Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity v. Carle
This text of 90 A.D.2d 591 (Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity v. Carle) 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.
Opinion
Cross appeals from a judgment of the Supreme Court at Special Term (Cobb, J.), entered August 5, 1981 in Ulster County, which, in a proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78, inter alia, granted petitioner’s application to the extent that it directed respondent Planning Board of the Town of Rochester to hold public hearings on petitioner’s site plan application and denied intervenors’ motion to dismiss the [592]*592application as time barred. In June, 1980, the Holy Spirit Association for the Unification of World Christianity (HSA) purchased certain property, which had previously been used as a children’s summer camp, in the Town of Rochester in Ulster County. Sometime thereafter, an inspection of the property was made by the Town of Rochester’s zoning inspector in order to determine whether HSA had changed the use of the property in such a way as to require a new zoning permit. Although no written determination was made, the inspector apparently made an oral determination that no such change of use had occurred. Accordingly, on July 9, 1980, a certificate of occupancy was issued by the multiple residence inspector permitting the property to be used as a “summer camp” between May 15 and October 15, 1980. On July 21, 1980, a town resident filed an appeal from the “determinations” of the zoning inspector and multiple residence inspector on the ground that a change in the use had occurred on the subject property which change required a special use permit. Shortly thereafter, HSA purchased a second parcel of property with a one-family dwelling immediately adjacent to the camp property. A second inspection of the HSA parcels was subsequently conducted by a newly appointed zoning inspector, for the apparent purpose of clarifying, for purposes of the appeal, the former inspector’s earlier unrecorded determination. On October 17, after HSA had closed the summer facility, the zoning inspector, by letter addressed to HSA, determined that three violations of the Town of Rochester’s Zoning Ordinance existed on the HSA property: (1) that the camp property was being used as a “church or other place of worship” and thus required site plan approval under subdivision A of section III of the ordinance; (2) that the one-family residence property was no longer being used as a single-family dwelling and, therefore, required a special use permit under that same section; and (3) that the fence surrounding the property exceeded the maximum allowable height under subdivision 7 of section V of the ordinance. The inspector directed HSA to file the appropriate applications within 30 days. Three appeals, including one by the intervenors, were subsequently filed from the inspector’s determinations with the Town of Rochester’s Zoning Board of Appeals pursuant to section VIII (subd C, par 1) of the zoning ordinance on the ground that a special use permit was required for all the HSA property, not just the property on which the single-family dwelling was located. No appeal was filed by HSÁ. Subsequent to the filing of these appeals, and within the 30-day limitation prescribed by the zoning inspector, HSA submitted a site plan application. The application, however, covered not only the camp property, but, in addition, the single-family residence property for which the inspector had determined that a special use permit was required. Despite this discrepancy, the zoning inspector, on or before December 9, 1980, referred the application to the Town of Rochester Planning Board for its review pursuant to subdivision B of section VII of the zoning ordinance. On January 13,1981, the planning board determined, over HSA’s objection, that under section VIII (subd C, par 1, subpar d) of the zoning ordinance, and the corresponding subdivision 4 of section 267 of the Town Law, its review of HSA’s site plan application was stayed pending a determination by the zoning board of appeals of the appeals filed from the zoning inspector’s October 17 determination. This stay by the planning board was not officially recorded in the office of the board, but was contained in the minutes of the board meeting which were filed with the town clerk on February 1, 1981. No further action was taken until April, 1981, when HSA instituted this proceeding seeking, inter alia, an order directing the zoning inspector to issue HSA the zoning permits necessary to allow it to use its property for religious purposes. Town residents Donna and Leon Greenhill, owners of Worley Homes, Inc., were granted permission to intervene in the proceeding and, in their answer, they requested that the [593]*593proceeding be dismissed as time barred under the 30-day Statute of Limitations provided by section 282 of the Town Law. Special Term held, however, that because the planning board’s action to stay the proceedings pending a determination of the appeals was not a “final” determination of the planning board from which an appeal must be filed within 30 days pursuant to section 282 of the Town Law, petitioner’s application was not time barred. As to the merits, Special Term held that because the source of the planning board’s power to act upon the site plan application “[did] not stem from the rulings of the zoning inspector and the multiple dwelling inspector”, section VIII (subd C, par 1, subpar d) of the zoning ordinance was not applicable and that, therefore, the planning board had improperly stayed its review proceedings. Special Term refused, however, to grant the relief requested by HSA, but instead ordered the planning board to hold public hearings on the HSA application within 30 days and to render a decision within 45 days thereafter. HSA appeals that part of Special Term’s order which denied its request for an order directing the zoning inspector to issue HSA the required permits, and the interveners cross-appeal that part of the order which denied their request to dismiss the proceeding as time barred. We agree that the remedy fashioned by Special Term provides a proper solution to the procedural entanglement created by these parties. However, in our view, much of the legal argument offered by those parties has heretofore been rendered moot. We note that in May, 1981, before Special Term’s decision herein, and just prior to the scheduled summer opening of HSA’s facility, the zoning officer, in an effort to lift the stay and thereby prohibit the facilities’ opening, filed a “certificate of imminent peril” pursuant to section VIII (subd C, par 1, subpar d) of the zoning ordinance. Petitioner thereupon instituted another article 78 proceeding, wherein a restraining order to keep the stay intact was sought, which was dismissed by Special Term. Upon appeal, a motion in this court for a preliminary injunction was denied in an order joining that appeal with this matter, which was then pending.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
90 A.D.2d 591, 456 N.Y.S.2d 195, 1982 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 18657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holy-spirit-association-for-the-unification-of-world-christianity-v-carle-nyappdiv-1982.