Board of Education of Central School District No. 3 v. County of Westchester

34 Misc. 2d 795, 230 N.Y.S.2d 627, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2985
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 34 Misc. 2d 795 (Board of Education of Central School District No. 3 v. County of Westchester) 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
Board of Education of Central School District No. 3 v. County of Westchester, 34 Misc. 2d 795, 230 N.Y.S.2d 627, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2985 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

-Clare J. Hoyt, J.

Plaintiff School District commenced this action on May 17, 1962, for an injunction against the County of Westchester, to forever enjoin and restrain it from constructing, operating and maintaining upon property owned by it in the Town of Cortlandt, Westchester County, in a preserve known as Blue Mountain Reservation, a Sportsmen’s Center. The Sportsmen’s Center would consist of a shooting center with pistol, large and small bore rifle ranges, trap and skeet shooting ranges, archery ranges and bait and casting ponds.

On May 28, 1962, plaintiff moved for a temporary injunction. Special Term denied the motion holding that the issue could not be disposed of summarily. Recognizing the rights of the parties, however, to a speedy determination, Special Term set the matter down for trial before this court on June 15, 1962 at .which time the trial commenced and proceeded for some five days.. At the conclusion of the trial, the court, with the consent of and in the presence of the.parties, inspected the site of the controversy. .

Defendant acquired Blue Mountain. Reservation, containing some 1,500 acres, .upwards.of 30 years ago. Up to the present, very little has been done .to change its natural state. It is heavily wooded and-quite hilly. Watch Hill Road runs in a generally east-west direction along its southerly boundary. The property has been used heretofore for hiking, camping, picnicking, and [796]*796horseback riding and has been under the control of defendant’s Board of Parks, Recreation and Conservation.'

For many .years the county has investigated and considered the erection and maintenance of a shooting center within its park system. Sportsmen, through, their clubs and councils, have sought such a facility. Blue Mountain Reservation has been considered as a possible location therefor since 1955. In 195.7 the Westchester County Executive appointed a Sportsmen’s Advisory Committee consisting of county officials and representatives of sportsmen’s groups to consider the need, appropriateness, feasibility and site locations for a shooting center. In June of 1960 the committee rendered its report to the Westchester County Executive and in August of 1961 the Board of Parks, Recreation and Conservation approved plans for the Sportsmen’s Center in Blue Mountain Reservation. Plans were prepared, submitted to the Capital Projects Committee of defendant’s Board of Supervisors and .an item of $250,000 therefor was placed in defendant’s budget. A budget hearing was held in December of 1961 and the budget, including this item, was approved in January, 1962. The range site was tentatively staked out in March, 1961, and staked out again with some certainty in January, 1962. Two contracts, aggregating around $26,000 were let in April and May of 1962 for blasting, cleaning of the range sites and the preliminary work.

This chronology of events has been set forth with particularity because the plaintiff claims, and nothing in the record disproves it, strange as it may seem, that it had no knowledge of the defendant’s plans for the shooting center when plaintiff purchased in March of 1962 some 28 acres of land adjacent to Blue Mountain Reservation for the erection of an elementary school.

Plaintiff, in the Summer of 1961, looked at several sites within its district as a location for an elementary school to be erected when anticipated future needs required it. In November of 1961 an architect for the State Department of Education examined the proposed school site and recommended its purchase. He did not know of the plans for the shooting center. The plaintiff in November of 1961 secured a four-month option to purchase the land. Two district meetings were held and a vote in February of 1962 favored the purchase of the site. The plaintiff at once exercised its option, secured title in March of 1962 and in April of 1962- learned of the proposed shooting center. It thereupon commenced this action claiming that the dangers "inherent in and the noises emanating from the shooting center would constitute a nuisance, would make it impossible for plaintiff to proceed with the erection of a school on its site and that such use by the [797]*797defendant would be .unreasonable, and that the loss to the plaintiff would be irreparable.

Although the determination herein is not dependent on plaintiff’s knowledge of defendant’s plans, the court finds there was no such knowledge. Nevertheless, defendant cannot be charged with planning the shooting center without normal publicity. Articles appearing in 1957 and 1958 in The Evening Star, a daily paper of general circulation within the school district, mentioned the possibility of a shooting center in Blue Mountain Reservation. In an article in January, 1962, the selection of Blue Mountain Reservation as the shooting site was reported.

The defendant established by several well-qualified witnesses that the site chosen is well situated topographically for a shooting center. These witnesses further established that the ranges were so oriented, separated from each other and with hills or rises in the target area to cause no danger or threat of injury to anyone on plaintiff’s property. The only ranges that point in the direction of plaintiff’s property are the skeet and trap shooting ranges. They are 1,650 feet from plaintiff’s lands which is over twice the carrying power of any shots from the ranges. The plaintiff failed to establish that shots fired from the ranges would land on the plaintiff’s property so as to constitute any danger to persons on plaintiff’s property.

Plaintiff’s proof was devoted principally to the noise that would emanate from the shooting. True, when the center is in operation there may be heavy firing from the 10 stations in the pistol range, the 20 stations in the large bore rifle range, the 10 stations in the small bore rifle range, and the 4 skeet and trap ranges. The plaintiff was permitted to reproduce in the courtroom sounds of gun fire emanating from a range at Kenilworth, New Jersey, which range was established to be comparable to the one contemplated on defendant’s property. Child psychologists testified that the noises from gun discharges are impulsive, sporadic, with steep wave fronts and rapid onsets, and that such noises would divert the attention of the pupils, cause distraction and emotional tensions and interfere with the learning ability of the pupils and the ability of their instructors to teach.

These effects, however, were predicated upon the reception of sound on the boundary of the school land contiguous to defendant’s land, a point about 1,650 feet.from the nearest rapgc, the trap and skeet range, ' The plaintiff’s lands extend on for at least another 1,650 feet in an easterly direction still farther away from the ranges. The plaintiff has formulated no plans as to where on its parcel it will build its school and no allowance has been made for the reduction of the sound that will result from [798]*798the pupils and teachers being within a building and being at a greater distance from the shooting ranges.

Upon the foregoing facts, plaintiff’s application for injunction is denied. As previously pointed out, there is no factor of danger for the court to consider. The sole remaining complaint is that of noise. There has been and can be at this time no proof as to the extent of the noise that might be heard by pupils in a school that plaintiff may erect on its land at a location now unknown.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blair v. 305-313 East 47th Street Associates
123 Misc. 2d 612 (New York Supreme Court, 1983)
Committee to Abolish Sport Hunting, Inc. v. Palisades Interstate Park Commission
84 A.D.2d 798 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1981)
Durand v. Board of Cooperative Educational Services
70 Misc. 2d 429 (New York Supreme Court, 1972)
Jones v. Vassar College
59 Misc. 2d 296 (New York Supreme Court, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Misc. 2d 795, 230 N.Y.S.2d 627, 1962 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2985, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-of-central-school-district-no-3-v-county-of-nysupct-1962.