debtor satisfied the requirements to show a contempt order is warranted. The debtor established that 1) the order violated was clear and unambiguous, 2) the proof of noncompliance was clear and convincing, and 3) the contemnor has not diligently attempted to comply in a reasonable manner.1 No adversary proceeding is necessary by the debtor to determine that the taxes are dischargeable in order to give effect to the discharge injunction. The burden of demonstrating that any of the tax debt meets the exception to discharge is born by the IRS. The Court awarded compensatory damages of $500 for each notice issued by Conserve, and awarded total attorneys fees of $2,644. The Court denied the request for punitive damages.1 King v. Allied Vision, Ltd., 65 F.3d 1051, 1058 (2d Cir. 1995).↩Michael Barnett, Esq.Law Offices of Larry Heinkel, PA506 N Armenia Ave.Tampa, FL 33609813 870-3100https://myfloridabankruptcylawyer.com
The federal government has finally offered some clarity on how mom-and-pop businesses can avoid repaying their bailout loan—a major sticking point in the Paycheck Protection Program.In the past month officials in the Small Business Administration and the Treasury Department have worked with Congress to make much-demanded changes to the law, which culminated in the PPP Flexibility Act signed by President Donald Trump on June 5.With all remaining PPP loan applications expiring next week—June 30 is the last day to apply—here are the changes small-business owners need to know to receive forgiveness on current or future loans.RELATED ARTICLES Read this week’s issue of Crain’s New York Business onlineFAQ: A guide to SBA's disaster loans Here's why the $349 billion PPP ran out of moneyThe amount one is required to spend on payroll has shiftedThe first iteration of the PPP loan required small-business owners to spend 75% of the loan money they received on employee payroll before it could be considered for forgiveness. After an outcry from small-business owners, who considered the stipulation restrictive in light of a host of other operating costs, the revised PPP loan shifts that requirement to 60%.Furthermore, even if a borrowing small-business owner uses less than 60% of the loan amount on payroll, he or she will still be eligible to have a portion of the entire loan forgiven. The other expenses that can be funded from the remaining 40% of the loan money and still be forgiven are rent, mortgage payments, utilities and interest on loans. Expenses outside this realm are not forgiven.There is a new PPP loan forgiveness 'safe harbor' ruleThis change in the loan terms protects businesses that were unable to hire employees back to Feb. 15, or pre-Covid-19, levels from being penalized on their loan amount, as payroll is tied directly to the employee amount an owner can or had hired before the shutdown. Businesses have been given an extension to Dec. 31 to hire back employees they had on staff before February of this year. Basically the "safe harbor" rule applies to those small businesses that are still shut down. They can apply for a full PPP loan and not feel forced to hire back staff when they are not open. The rule has a second component. Businesses that hire employees back on salaries lower than before the pandemic—because of a decline in business activity or a lack of revenue—will not be penalized on their loan amount as long as they can document their drop in full-time employee salary was related to Covid-19 restrictions.The requirement to use funds within eight weeks of receiving the loan has been moved to 24 weeksThis is another important change to the program that could have ramifications on how much forgiveness is allocated to small-business owners. Borrowers who applied for and received PPP funds after June 5 will have 24 weeks (six months) until they need to spend the money. Those who received money before June 5 will still have eight weeks from the start of the loan to spend the money if they choose so, as they might find it advantageous to get it off their books. These borrowers are offered the flexibility to receive the 24-week extension. The repayment terms have been extended tooSmall-business owners who received PPP money on or after June 5 will now have five years to repay the amounts of the PPP loan that are not turned into a grant through the forgiveness provisions. Those borrowers who received PPP money before June 5 must pay their nonforgiven portions of the loan back within two years, although they can work with the bank that provided the loan to get an extension.PPP Forgiveness Application 3508EZ ( Revised 06.16.2020) by Janon Fisher on ScribdFurthermore, the SBA has amended the law to allow deferments on payments on principal, interest and fees associated with PPP loans to the date the SBA remits the loan to the bank. Previously the period was six months from the date of the loan. This amendment extends the clock from ticking too quickly on when a borrower is expected to pay back these costs.SBA offers 'EZ-Application' for eligible small- business ownersThis three-page PPP loan application simplifies the paperwork process and is available to small-business owners who are either self-employed or have no employees, did not reduce the wages of their employees by more than 25%, or can prove they experienced a drop in business activity because of Covid-19 and did not reduce their business wages by more than 25%.Letter
June 3, 2020International Business Times By Amy Fontinelle Declaring bankruptcy is never pleasant, but for small businesses it's often been disastrous. Filing under chapter 11 -- the method that allows a firm to re-organize -- was designed for large corporations. Technically, a small firm could do it, but the process was lengthy, costly, and creditor-friendly. As a result, insolvent small businesses often had to file for chapter 7, which meant closing shop entirely.But now there's a new way to declare bankruptcy, a more debtor-friendly alternative: subchapter V. Created by the Small Business Reorganization Act (SBRA) of 2019, it became effective February 19, 2020. And then, a month later, it got even better, thanks to the CARES Act, which tripled the qualifying debt limit under this option.Now, if you're a small business owner with less than $7.5 million in debt, and if you can demonstrate that staying open will generate enough money to repay your creditors over three to five years, you'll have a better chance at continuing to support yourself and serve your customers. Subchapter V: Are You Eligible?The SBRA originally made subchapter V -- so-called because it's a clause under chapter 11 -- available to small businesses whose secured and unsecured debts combined totaled no more than $2,725,625. When the CARES Act became law on March 27, 2020, that limit increased to $7,500,000. This higher limit is set to expire after March 26, 2021. At least half of the debt must be business (not personal) debt. One requirement to file for subchapter V is that the debtor (that is, you) be currently engaged in commercial or business activities. However, if your operation closed down when pandemic-induced stay-at-home orders went into place, here's the good news: Courts so far have taken a liberal view, ruling that businesses in similar situations are eligible to file.When you file, you'll incur a $1,167 case filing fee and a $550 administrative fee. The court may allow you to pay in installments within 120 days of filing (roughly $430 per month) or 180 days of filing (roughly $286 per month). You may also incur fees for professionals such as attorneys, accountants, appraisers, and auctioneers. How Subchapter V Works: Creating Your Reorganization PlanSubchapter V is unlike a regular chapter 11 case in that it doesn't require an impaired class --like a creditor who won't receive everything you originally owed them -- to accept your reorganization plan. The bankruptcy court can approve it without their acceptance as long as your plan is fair and equitable."Fair and equitable" means your plan must provide for all of your disposable income to go toward repaying your creditors over the next three to five years. You'll be able to use some of your income to support yourself, support any dependents, and operate your business. You won't be taking any vacations, but you won't be homeless and you might not have to lay off your employees.Your reorganization plan will include the information that would normally be included in a disclosure statement under regular chapter 11. This information includes a brief history of your business operations, a liquidation analysis, and financial projections for your business showing how you'll repay your creditors.A liquidation analysis is a good faith estimate of what your business assets could be sold for in a chapter 7 bankruptcy where you closed your business. The court will want to see that if you choose subchapter V, your debtors will be better off than if you liquidated under chapter 7.Unsecured creditors can really lose out in a liquidation bankruptcy, and even secured creditors may not recoup what they owe since it can be challenging to get the full value for assets sold in a distress sale. That said, if your business continues to struggle during your three to five years of payments, you may end up liquidating certain assets to pay your creditors, or even converting your case to chapter 7 and liquidating everything.Filing for Subchapter V: Trustee SupervisionFiling for any type of bankruptcy provides an automatic stay that requires creditors to leave you alone. Once the bankruptcy court discharges your debts., creditors cannot try to collect them. You can't be sued or held personally liable for them. Discharge occurs either upon confirmation of a consensual plan -- before you start making payments to creditors who have agreed to your plan, or after you make all your payments under the plan, for a nonconsenual plan.After you file, the U.S. Department of Justice will appoint a trustee to supervise your bankruptcy process. You'll give the trustee copies of your most recent tax return, statement of operations, cash flow statement, and balance sheet. They will help with your reorganization plan and attend your key court hearings.If your creditors approve your plan, the trustee's job ends there. If not, the trustee will oversee the entire three- to five-year repayment process. The trustee will not take control of your assets and cannot sell your assets, but the trustee will collect your payments and distribute them to your creditors. They may also inspect your business premises, books, and records if they give you reasonable advance notice.Who Should File Subchapter V?Subchapter V offers many benefits to small businesses that are struggling under too much debt. Of course, if you can work something out with your creditors without filing for bankruptcy, that's always the preferable course, saving you a lot of money. Subchapter V is for when your creditors won't budge, because the court can approve your case against their will. It's also for when you've pledged your home as collateral for a business loan you can't pay and you don't want to lose your home.If you think your business has a good chance to become profitable again and you don't want to close down for good, talk to a bankruptcy attorney about opening a subchapter V case.
June 12, 2020NY Post A large number of small US business could fail during the coronavirus recession, the Federal Reserve said on Friday, slowing recovery and creating lasting damage to the world’s largest economy. “The nature of the economic recovery that follows the COVID-19 crisis will depend in part on the survival of small businesses,” the Fed said in its biannual monetary policy report to Congress on Friday. “The pandemic poses acute risks to the survival of many small businesses [whose] widespread failure would adversely alter the economic landscape of local communities and potentially slow the economic recovery and future labor productivity growth.” Congress has extended some help, including $660 billion to cover payrolls and overhead. About three-quarters of small businesses with employees have applied for the aid, with many getting funding, the Fed said. Still, “some industries may face an ongoing need” after the program expires this summer. Meanwhile, job losses have been steeper at small businesses than large ones, with many small firms stopping paychecks entirely, the Fed said. Some 30 percent to 40 percent of small firms in sectors most affected by social distancing have gone inactive since February.Spending at small restaurants was down 80 percent by April during the height of the nation’s shutdowns and was still down by half in early June, the Fed said, citing data from credit card transaction processor Womply. Small businesses account for nearly half of jobs in the private sector, and new business formation fell steeply in the early months of the crisis, data from the Census Bureau shows. Small business failures not only destroy jobs but “erase the productive knowledge within the firms, deplete the assets of business owners, alter the character of communities and neighborhoods, and, in some cases, deprive the country of innovations,” the Fed said.
June 22, 2020NY Postby: Priscilla DeGregoryFashion brand Valentino wants to break the lease on its chic Fifth Avenue location — because the coronavirus is stopping it from conducting “high-end” business, a new lawsuit says. The Italian luxury retail and design company says even if the Big Apple overcomes the pandemic, “the social and economic landscapes have been radically altered in a way that has drastically, if not irreparably, hindered Valentino’s ability to conduct high-end retail business,” at the primo shopping locale, according to the Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit filed Sunday. Valentino is asking a judge to allow it to break its pricey lease with landlord 693 Fifth Owner, LLC by the end of the year, despite a contract that is slated to run through July 2029, the court papers say. Valentino — which leases four levels at the location — initially signed the contract in May 2013, the court documents say. Since the state “PAUSE” executive order went into effect closing businesses for months — and which is now only allowing them to open in a very limited way — Valentino cannot “offer in-boutique retail sales, or associated services such as fittings … as the company operated before the COVID-19 pandemic,” the lawsuit claims. New Yorkers have suffered major financial setbacks, including high unemployment rates, which has led to a major consumer spending decline — while new safety protocols “have severely impacted brick-and-mortar retail sales, and will continue to do so, indefinitely,” the court filings say.“Even if such restrictions are eased (at some point), continued social distancing, as well as other limitations, will make it impossible for Valentino to operate its boutique as initially envisioned under the Lease,” the court papers say. After notifying the owner it wanted to break the lease, Valentino was told on June 19 through a lawyer that 693 Fifth Owner, “would not accept such a surrender, and, notwithstanding the COVID-19 pandemic, disputed that Valentino’s obligations under the Lease have been excused, leaving Valentino with no alternative but to commence this action,” the suit alleges. 693 Fifth Owner lawyer Robert Cyruli told The Post, “My client will not choose to litigate this in the media.”