County of Oneida v. Estate of Kennedy

189 Misc. 2d 689, 734 N.Y.S.2d 402, 2001 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 464
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 2001
StatusPublished

This text of 189 Misc. 2d 689 (County of Oneida v. Estate of Kennedy) 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
County of Oneida v. Estate of Kennedy, 189 Misc. 2d 689, 734 N.Y.S.2d 402, 2001 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 464 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Robert F. Julian, J.

Relief Requested

Plaintiffs seek judgment providing for the demolition of a burned, unsalvageable building; compensation for the costs thereof; and an injunction restraining the expenditure of insurance proceeds derived from the fire. Defendant seeks a judgment holding it does not owe the cost of demolition.

Holding

Judgment granted to plaintiffs, County of Oneida and City of Utica. The court finds:

(1) Defendant is liable for the cost of demolition. An inquest shall be held to determine the amount owed. The defendant is enjoined from expending $15,000 of the fire insurance proceeds collected pending determination of the amount owing for demolition.

(2) A contract implied in law between the City and the defendant by which the City would demolish defendant’s structure at no cost to the defendant is void because the contract bestows an unconstitutional gift of services upon the defendant. The City cannot demolish private property and not charge the owner (defendant) for the cost of its services because a failure [691]*691to charge is an unconstitutional gift in violation of article VIII, § 1 of the New York Constitution.

(3) There was no contract between the parties that released the defendant from responsibility for the cost of demolition because there was no meeting of the minds, no consideration, and certain provisions of the proposed contracts violate New York Constitution, article VIII, § 1.

(4) To satisfy the gifts and loans provision of New York Constitution, article VIII, § 1, the City and County must attempt to collect the cost of demolition from the property owner personally and cannot solely resort to a special assessment pursuant to section 20 (35) of the General City Law against the property for repayment where the cost of demolition exceeds the value of the property.

(5) The common practice engaged in for years by the City and County that permitted a property in long-standing codes noncompliance to be taken for unpaid real estate taxes and then demolished at taxpayers’ expense is an abuse of discretion and violative of article VIII, § 1 of the New York Constitution. The court takes judicial notice that there are a significant number of properties in the City significantly out of codes compliance that fall within this category.

Discussion

Procedural Status

The County of Oneida (County) commenced this action against the Estate of John Kennedy et al. (the Estate) the owners) of certain fire-damaged property at 603 Saratoga Street, Utica, New York, on May 23, 2001, seeking a judgment ordering the demolition of the property and payment therefor by the owner(s). The Estate commenced a third-party action against R.E.B. Enterprises, Inc. (REB) and Ron Borek (apparently a principal in REB) and the City of Utica (City). There has been no appearance by REB, and it is unknown to the court whether or not REB has been served; the court finds that it has no jurisdiction over REB and makes no findings or rulings regarding it. The City was granted permission to intervene in this case as a plaintiff at a hearing before the court on July 23, 2001 without opposition by either party. Although discussion at that time indicated the City was intervening as a defendant, that was clarified at the continued hearing on July 27, 2001. The City intervenes as a plaintiff and has adopted the complaint of the County as its pleading. The County’s complaint is ordered deemed to be the complaint of the City, and [692]*692the answer and other pleadings are deemed, and ordered, amended accordingly. This also has been stipulated to by the parties. The amended pleadings are in the court’s file.

In the verified complaint the County and City further request injunctive relief freezing the funds obtained or to be obtained from fire insurance by the Estate or its decedent.

The County is proceeding pursuant to the Public Health Law and the County Sanitary Code and the City seeks relief pursuant to the City Housing Standards Code. The Estate and its individual defendants seek a dismissal of the complaint, and as further discussed below the enforcement of an alleged contract to demolish the property, and judgment on their counterclaim against the City for the cost of demolition.

The Estate did not dispute that the property should be demolished nor did it oppose the demolition of the premises. The court, with the consent of the parties on July 23, 2001, issued an order and judgment compelling demolition of the premises. The building was demolished by the County of Oneida in August of 2001 pursuant to that order. The defendant disputes the plaintiff municipalities’ contention that the Estate is responsible for the cost of demolition. The Estate asserts, as defenses to this action:

(1) A third party, REB, had a contract with the Estate to demolish the property and breached that contract. REB is not before the court, and thus the court is not empowered to rule in any way upon this claim except to find it not material or relevant to this proceeding. Any third-party action in existence is deemed, and ordered, severed on the court’s own motion.

(2) There was either an oral or a written agreement or a contract implied in law between the Estate and the City which provided that the Estate would not be held responsible for paying any costs of demolition. Two written forms of agreement were prepared, but neither was ever executed by any authorized representative of the City. The defendant in its verified answer, and at trial, alleged the existence of the oral contract with the City. The Estate asserted at trial the existence of a written agreement signed by the executrix only.

(3) The defendant’s failure to demolish this building or to act to enforce its contract with REB at a reduced price was based upon the plaintiff City’s promise to demolish it, thus creating a contract implied in law between the City and defendant, as the defendant relied upon the City’s promise to its detriment.

(4) The property was lost for back taxes, and thus, the Estate is not a proper party as it does not have title. The record does [693]*693not support this assertion and this defense is dismissed and not further considered.

(5) The defendant is being unfairly singled out by the plaintiffs and thus is the victim of selective enforcement.

Facts

The property in issue, 603 Saratoga Street, was severely damaged in a fire on December 15, 1997 and was deemed irreparable. The building was insured and the fire insurance carrier paid the Estate’s decedent in excess of $40,000 within several months of the fire. Those funds remain in the Estate’s savings account.

The court took proof on July 23, July 27, August 7, and August 13, 2001.

The attorneys appearing for both the City and Estate testified, and by stipulation of all parties, conflicts on this basis were expressly waived.

Two purported written contracts were introduced into evidence. The first (Contract One) was a proposed, unsigned contract prepared by the City and presented to the Estate in the spring of 2000. It provided that the City may seek restitution for demolition costs. Contract One also permits the City, in the alternative, to file a lien against the property for the demolition costs.

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Bluebook (online)
189 Misc. 2d 689, 734 N.Y.S.2d 402, 2001 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-oneida-v-estate-of-kennedy-nysupct-2001.