Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. Village of Garden City

185 Misc. 508, 57 N.Y.S.2d 377, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2248
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 Misc. 508 (Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. Village of Garden City) 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
Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. Village of Garden City, 185 Misc. 508, 57 N.Y.S.2d 377, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2248 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1945).

Opinion

Lockwood, J.

This litigation between the Curtiss-Wright Corporation and the Village of Garden City concerns the use to which the Curtiss-Wright- plant may be put and the effect thereon of certain zoning ordinances.

On December 27, 1917, the Garden City Company which originally owned most of Garden City, sold the Curtiss Engi[509]*509neering Company, predecessor of Curtiss-Wright Corporation, twenty acres at the corner of Clinton and Stewart Avenues.

The deed restricted the property to “ an experimental laboratory for the manufacture, exposition, testing and sale .of airplanes and accessories and the necessary buildings and structures connected therewith * * *.”

By later agreement, the permitted use was broadened, except that no livery stable, slaughterhouse, boiler factory, brass or iron foundry was allowed.

On this cite, the Curtiss-Wright plant was completed in 1919 at a cost of over $1,100,000.

The Village of Garden City, incorporated in September, 1919, adopted two zoning ordinances, one on April 19, 1921, and one on March 7, 1924.

Under both, the Curtiss-Wright property was placed in a residence district.

The one of March 7, 1924, provides: “ Sec. 200. Any nonconforming use existing in any building at the time of the adoption of this ordinance may be continued, and any existing building designed, arranged, intended or devoted to a non-conforming use, may be reconstructed or structurally altered, and the non-conforming use therein changed subject to the following regulations:

“ 1. The structural alterations made in such building shall in no case exceed fifty percent of its appraised value, nor shall the buildings be enlarged, unless the use therein is changed to a conforming use.

2. No non-conforming use shall be extended at the expense of a conforming use.

“ Sec. 201. Nothing in this ordinance shall * * * prevent the continuance of the use of such building or part thereof or prevent a change of such existing use under the limitations provided in Section 200.”

Differences developed after the adoption of the zoning laws and the village officials acted on a number of complaints. To one against noise, Curtiss-Wright replied that the airplane motor tests objected to were being conducted for the United States Navy but that they would thereafter be made at Buffalo, New York.

The Garden City Curtiss-Wright plant closed down during the depression in 1932. Some machines were moved to Buffalo. Others remained at Garden City and were sold off from time to time up to 1935 or 1936. At all times Curtiss-Wright kept records and a custodian and a watchman, and, for a while [510]*510an accounting force on the premises. Light, heat, power and water were always available.

Between 1932 and 1940, part of the property was leased for restaurant purposes, other space to Nassau County for adult education quarters and one building to Doubleday, Doran & Co., Inc., publishers, for storage. From October, 1940, to date all, except the space used by Curtiss-Wright, has been under lease to Sperry Gyroscope Company.

These rentals, all for nonconforming uses permitted by the ■ restrictive covenants of record, were made upon application to, and with the approval of the village authorities.

On September 20, 1940, the village Board of Zoning Appeals granted a limited permit for the Sperry occupation on condition: “ (4) that the granting of this appeal and anything done hereunder shall be without prejudice to the rights of the appellant (Curtiss-Wright) * * * or of the Village * * * as such rights existed prior to the filing of this appeal or with respect to any questions which might have been or might be urged by any of said parties in any future action or proceeding, whether judicial or otherwise, with respect to said property, whether or not such proceeding shall be instituted by further application to this Board or otherwise, and that the rights of all said parties, their successors or assigns shall be fully preserved.”

In the early fall of 1944, when all plants were being urged by "the President and the Secretaries of War and of the Navy to increase production to the maximum to further the allied cause, the application to extend the Sperry lease one year from December 1, 1944, was denied by the village board because Curtiss-Wright insisted that the additions erected by Sperry at a Cost of $325,000 to carry on Government work should not be later torn down without their consent. The village board had reserved the right to enter upon the premises at the end of the lease and demolish such buildings if Curtiss-Wright failed to do so.

It was not until February 10, 1945, that the board approved of the Sperry lease which had expired December 1, 1944, and it was extended to December 1, 1945.

During this last controversy, Curtiss-Wright instituted this action for a judgment declaring: (1) That its plant and property is devoted to a nonconforming, pre-existing, legal use and therefore the zoning ordinance of the Village of Garden City is void and ineffectual to prevent such use; and (2) that the zoning ordinance insofar as it restricts the use of the. property [511]*511to uses permitted by the ordinance in a “ B ” residence district, is so unreasonable and confiscatory as to constitute an unconstitutional taking of the property.

The defendant village asserts that Curtiss-Wright abandoned the nonconforming, pre-existing legal use of the property — the active manufacture of airplanes and accessories — at this plant in 1932. That by shutting down manufacturing and renting out some of the buildings between 1932 and 1940 for nonconforming uses, as hereinbefore set forth, it lost its right to the nonconforming use, and the restrictions of the zoning ordinance of 1924 limiting the use of the property to residences only, became applicable.

That Curtiss-Wright’s sole remedy for any grievance it may have against the decisions of the village Board of Zoning-Appeals is a review by certiorari, the time for which has long since expired. It further denies the allegations of the unreasonableness and unconstitutionality of the zoning ordinance.

Curtiss-Wright says that the applications to the village authorities after 1932 for consents to temporarily lease parts of the property, were made to avoid friction. That it never had any intention of permanently changing the character of the plant, which, during all the years was and is assessed for taxes by the village on the basis of industrial use, far higher than assessments for residential use. That it presented the matter of the Sperry lease in 1940, not because the consent of the village was necessary to continue the nonconforming use, but to save time in getting important work for the Government under way and that its rights and the rights of the village were preserved under the stipulation herein quoted.

Curtiss-Wright points out that it manufactured airplanes here from 1919 to 1932, when it shut down because the nation was then going through the most severe depression in history; that many corporations and businesses, large and small, failed or closed in whole or in part at that time, awaiting the business revival which many thought was “ just around the corner ”. That, meanwhile, it rented out parts for nonconforming uses to obtain income.

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Related

Crone v. Town of Brighton
19 Misc. 2d 1023 (New York Supreme Court, 1952)
Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. Village of Garden City
270 A.D. 936 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
185 Misc. 508, 57 N.Y.S.2d 377, 1945 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtiss-wright-corp-v-village-of-garden-city-nysupct-1945.