Real Estate

Apartment at center of dispute with Joan Rivers on sale for $6M

Want to own an Upper East Side apartment that was the subject of a nasty $15 million legal battle between the late comedienne Joan Rivers and her socialite neighbor?

The one-bedroom with a remote-operated fireplace at 1 E. 62nd St. could be yours for $6 million, a bargain compared to Rivers’ former penthouse that’s listed for $28 million.

Seller Elizabeth Hazan put her street-level unit on the market Tuesday just as she settled a five-year court case with the condo board and Rivers’ estate.

Terms of the “amicable” deal are confidential, Hazan’s lawyer Darius Marzec told The Post.

The board first sued Hazan in 2009, claiming she owed $200,000 in late fees, then the bottle blonde hit back with the $15 million case in 2013, saying Rivers tried to sabotage her residence by gluing the locks and stealing her mail.

The hush-hush settlement addresses all disputes, Marzec said.

The board’s attorney, Tracy Peterson, declined to comment.

During the litigation, Hazan also took a page out of the sharp-tongued fashion critic’s playbook, saying her 80-year-old neighbor “looks like Joker from Batman” when she’s not wearing makeup.

The $6 million price tag on the 1,100-square-foot unit is a $4 million markup from when Hazan purchased the pad 10 years ago.

The apartment, featured in Architectural Digest, was once the library of a mansion built in 1903 for another socialite, Alice Troth Drexel, and her husband, banking scion John R. Drexel.

Ernest Hemingway also called the apartment home, according to Douglas Elliman broker Joe Peraino.