Incorporated Village of Nissequogue v. Meixsell

55 Misc. 2d 1069, 287 N.Y.S.2d 555, 1968 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1777
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 Misc. 2d 1069 (Incorporated Village of Nissequogue v. Meixsell) 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 Nissequogue v. Meixsell, 55 Misc. 2d 1069, 287 N.Y.S.2d 555, 1968 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1777 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

John P. Cohalan, Jr., J.

Defendants move (1) to cancel and vacate the notice of pendency of action filed herein and (2) to dismiss the complaint for insufficiency as a matter of law, pursuant to CPLR 3211 (subd. [a], par. 7). No. 1 is granted and No. 2 is denied. Plaintiff’s cross motion for summary judgment is denied.

The complaint prays for judgment enjoining and restraining defendants from selling or offering for sale, lease or rent any part of a tract of land owned by defendants in the Incorporated Village of Nissequogue, Town of Smithtown, County of Suffolk.

Defendants are the owners of 24.8 acres of land within the village. The parcel has existing street and road frontage of 3,200 feet. In August, 1964 defendant, Edward Meixsell, the then owner of record of the entire parcel of land, caused 1 ‘ Map of Land located at Nissequogue ” to be prepared by licensed surveyors. The map shows the property is subdivided into 12 parcels of land, each of different size and road frontage. By a process often referred to as “ checkerboarding ’ ’, defendant Edward Meixsell conveyed portions of the tracts of land to the codefendants, Jean Audrey Meixsell and Dentrac Shopping Plaza, Inc. These deeds were all dated April 5, 1965 and were recorded in the Suffolk County Clerk’s office on April 6, 1965. [1070]*1070The deeds separate the record title so as to avoid record ownership of adjoining parcels under the same name.

No subdivision map was approved or filed as provided for in section 179-m of the Village Law, section 335 of the Beal Property Law and section 1115 of the Public Health Law. Plaintiff claims that all these laws were violated by defendants in failing to obtain the approval of the Planning Board of the village for a subdivision map.. It further contends that defendant should have obtained the approval of the Suffolk County Department of Health pursuant to the provisions of section 1115 et seq. of the Public Health Law. Section 1115 defines a subdivision as follows: “As used in sections one thousand one hundred fifteen to one thousand one hundred eighteen of this chapter, inclusive, the word subdivision ’ shall mean any tract of land which is hereafter divided into five or more parcels along an existing or proposed street, hightoay, easement or right-of-way for sale or for rent as residential lots or residential building plots¡ regardless of whether the lots or plots to be sold or offered for sale, or leased for any period of time, are described by metes and bounds or by reference to a map or survey of the property or by any other method of description.” (Italics ours.)

Section 335 of the Beal Property Law provides in connection with the subject of maps the following: “ It shall be the duty of every person or corporation * * * who as owner or agent subdivides real property in Suffolk county into lots, plots, blocks or sites, with or without streets, for the purpose of offering such lots, plots, blocks or sites for sale to the public, regardless of how they are conveyed, to file or cause to be filed in the office of the county clerk of Suffolk county a map thereof together with a certificate of the surveyor endorsed on the face of such map certifying same to have been made from an actual survey of the property and the date of the completion of the survey * * *. Likewise, every such subdivision map of property located wholly or partly within an incorporated village, shall before the filing thereof as hereinbefore provided, have endorsed on the face thereof in writing the approval of the planning board of such village, or in a village not having a planning board, the approval of the board of trustees ’ \

Section 179-m of the Village Law provides for the approval of maps for filing and recording the notification as to the filing.

Defendants contend that when they acquired title to the various lots or parcels of land as subdivided between themselves, the village ordinance relating to subdivision maps did not apply to the map caused to be prepared by defendant Edward Meixsell, as there were no new streets, highways or roads shown on the [1071]*1071map. They say further that it was not until seven months after the transfer of title to the various parcels was effected, namely November 22,1965, that the village extended its ordinance so as to include subdivision of property ‘ ‘ with or without streets or highways ”.

On a different tack they contend also that pursuant to the theory of single and separate ownership ” set forth in the opinions of the undersigned: Matter of Kollmer v. Horn (Zoning Bd. of Appeals, Town of Huntington) (N. Y. L. J., June 29, 1964, p. 14, col. 7); Matter of Moskeland v. Horn (Zoning Bd. of Appeals, Town of Huntington) (N. Y. L. J., Oct. 28, 1964, p. 21, col. 7); and Town of Smithtown v. Mendozza (N. Y. L. J., Jan. 23, 1967, p. 21, col. 4) the subsequent adoption on November 22, 1967 of the amendment of the ordinance relating to planning board maps of the Village of Nissequogue, was not applicable retroactively to the property of the defendants.

The difficulty with this latter argument is that the “ single and separate ownership ” doctrine is applicable only to parcels of land which are rendered useless by reason of inadequacy in size due to subsequent municipal legislation which forbids the use of such parcels for any .purpose after title is vested in a property owner. We do not have a similar situation in the instant action. The beneficent purpose of subdivision planning would be nullified if defendants could avoid filing of subdivision maps merely by transferring titles or portions of their property.

See Corpus Juris Secundum (vol. 62, Municipal Corporations, § 83, p. 198):

‘ ‘ General Considerations
1 ‘ Municipal planning is designed to preserve the public health and welfare, and to promote an harmonious and a systematic municipal growth in accordance with the needs of the whole community rather than those of any particular area thereof.
‘ ‘ While * planning ’ and 1 zoning ’ are sometimes considered so closely akin as to constitute a single concept, they do not cover identical fields of municipal endeavor and the terms are not interchangeable. Municipal1 planning ’ is a term of broader significance than ‘ zoning ’ and is designed to promote the public health and welfare, and to preserve through a governmental agency a uniform and harmonious development of the growth of a municipality and to prevent the individual owner from laying out streets to his own will without official approval. 1 Planning ’ connotes a systematic development contrived to serve the common interest in matters embraced within the police power, having particular reference to the location, character and extent of [1072]*1072streets, squares and parks, and to the mapping and charting incidental thereto

In Matter of Brous v. Smith (304 N. Y. 164, 168) the Court of Appeals emphasized the importance of municipal planning and stated the following: “ The challenged regulation is an enactment in that important field of legislation concerned with the problem of community planning and designed to secure the ‘ uniform and harmonious development of the growth ’ of our villages, towns and cities and continued (p.

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55 Misc. 2d 1069, 287 N.Y.S.2d 555, 1968 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/incorporated-village-of-nissequogue-v-meixsell-nysupct-1968.