Gardner v. Downer

61 Misc. 2d 131, 305 N.Y.S.2d 252, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1114
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1969
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Misc. 2d 131 (Gardner v. Downer) 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
Gardner v. Downer, 61 Misc. 2d 131, 305 N.Y.S.2d 252, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1114 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1969).

Opinion

Mario Rittoni, J.

This is another of a long line of cases involving the innumerable battles between municipalities in Nassau County trying to keep properties within their confines residential in nature and commercial interests attempting to change those areas into more profitable business zones.

Plaintiff owner again sues for a judgment declaring the building zone ordinance of the Village of Old Westbury unconstitutional as it applies to plaintiff’s property. Her first action was tried in 1960. (Gardner v. Le Boeuf, 24 Misc 2d 511.) She again claims that the ordinance unconstitutionally restricts her property to one-family, one-acre plots under the village’s Residence “B” zone, when it should be zoned “Business.” Plaintiff’s property has been zoned Residence “ B ” since 1926.

Plaintiff’s property consists of 14% acres of wooded land on the northeast corner of Jericho' Turnpike and Glen Cove Road. It is surrounded by Glen Cove Road, a county road, on the west; Hillside Avenue, a State road, on the north; a recharge basin property on the east; and Jericho Turnpike, a State .road, on the south.

Although Glen Cove Road is a wide four-lane road, it is undivided. However, both Hillside Avenue and Jericho Turnpike are not only very wide but the east and west traffic lanes are divided by wide islands or malls. Hillside Avenue has the [132]*132added feature of being higher than the subject property at one end and lower than the property at the other end.

The other three corners of Glen Cove Road and Jericho Turnpike, that is, the northwest, southwest and southeast corners, are commercially zoned and commercially used. There are two gasoline stations, the Red Coach Grille and a Carvel ice cream stand in these areas.

Above Hillside Avenue, the rest of the village, except for a few small areas for the village’s convenience, is zoned residential, some for one-acre plots, some for two-acre plots and the rest for larger plots.

The history of the litigation involving this property is pertinent. In 1957, plaintiff first petitioned the village for permission to use her property for a shopping center. The petition was turned down. Her subsequent court action for a judgment declaring the residential zoning ‘ ‘ B ” of her property as unconstitutional was rebuffed by the courts (Gardner v. Le Boeuf, 24 Misc 2d 511, affd. 15 A D 2d 815). Thereafter, another application to the village for a rezoning to commercial or business use in order to build a Bloomingdale’s department store was also rejected. After that, she started the present proceeding by applying to the village for a rezoning. Although the village’s Planning Board recommended approval of her application, the village’s Board of Trustees, after receiving a recommendation of disapproval by the County of Nassau Planning Commission and after coiisidering other factors, denied her application. Plaintiff’s present action followed that denial.

Meanwhile, her property, which had approximately 19 'acres, was partially condemned by the State and county for road widening, and she received $105,800 for approximately 4% acres of the subject property.

Plaintiff rests her case primarily on Stevens v. Town of Huntington (20 N Y 2d 352, 355, 356) and Matter of Fulling v. Palumbo (21 N Y 2d 30).

The pertinent language in the Stevens case (pp. 355-356) is as follows:

The appellants are entitled to succeed only if they have shown that the zoning ordinance, as applied to their property, is clearly arbitrary and unreasonable (Summers v. City of Glen Cove, 17 N Y 2d 307). If the classification is fairly debatable, it must be allowed to stand (Shepard v. Village of Skaneateles, 300 N. Y. 115). If, on the other hand, the ordinance goes so far as to preclude the use of the property for any purpose to which it is reasonably adapted, it is confiscatory and unconstitutional (Vernon Park Realty v. City of Mount Vernon, 307 N. Y. 493).

[133]*133“No doubt, every restriction on the unincumbered use of property may impose a burden, provoke hardship, or adversely affect value (Matter of Wulfsohn v. Burden, 241 N. Y. 288, 302). That is one of the prices of society. But the question in each case is ultimately one of reasonableness and that, in turn, depends on a total view of the relevant facts and circumstances. ’ ’

The Stevens case did not adopt any new rule; it merely said that the disparity of value between the property when zoned residentially and when zoned for business was a factor among others which the court weighed in its ultimate determination in respect to constitutionality. Thus, the test of the validity of a zoning ordinance is still one of reasonableness and whether under the restrictions of the ordinance the property is reasonably adapted to any of the permitted uses.

Be that as it may, in the Stevens case the owner had a legitimate complaint. His property was being upzoned from commercial to residential when it was located in an ocean of surrounding commercial uses. In fact, the property was also adjacent to the large Walt Whitman Shopping Center, one of the largest in Long Island. This was a major factor in the Stevens decision (p. 356).

The situation here is not similar to the Stevens case. Plaintiff’s property has been zoned residential since 1926. The commercial uses in the present case are on the three corners and along a short stretch of the south side of Jericho Turnpike. Most of the area surrounding the subject property is residential. There is no overpowering commercial activity surrounding the subject property as there was in the Stevens case.

Plaintiff also presses Matter of Fulling v. Palumbo (21 N Y 2d 30). This was an unusual case involving area variance and the court was called upon to review in an article 78 proceeding a decision which denied a variance to permit a building on a plot smaller than the ordinance required. The facts there cried for relief. The owners in the Fulling case merely requested the right to build on a substandard plot, the same right as the owners of many other adjoining and adjacent substandard plots. The denial of the owner’s application in that case was on the face unfair and unreasonable, and the granting of a variance in that case would not in any way have affected the community or any comprehensive plan. Furthermore, there was no reasonable or legitimate interest in maintaining the character of the area. Then, too, at a prior time the Fulling plot conformed, but subsequent upzoning by the municipality made it nonconforming. To repeat, the Fulling case was concerned only with a minimum plot size restriction imposed' upon a plot already surrounded by [134]*134many other substandard plots. It is unfortunate that the language of the Fulling case is sometimes misinterpreted to apply generally to other zoning cases.

However, even using Fulling case language as a standard, plaintiff has failed to establish significant economic injury. True, if rezoned commercially the value of subject property would be $1,500,000 instead of from $200,000 to $225,000 for the .raw property.

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Related

Shepard v. Village of Skaneateles
89 N.E.2d 619 (New York Court of Appeals, 1949)
Matter of Wulfsohn v. Burden
150 N.E. 120 (New York Court of Appeals, 1925)
Vernon Park Realty, Inc. v. City of Mount Vernon
121 N.E.2d 517 (New York Court of Appeals, 1954)
Gardner v. Le Boeuf
14 Misc. 2d 98 (New York Supreme Court, 1958)
Gregory v. Incorporated Village
18 Misc. 2d 478 (New York Supreme Court, 1959)
Gardner v. Le Boeuf
24 Misc. 2d 511 (New York Supreme Court, 1960)

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Bluebook (online)
61 Misc. 2d 131, 305 N.Y.S.2d 252, 1969 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-downer-nysupct-1969.