Ferrer v. Hill

65 A.D.2d 561, 408 N.Y.S.2d 967, 1978 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13206

This text of 65 A.D.2d 561 (Ferrer v. Hill) 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
Ferrer v. Hill, 65 A.D.2d 561, 408 N.Y.S.2d 967, 1978 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13206 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

In an action, inter alia, for specific performance of a contract for the sale or realty or, in the alternative, for damages, defendants appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Suffolk County, entered January 26, 1978, which, inter alia, awarded plaintiffs $232,372, after a nonjury trial. Judgment reversed, on the law, and new trial granted, with costs to abide the event. The property which is the subject of this action, consists of seven and one-half acres of unimproved property known as Ivy Beach and runs from the Great South Bay to the Atlantic Ocean on Fire Island in the Town of Islip, County of Suffolk. This property had been purchased by the defendants in 1972. The defendants’ predecessor in title had obtained tentative approval in 1971 from the Town of Islip for 48 building parcels on the subject property provided the "applicant * * * contact the Sewer Agency relative to sewage collection and disposal” and subject to a "Satisfactory recreational offer”. In August, 1972, prior to the execution of the subject contract, the defendants submitted a required "Application For Approval of Sanitary Facilities For Realty Subdivisions” to the Suffolk County Department of Health. On June 25, 1973 the proposed subdivision of the entire parcel was approved provided that the over-all density for both the northerly and southerly parts of the parcel does not exceed 30 lots and that the subdivided 30 lots "should be confined primarily to Section One” (the southerly portion of the property). This determination was adopted by the Commissioner of the Suffolk County Department of Health by letter dated July 11, 1973. On October 11, 1973 the defendants entered into a contract to sell the southerly part of the subject parcel to the third-party defendant Five Towns Holding Corp. The sale price was $365,000, with the sellers agreeing to a purchase-money mortgage of $315,-000 payable in three years at 9%. The purchaser also had an "option of first refusal” to buy the northerly half of the parcel for $157,500 plus engineering expenses and the cost of constructing a marina, land fill and map filing. It had a further option, in the event it chose not to exercise the option to buy, to lease 15 boat slips in the marina to be erected by the sellers, at a rental "for the lease terms equal to 50% of the amount being charged to all other renters or lessees of the Marina slips” (contract rider par 5). Paragraph 1 of the contract rider provides: "The Sellers agree to (a) file and have approved a Map embracing the described property so as to show thirty (30) building plots in the same manner as outlined on the map attached hereto and made a part hereof and marked 'exhibit a’, and (b) proceed diligently and expeditiously to obtain full approval of said map and cause the same to be filed”. Pursuant to this paragraph, the purchaser also agreed to reimburse the sellers for any improvement bond that was required. (The option to purchase the northerly half of the parcel was to expire 15 months from [562]*562the date "upon which the Purchasers receive notification, by certified mail, of the filing of the map” on the southerly half.) Paragraph 9 of the contract rider provides as follows: "If Sellers shall be unable to convey title in accordance with the terms of this agreement, the down payment made hereunder shall he refunded, and all the rights and obligations of the Sellers and Purchaser hereunder shall thereupon become null and void”. On October 15, 1973 the contract vendee, Five Towns Holding Corp., for valuable consideration, assigned all its "right, title and interest” in and to the contract dated October 11, 1973 to the plaintiffs herein. After the signing of the contract in October, 1973 the defendants submitted plans to the Town of Islip for final approval of the proposed subdivision, and after a hearing, the Town of Islip Department of Planning and Development, by letter dated April 30, 1974, denied the application for the following reasons: "a) The Suffolk County Health Department is willing only to approve a total of thirty (30) lots from Ocean Bay; b) Two to four lots on the south end may be in the Dune District and cannot be built on; c) Technically, the northern portion of the property should be designated as lot #31 because it is part of the subdivision; d) The applicant has not furnished any evidence concerning the origin of the voluminous amounts of fill necessary to bring the properties up to Health Department standards, nor the effects which the individual cesspools will have on the ground water”. This denial was followed by another application being submitted to the Islip Department of Planning and Development based on a clustered zone concept. On August 7, 1974 the department notified the defendants’ attorney that it was prepared to recommend the acceptance of a clustered development based on the following conditions: "a) Applicant-owner(s) to provide Town with a 50 ft. easement along the dunes for purposes of preserving their existence. No buildings or other improvements to be permitted within said easement except a wooden walk across said easement to permit residents of this subdivision to reach the ocean, b) The two (2) 'dune’ lots be increased in size to a minimum of at least 11,000 sq. ft. including the 50 ft. dune easement area mentioned in 'a’ above, c) Maple Walk to be straightened and widened to width of twenty (20) ft. d) To permit proven yield of 30 plots, interior plots may be reduced to a minimum of 5,000 sq. ft. and 55 ft. frontage. Corner lots to conform to minimum 6,000 sq. ft. requirements of Residential 'BAA’ zone, e) To satisfy the Health Department requirements, applicant-owner(s) to file deed restrictions on parcel north of Maple Court agreeing not to request any building permit until approved subdivision plan is filed in County Clerk’s Office or rezoning is granted for some other 'Permitted Use’ ”. A third application was then made, this time to the Suffolk County Department of Environmental Control, for approval of the subdivision. The application was conditionally approved provided "that the area between Maple Court and Great South Bay [i.e., the northerly portion] should be dedicated for public or semi-public use and/or restrictive covenants should be filed on said parcel so that the number of lots for the entire 7.353 acres does not exceed 30, in keeping with the Health Department Board of Review determination of June 25, 1973”. This latter reference was to the approval of the earlier subdivision application made by the defendants prior to the execution of the contract and which was adopted by the health department in its letter of July 11, 1973. Finally, a fourth application was made, again to the Department of Environmental Control, for 30 building parcels on the southerly part of the parcel with the northerly parcel to be used for recreational uses (i.e., tennis courts) and not for a subdivision development. Plans were submitted to the Department of Environmental Control in April, 1975. Following a hearing held on [563]*563April 29, 1975, the Department of Environmental Control, by letter dated April 30, 1975, denied the application stating: "At the hearing of the Suffolk County Sewer Agency held on April 29, 1975 in Hauppauge, New York, your request to use the land on the above mentioned map between Maple Court and Great South Bay for private recreational purposes was denied by the Agency, since the Agency felt that the approval granted at the meeting of November 8, 1974 was predicated on the fact that the subject parcel would remain in its natural state”. (An article 78 proceeding was commenced with respect to this latter application.) The plaintiffs then demanded that the defendants convey title to the southern half of the property. The sellers refused and this action for specific performance followed.

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Bluebook (online)
65 A.D.2d 561, 408 N.Y.S.2d 967, 1978 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 13206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrer-v-hill-nyappdiv-1978.