INC. VIL. OF LLOYD HARBOR v. Huntington
This text of 4 N.Y.2d 182 (INC. VIL. OF LLOYD HARBOR v. Huntington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Incorporated Village of Lloyd Harbor et al., Respondents,
v.
Town of Huntington, Appellant.
Chester S. Williams et al., Respondents,
v.
Town of Huntington et al., Appellants. (Consolidated Actions.)
Court of Appeals of the State of New York.
George M. Blaesi, Town Attorney (Otho S. Bowling and Robert F. Bowling of counsel), for appellants.
Jackson A. Dykman for Incorporated Village of Lloyd Harbor and another, respondents.
Gordon M. Lipetz for Chester S. Williams and others, respondents.
Chief Judge CONWAY and Judges DESMOND, FROESSEL and BURKE concur with Judge FULD; Judges DYE and VAN VOORHIS dissent and vote to affirm.
*186FULD, J.
Some time before 1955, the Town of Huntington acquired lands in the Village of Lloyd Harbor and in the Village of Huntington Bay both villages being within the town's territorial limits for the purpose of operating them as public bathing beaches. Both villages had zoning ordinances which in effect exclude such beaches, it being conceded that they were zoned for residence purposes only. In April of 1955, the Legislature enacted a statute (L. 1955, ch. 840) which in part provides that, "Notwithstanding any other general, special or local law, ordinance or regulation * * * the town of Huntington, in the county of Suffolk, may establish, maintain and operate public bathing beaches * * * on lands owned or leased by the town of Huntington * * * at any place within [its] boundaries".
Regarding this act as the town's sole authority to establish public bathing beaches, the villages brought suit urging that the statute is unconstitutional; it is their thesis that the zoning ordinances prohibit such beaches and that, therefore, the 1955 legislation is a local law which amended the village charters. A declaratory judgment with injunctive and other incidental relief is sought. Some time later, a group of residents of the *187 Village of Huntington Bay instituted a taxpayer's action for substantially the same relief, and the two actions were consolidated. The court at Special Term decided in favor of the plaintiffs in both actions. It was that court's view, to state it shortly, that the 1955 act was "designed specifically to take from the villages within the town of Huntington certain powers granted them by their charters, as embodied in the Village Law" and, by reason thereof, must be deemed local in character and violative of article III, section 17, of the New York State Constitution. The Appellate Division, by a divided vote, affirmed.[1]
We have reached a different conclusion. The town had the authority, quite apart from chapter 840 of the Laws of 1955, to establish a public bathing beach within village limits without village permission. That being so, the 1955 statute but confirmed and clarified a power which the town already possessed and may not, therefore, be subjected to any charge of unconstitutionality.
Actually, there are three statutes (Town Law, § 81, subd. 1, par. [d]; Town Law, § 220, subd. 4; L. 1906, ch. 87) which have long constituted grants of authority to a town to establish public parks and bathing beaches are parks (see, e.g., Caldwell v. Village of Island Park, 304 N.Y. 268; Augustine v. Town of Brant, 249 N.Y. 198) in village territory within town limits. The earliest of these statutes, the 1906 law, as later amended (L. 1943, ch. 710, pt. four, tit. 1, § 4), empowers "The town board of any town in the county of Suffolk * * * [to] acquire land in such town for park purposes", while subdivision 4 of section 220 of the Town Law authorizes every town board throughout the state to "Establish airports, landing fields, public parking places, public parks or playgrounds, acquire the necessary lands therefor, and equip the same with suitable buildings, structures and apparatus." Section 81, subdivision 1 [d], reads in almost identical fashion.
The plaintiffs contend, however, that these statutes permit the town to establish a public park only in town territory outside *188 of an incorporated village and, if such park be placed within the village, the latter's consent is essential. Such an argument does not stand analysis.
In so many words, subdivision 4 of section 220, as it reads today, broadly empowers a town to establish a public park within its boundaries. There is no suggestion or intimation that the park is to be located outside the villages. Whenever the Legislature has desired to restrict the location of any facility or improvement to town territory beyond or outside the corporate limits of a village, it has made its design unmistakably plain by the use of appropriate language (e.g., Town Law, § 220, subd. 5, dealing with public dumps; Town Law, § 198, subd. 1, par. [e], dealing with sewer pipes; Town Law, § 198, subd. 3, par. [a], dealing with water pipes; General Municipal Law, § 240, as amd. by L. 1957, ch. 532, dealing with playgrounds and recreation centers).[2] Indeed, the Legislature had actually so provided with respect to a public park itself in former section 342 of the Town Law; it had expressly authorized a town to establish public parks, but only "outside an incorporated village". The repeal of section 342 and its replacement by present subdivision 4 of section 220, without such qualifying and restrictive language, furnish convincing demonstration that the Legislature did not desire to prohibit a town from establishing a public park within an incorporated village.
Moreover, it should be remarked that section 220 does not refer only to parks. It also authorizes the town, in wording quite similar to that contained in subdivision 4, to erect a town hall or a town lockup (subd. 3) and, in subdivision 4 itself, to construct and maintain parking lots and airfields. If the limited interpretation urged by the villages were to be adopted, no such improvements or facilities could be located in those towns, their number may be few, where there is no area outside of incorporated villages. Having these considerations in mind, it is manifest that a statute which authorizes a town to establish *189 a public park allows it to locate such park within a village in the town unless the statute itself, or some other statute, forbids and this, we note, in passing, has been the view of State Comptrollers who have addressed themselves to the question. (See, e.g., 9 Op. St. Comp., 1953, p. 336; 4 Op. St. Comp., 1948, p. 596.)
And, contrary to the opinion expressed by the trial court, section 198, subdivision 4, of the Town Law does not qualify the other statutes or require village consent to the establishment of public parks. Actually, it has no application to a town public park.
While subdivision 4 of section 198 does declare that no property within a village is to be acquired "for park purposes" unless the permission of the village trustees is obtained, the statute, as both its text and its title make evident, deals solely with a "park district" park, a completely different type of park from the town public park. Section 198, which grants the town board authority to exercise certain powers "with respect to improvement districts", is contained in article 12 of the Town Law, and, as a reading of the several sections contained in that article discloses, it is entirely given over to specifically designated improvement districts.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
4 N.Y.2d 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inc-vil-of-lloyd-harbor-v-huntington-ny-1958.