Eagle Creek Land Resources, LLC v. Woodstone Lake Development, LLC

108 A.D.3d 71, 964 N.Y.S.2d 743

This text of 108 A.D.3d 71 (Eagle Creek Land Resources, LLC v. Woodstone Lake Development, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eagle Creek Land Resources, LLC v. Woodstone Lake Development, LLC, 108 A.D.3d 71, 964 N.Y.S.2d 743 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Stein, J.

AER NY-GEN, LLC is a power company licensed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (hereinafter FERC) to [74]*74operate a hydroelectric facility known as the Swinging Bridge Project (hereinafter the project). The project encompasses three reservoirs, including the Toronto Reservoir (hereinafter the reservoir) located in the Town of Bethel, Sullivan County. As a condition of the FERC license, AER was required to maintain, among other things, a public recreational area on the southeast bank of the reservoir.1 From 1971 through 2000, access to this recreational area was provided by AER’s predecessor in interest2 via an easement through property — now owned by respondent Woodstone Lake Development, LLC — that surrounds the reservoir. Woodstone obtained the property in 2000 from Clove Development Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Orange and Rockland Utilities, Inc. (hereinafter O&R).3

Following Woodstone’s acquisition of the property, the public continued to use roads that traversed such property in order to access the recreational area. In the meantime, Woodstone developed the property into an exclusive, private, gated residential community called Chapin Estate. Disputes arose regarding the public’s use of the private roads and, ultimately, Woodstone began blocking the public’s access to the recreational area across its property.

In April 2010, while the issue of the public’s access through Woodstone’s property remained unsettled, AER filed an application to transfer its license to operate the project to petitioners. In November 2010, FERC dismissed the application without prejudice on the ground that AER had not met the requirement of the license that it ensure that the public have access to the recreational area. As a result, AER commenced this EDPL article 4 proceeding seeking to acquire by condemnation a public access easement to the recreational area across the subject roads through Woodstone’s property.4 Woodstone and respondent Chapin Estate Homeowners Association, Inc. filed separate answers to the petition containing various affirmative defenses, including claims that AER had failed to comply with the public [75]*75hearing requirement of EDPL 201 and that the petition was untimely. Supreme Court dismissed the affirmative defenses, granted the petition, and directed AER to, among other things, file a bond in the amount of $402,000. Upon respondents’ appeal,5 we now affirm.

Initially, respondents assert that Supreme Court’s order was based upon an incorrect factual determination that the subject roads located on Woodstone’s property were already burdened by a right of public access and that this finding was contrary to the parties’ agreement that such roads were private. While petitioners agree that the roads were private, it is undisputed that the deed by which O&R transferred the property to Clove in 1971 specifically reserved to O&R the right to enter and use certain private roads for “any purpose, including without limitation the right to unrestricted travel along said roads with any vehicle, equipment or machinery.”6 Clove’s conveyance of the property to Woodstone in 2000 recognized that easement.7 It is also undisputed that, for decades, the public enjoyed access to the recreational area at the reservoir through the property now owned by Woodstone until Woodstone permanently blocked such access in 2005. Simply put, Supreme Court’s decision properly reflected the existence of the reserved easement, as well as the public’s prior access to the reservoir by use of the roads across Woodstone’s property.

We turn next to the merits of respondents’ challenge to Supreme Court’s conclusion that AER was not required to conduct a public hearing pursuant to EDPL 201. In that regard, the EDPL prescribes a two-step process for the condemnor to obtain title. The first step requires compliance with the procedures set forth in EDPL article 2 which, among other things, calls for a condemnor to determine whether condemnation is required by either conducting a hearing or by following an alternate procedure under EDPL 206 (see Matter of City of [76]*76New York [Grand Lafayette Props. LLC], 6 NY3d 540, 543 [2006]). Thereafter, the condemnor must seek acquisition of the property by commencing a vesting proceeding pursuant to EDPL article 4 (see id.).

“The principal purpose of EDPL article 2 is to insure that [a condemnor] does not acquire property without having made a reasoned determination that the condemnation will serve a valid public purpose” (Matter of 265 Penn Realty Corp. v City of New York, 99 AD3d 1014, 1014 [2012] [citations omitted]). Thus, the function of a preacquisition public hearing is “to inform the public and to review the public use to be served by a proposed public project and the impact on the environment and residents of the locality where such project will be constructed” (EDPL 201). Following the public hearing, the condemnor is required to make written determinations with respect to, among other things, “the public use, benefit or purpose to be served by the proposed public project” (EDPL 204 [B] [l]).8

However, there are five exemptions that allow a condemnor to dispense with the hearing requirement of EDPL article 2 (see EDPL 206; City of Buffalo Urban Renewal Agency v Moreton, 100 AD2d 20, 23 [1984]). Here, AER claimed that three of these exemptions applied (see EDPL 206 [A], [C], [D]). As the condemnor, AER bore the burden of demonstrating that it was entitled to an exemption (see Matter of Sanitation Garage Brooklyn Dists. 3 & 3A, 32 AD3d 1031, 1034 [2006], lv denied 7 NY3d 921 [2006]). Supreme Court found such entitlement pursuant to EDPL 206 (A). As relevant here, that section provides that a hearing is not required when, in relation to a federal law or regulation, a condemnor considers factors similar to those set forth in EDPL 204 (B) and obtains a license or “similar approval” from a federal agency or commission before proceeding with the acquisition (see Matter of National Fuel Gas Supply Corp. v Town of Concord, 299 AD2d 898, 899 [2002]).

Here, both AER and FERC clearly considered factors that are similar to those contained in EDPL 204 (B), with the primary consideration being the public’s use and the benefit to be served by public access to the recreational area. In its November 2010 order dismissing AER’s application to transfer the project’s [77]*77license to petitioners, FERC specifically noted that AER was required to “obtain the property rights (e.g., easement or fee title) necessary to ensure public access to the recreation[al] area regardless of the operational aspects of the project” and concluded that “[i]t would not be in the public interest to allow [AER] to divest itself of the [project] until it has resolved the access issue by obtaining the necessary property rights.”9 Moreover, AER was reminded that FERC “would not allow the interests of private landowners to override the general public’s right to enjoy the recreational resources associated with hydropower projects.” At that time, FERC had been fully apprised of the issues surrounding the public access to the recreational area and Woodstone’s refusal to allow the public to use its private roads.

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Bluebook (online)
108 A.D.3d 71, 964 N.Y.S.2d 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-creek-land-resources-llc-v-woodstone-lake-development-llc-nyappdiv-2013.