Bakery Salvage Corp. v. City of Lackawanna

48 Misc. 2d 975, 265 N.Y.S.2d 471, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1262
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 48 Misc. 2d 975 (Bakery Salvage Corp. v. City of Lackawanna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bakery Salvage Corp. v. City of Lackawanna, 48 Misc. 2d 975, 265 N.Y.S.2d 471, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1262 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Michael Catalano, J.

Plaintiff and defendant Town of West Seneca (herein called “ Town ”) seek judgment against defendant City of Lackawanna (herein called “City”) declaring a [976]*976truck-weight-limit ordinance “ void, unconstitutional and ineffective ” and enjoining its enforcement. The City prays for judgment “ declaring that the obligation for furnishing a truck route for West Seneca industry and lands rests upon the defendant, Town of West Seneca.”

The court finds these facts:

The questioned City ordinance provides: “ No person, shall operate or drive and no person, firm or corporation or association shall cause to be operated or driven, any truck in excess of five (5) tons gross weight except for making deliveries on the following street: Fisher Road,” effective April 15, 1965. (Traffic Ordinances, § 6, ch. 5E.)

This ordinance was debated at a public meeting, but no findings of fact were made by the City for its adoption.

The City is four square miles, rectangular, predominantly industrial and manufacturing; only the third of three wards is zoned predominantly residential. Seventy-two cents of every tax dollar on realty comes from industry. The most highly-priced homes in a radius of five City blocks from Fisher Eoad are $15,000 to $18,000 each. This City area abuts the Town zoned for light manufacturing.

Fisher Eoad is an old farm road built up over 40 to 50 years on heavy slag and cinders with asphalt topping. It starts at Abbott Eoad in the City, extending east in the Town to Orchard Park Eoad. Starting at Abbott Eoad, the first 1,000 feet are in the City which enacted the questioned ordinance; the next 1,400 feet are in the Town, ending in a cul-de-sac at the New York State Thruway. Across the Thruway at that point are the rights of way of the Pennsylvania Eailroad, New York Central Eailroad, a water main and the Niagara, Lockport and Ontario Power Company. Eight hundred feet east of the City’s eastern limit across Fisher Eoad runs the Lehigh Valley Eailroad right of way, including a private road that parallels the track.

The City’s 1,000 feet of Fisher Eoad have never been dedicated or accepted as a street by the City which technically is not obliged to maintain or service it. The structure of other City roads that parallel Fisher Eoad in that area is built of residential street design, having a base of eight-inch number three and four stone, a two-inch layer of number two stone, topped by a one-inch layer of asphalt; Fisher Eoad in the City is the only one in the area not so constructed. Fisher Eoad has a sanitary sewer; it has no curbing, no storm sewer; it is not a “surfaced street ” acceptable according to the City’s specifications for residential street standards. The [977]*977Town’s residents on Fisher Road use the City’s sanitary sewer.

The Town’s 1,400 feet of Fisher Road formerly was an Erie County road which reverted to the Town when the county abandoned it; it is landlocked by the east line of the City’s 1.000 feet and by the west line of the Thruway.

Plaintiff’s plant, that manufactures toasted bread crumbs for the dog-food industry, is located on the south side of Fisher Road in the Town west of the Thruway; trucks making deliveries to and from plaintiff’s plant must be driven upon the City’s 1.000 feet of Fisher Road to get to the only connecting through highway, Abbott Road, otherwise plaintiff’s plant is landlocked.

Snowplowing, refuse collection, salting, ditch and roadside right of way maintenance, repairs, school buses, service to sewers and water mains, fire trucks, and police protection west of the Thruway can be provided residential and maufacturing taxpayers only by the Town’s highway, police and other service departments entering Fisher Road and seven other parallel roads from Abbott Road in the City. Nine paper streets, dedicated to but not accepted by the Town, are similarly so situated. Many of these service trucks when loaded exceed five tons.

Prior to April 15, 1965, no ordinance or other law limited the weight of traffic on Fisher Road, which had been a through street from the City to the Town for all kinds and weights of traffic for over 40 years before the Thruway was built in 1957.

The City has no ordinance, truck routes, only weight-limit ordinances covering some of its streets. Abbott Road is used as a truck route.

The Town’s attorney advised the Town inter alia that the City roads could be used to service this area because they were all the Town had to reach Fisher Road and the other roads nearby.

Since 1941 to 1957, when the Thruway was built, the vehicular traffic over Fisher Road from Abbott Road to Orchard Park Road included all sizes and weights of trucks that passed at least a dozen times a day. Since 1941, the Town end of Fisher Road was smooth, the City end was always bumpy and wavy. After 1957, the barriers at the Thruway prevented many trucks from using Fisher Road.

Before the Thruway was built, Fisher Road crossed over all railroad rights of way at grade, having an electrical system to regulate traffic. The Thruway has a clearance under it, near the dead end of Fisher Road, about 23 feet in height. A tractor-trailer needs about 12 feet of clearance. This clearance could have been built under the Thruway so that it would [978]*978not be necessary to close Fisher Road; but for some unknown reason this was not done. Presently, the clearance is at grade but not paved for vehicular traffic.

The parties’ counsel stipulated in open court to 14 matters of fact which are confirmed as found by the court as follows:

(1) That the area where plaintiff’s plant is located has been zoned for light manufacturing since March 18, 1963, by the Town and designated on the Town Zoning Map as M 1 on Exhibit No. 4.

(2) That the area in the City immediately west of the Town in the area abutting the manufacturing zone has been zoned residential by .the City since 1937.

(3) Fisher Road in the City extends 1,000 feet east of Abbott Road and is a City street and deemed a public highway.

(4) That the New York State Thruway was constructed in the area of Fisher Road in the Town in about 1957.

(5) That Fisher Road in .the City and Town was an Erie County highway prior to the construction of the Thruway in 1957.

(6) That Fisher Road is crossed over by the Thruway.

(7) That beginning at and about the Fall of 1963, truck traffic on Fisher Road leading to plaintiff’s building housing the three corporations known as Bakery Salvage Corporation, Sterling Bag and Burlap Co., and Niagara Trading Co., would amount to about four daily round trips.

(8) That at the present time, said truck traffic is about eight or nine trucks per day on a round-trip basis to the said premises on Fisher Road and the said three corporations, about 50% being tractor-trailer type and 50% varied truck traffic.

(9) That many children of school age live in the homes on Fisher Road and occasionally play in the street.

(10) That there are 12 houses in the Town and 26 houses in the City, on Fisher Road, and they are mostly owner-occupied, having been built prior to 1963.

(11) That most homes on Fisher Road have cracks in the plaster of the walls and/or the cellars.

(12) That the range of values of the houses on Fisher Road in the City is between $15,000 and $23,000.

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Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 2d 975, 265 N.Y.S.2d 471, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bakery-salvage-corp-v-city-of-lackawanna-nysupct-1965.