Lewis Family Farm, Inc. v. Adirondack Park Agency

22 Misc. 3d 568
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedNovember 19, 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 3d 568 (Lewis Family Farm, Inc. v. Adirondack Park Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis Family Farm, Inc. v. Adirondack Park Agency, 22 Misc. 3d 568 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard B. Meyer, J.

Consolidated proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 challenging a determination by the respondent Adirondack Park Agency (Agency) dated March 25, 2008 which, inter alla, directed petitioner Lewis Family Farm, Inc. (LFF) to apply to the Agency for a permit for three new single-family dwellings and a four-lot subdivision, pay a $50,000 civil penalty, and not to occupy the dwellings until a permit was issued, and an action by the Agency to enforce the determination and enjoin LFF from working on or using the dwellings and further violating the Executive Law.

I. Factual Background

The essential facts are, for the most part, not in dispute. LFF owns and operates an eleven hundred acre organic farm in the Town of Essex, Essex County, New York designated as a single parcel of land on the official county tax maps and town tax rolls. The property lies wholly within the Adirondack Park and within Essex County Agricultural District No. 4. The subject parcel is classified on the Adirondack Park Land Use and Development Plan Map as resource management, rural use and hamlet. In or about November 2006, LFF commenced construction of three single-family dwelling units, to be used by employees working on the farm, on a portion of its property classified as resource management, one of which would replace an [570]*570adjacent preexisting dwelling scheduled for removal upon completion of the new homes. The dwellings are arranged in a cluster at a site located immediately north and east of the intersection of Whallons Bay Road and Christian Road, and approximately 800 feet (but less than one quarter of a mile) from the Boquet, also known as Bouquet River, a designated recreational river (ECL 15-2714 [3] [e]) under the Wild, Scenic and Recreational Rivers System Act (Rivers Act) (ECL 15-2701 et seq.).

Subsequently, on March 14, 2007, LEE submitted an application to the Agency seeking a permit to construct “three single family dwellings in a farm compound to be used by farm employees exclusively.” The next day, the Agency issued a notice of incomplete application and requested additional information. Over the next three months, the parties and their representatives engaged in unsuccessful negotiations over disputed issues, including the Agency’s threatened enforcement action and a proposed settlement agreement (9 NYCRR 581-2.5) which called for LEE to apply for after-the-fact permits for the subdivision and the single-family dwellings, as well as pay a $10,000 civil penalty. On June 27, 2007, the Agency’s acting executive director issued a cease and desist order (9 NYCRR 581-2.4) to LEE prohibiting “any and all land use and development related to the construction of the single family dwellings . . . until this matter is resolved and the enforcement case is concluded.” The following day, LEE commenced a declaratory judgment action against the Agency challenging jurisdiction.

After LEE filed an amended complaint and applied for a temporary restraining order, the parties exchanged motions to dismiss under CPLR 3211. LEE claimed the Agency lacked jurisdiction over its farm worker housing project because the structures were “agricultural use structures” (Executive Law § 802 [8]) in a “resource management area” (Executive Law § 805 [3] [g]), and also that any assertion of jurisdiction by the Agency violated Agriculture and Markets Law § 305-a. The Agency, citing CPLR 7801 (1), moved to convert the action to an article 78 proceeding and for dismissal on the grounds that the action was “premature and not ripe for judicial review because the State defendant has not issued a final determination,” and for failing to state a cause of action “because Agriculture and Markets Law § 305-a does not preclude the APA from requiring a permit for subdivision of land and construction of single family dwellings.” On August 16, 2007, Supreme Court (Ryan, J.) [571]*571dismissed the proceeding as premature and not ripe for judicial intervention, and also held that Agriculture and Markets Law § 305-a did not apply to a state agency. LFF filed a notice of appeal, and the appeal is pending.

Following dismissal of the converted article 78 proceeding, LFF continued to construct the single-family dwellings. One of the Agency’s associate attorneys served a letter on LFF’s counsel on August 31, 2007 advising that the previous cease and desist order remained in effect. On or about September 2, 2007, the Agency’s acting executive director issued a notice of apparent violation (9 NYCRR 581-2.3), thereby initiating an enforcement proceeding before the Agency’s enforcement committee (9 NYCRR 581-2.6 [b]).

The enforcement committee, consisting of six of the Agency’s 11 members (Executive Law § 803), convened on March 13, 2008 to “hear an oral presentation or argument by the agency’s staff and by the respondent and deliberate in executive session and subsequently make a determination as provided in” 9 NYCRR 581-2.6 (d) (record document No. 2 at 2). Also in attendance were the remaining five members of the Agency. In that hearing, Agency staff conceded that LFF was “clearly using the land for agricultural use purposes,” and that “[t]he agricultural use of resource management lands is listed by law as a primary compatible use and does not require an agency permit” (id. at 6). Staff argued, however, that a “single family dwelling” could not be an “agricultural use structure” under the Adirondack Park Agency Act (APA Act) (Executive Law art 27; record document No. 2 at 8, 13), and that, therefore, permits for the three single-family dwellings on land classified as resource management, as well as for subdivision of that land, were required under the APA Act and the Rivers Act (id. at 7-11). In so concluding, Agency staff contended that statutory construction favored specific over general definitions, and that the APA Act’s definition of a “single family dwelling” was specific, while that of “agricultural use structure” was general (id. at 10). Staff also asserted that because the APA Act’s definition of “principal building” included reference to both agricultural use structures and single-family dwellings, the Legislature intended them to be “separate and different types of structures for purposes of agency jurisdiction” (id. at 11). Counsel for LFF argued that the language of the APA Act supported a conclusion that a single-family dwelling used for agricultural purposes could be an agricultural use structure and exempt from Agency jurisdic[572]*572tian. Moreover, no subdivision permit would be required since the three dwellings would constitute a single principal building under the APA Act.

On March 25, 2008, the Agency’s enforcement committee, made up of a quorum of the Agency (Executive Law § 803), issued a unanimous determination (the Agency’s determination) that LFF violated the APA Act by failing to obtain a subdivision permit and a permit authorizing construction of two of the dwelling units. Since the determination was approved by the “affirmative vote by a majority of the members of the agency” (Executive Law § 803), it constitutes an action by the Agency (id.; see also General Construction Law § 41; Rockland Woods v Incorporated Vil. of Suffern, 40 AD2d 385 [1973]). In arriving at its determination, the Agency held that “farm worker dwellings are ‘single family dwellings’ (or possibly ‘multiple family dwellings’ or ‘mobile homes,’ depending upon the type of dwelling structure), and not ‘agricultural use structures’ ” under the APA Act (record document No. 1 at 8).

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 3d 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-family-farm-inc-v-adirondack-park-agency-nyappterm-2008.