Incorporated Village of Atlantic Beach v. Kimmel

48 Misc. 2d 193, 264 N.Y.S.2d 562, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1369
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1965
StatusPublished

This text of 48 Misc. 2d 193 (Incorporated Village of Atlantic Beach v. Kimmel) 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
Incorporated Village of Atlantic Beach v. Kimmel, 48 Misc. 2d 193, 264 N.Y.S.2d 562, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1369 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1965).

Opinion

Thomas P. Farley, J.

In this action for a declaratory judgment, the plaintiff Village of Atlantic Beach seeks to establish in itself sole and exclusive power and jurisdiction to provide for the collection and removal of garbage and refuse within its territorial limits. A permanent injunction is also sought (1) to restrain the defendant sanitary district from providing these services, (2) from levying taxes against the real property in the village for such service, and (3) to enjoin defendant from entering into a garbage removal contract effective after December 31, 1965. Briefly stated, the action is brought to resolve a dispute between the village and the sanitary district as to the jurisdiction over garbage removal within the corporate limits • of the village.

The trial consisted of a submission of the pleadings and the-offer and receipt of four exhibits into evidence. In effect, the parties stipulated as to the following basic facts, but disagreed as to tb ' conclusions to be drawn therefrom.

[195]*195On June 21, 1962, the plaintiff village was organized under article 2 (now art. 3) of the Village Law, the lands within its corporate limits being part of the unincorporated Town of Hempstead. At that time, the defendant sanitary district had been in existence, having been created by resolution of the Town Board of the Town of Hempstead on June 9,1931. The sanitary district embraces all of the land within the territorial limits of the village, together with other land outside of the village limits. Since its creation and until the present time, the defendant sanitary district has contracted with third parties for garbage collection and removal services. It does not own any property nor does it remove and dispose of garbage through any of its employees. The existing contract for this service was executed in 1962 and will expire on December 31,1965. The cost of operation of the sanitary district is levied against the land within the entire district and is included in the annual Town of Hempstead tax.

On July 22, 1965, the plaintiff village advised the sanitary district in writing that the village would provide garbage removal service for property within its territorial limits after the expiration of the present contract, December 31,1965, unless the village and the sanitary district arrived at some satisfactory arrangement. No agreement between the parties was ever reached and the village resolved to provide its own removal service and “ that the Village Attorney be directed to institute an action against the Sanitary District to restrain the District from entering into a contract covering the Village and performing such services in the Village after 1965 ”.

Notwithstanding notice of the above, the sanitary district advertised for bids for garbage removal for the entire district including the Village of Atlantic Beach, for 1966 and, by a resolution adopted at a meeting held on September 13, 1965, authorized the execution of a contract for a three-year period commencing January 1, 1966, for the sum of $144,000. As with previous contracts, part of this cost is intended to be levied against the real property in the village.

It is the village’s position that under sections 34 and 35 of the Village Law, the real property within its corporate limits ceased to be part of the sanitary district upon the village’s incorporation on June 21, 1962; that the defendants have no right to continue to contract for garbage removal after January 1, 1966, or to cause taxes to be levied for that purpose. The defendant, on the other hand, claims these rights; denies the district was reduced after incorporation; and urges that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest.

[196]*196When the plaintiff was incorporated as a village in 1962, sections 34 and 35 of the Village Law were in effect. These sections, however, were repealed and sections 3-358 and 3-360 were enacted containing the same language as the old sections 34 and 35. In relation to the incorporation of villages, section 3-358 (formerly § 34), which is entitled “Liability to special districts and collection of taxes ’ ’, provides in part as follows: 1 ‘ If the territory so incorporated as a village includes within its boundaries part of a special district established by the town for a sewer, water, light, fire, park, health, police or any other special district for municipal purposes the territory so included within the boundaries of the village shall not be relieved from bearing its proportionate share of any liability or indebtedness incurred for such special district purposes while such territory was a part of such special district ”.

Section 3-360 (formerly § 35), which is entitled “ Apportionment of property and obligations of a special district of a town upon the incorporation of a part in a village ” provides in part as follows: “If the territory so incorporated as a village includes within its boundaries part of a special district established by the town for a sewer, water, light, fire, park, health, police or any other special district for municipal purposes, the proportion of the bonded debt incurred by the town and payable by a tax against the property within a special district, for whose benefit the bonds were issued which shall be assumed by the village and the apportionment of personal and real property belonging to the special district shall be determined according to the relative assessed valuation of the personal and real property in that portion of the special district without the village and that portion within the village ’ ’.

It is the plaintiff’s contention that these statutes implicitly preclude the sanitary district from exercising any jurisdiction or rights within the territorial limits of the village and from binding the village by any contract for garbage removal after January 1, 1966.

In Village of Mill Neck v. Town of Oyster Bay (261 N. Y. 252), a question was presented as to whether there should be a partition and division of water district assets between the district and certain villages after the villages were incorporated. Pumping stations, pipes, distributing mains, had been constructed and the system had served the areas which later constituted these villages. The judgment of the lower court, entered on a Referee’s report, denied partition but, construing sections 34 and 35 of the Village Law, decreed that the villages involved were each entitled to a percentage interest in the prop[197]*197erty of the district. The Appellate Division affirmed that part of the judgment which denied the partition, but reversed as to the allocation of percentage interest. The Court of Appeals reversed the Appellate Division, stating as follows (pp. 255-256): ‘ Appellant concedes that the difficulties relating to an actual division of tangible property are great and possibly insurmountable. To conclude, therefore, that the Legislature intended to thrust upon the courts the duty of encountering a task so nearly impossible of fulfillment is scarcely conceivable. Whatever the statute may mean, we cannot think that its language leads to any such result. That it means more than the interpretation given it by the Appellate Division seems probable. According to that interpretation, the villages are entitled to no interest, not even an undivided and indivisible share in the property of the district. The statute (L. 1925, ch. 116) by which section 35 was added to the Village Law is entitled an act ‘ in relation to the apportionment of property and obligations ’ of a special district, and the caption of this section bears the same import.

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Related

Village of Mill Neck v. Town of Oyster Bay
185 N.E. 91 (New York Court of Appeals, 1933)
Village of Kensington v. Town of North Hempstead
185 N.E. 94 (New York Court of Appeals, 1933)
Rinas v. Duryea
278 A.D. 419 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1951)
Rinas v. Duryea
107 N.E.2d 80 (New York Court of Appeals, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
48 Misc. 2d 193, 264 N.Y.S.2d 562, 1965 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/incorporated-village-of-atlantic-beach-v-kimmel-nysupct-1965.