Long Island Lighting Co. v. Horn

49 Misc. 2d 717, 268 N.Y.S.2d 366, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1543
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 Misc. 2d 717 (Long Island Lighting Co. v. Horn) 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
Long Island Lighting Co. v. Horn, 49 Misc. 2d 717, 268 N.Y.S.2d 366, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1543 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Fred J. Munder, J.

In this article 78 proceeding the petitioner seeks to review and annul the determination of the Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of Huntington which denied an application for a special exception permit to erect an overhead electric transmission line on a right of way owned by the petitioner or over which it has appropriate easements. The transmission line is to run from a new generating station to be constructed on a 250-acre site on Long Island Sound just east of the Villages of Northport and Asharoken Beach in the Town of Huntington to the petitioner’s Pilgrim substation adjacent to the Sunken Meadow State Parkway just south of Commaek in the Town of Smithtown, a total distance of about seven or eight miles.

On the argument before the court it was revealed that for about a half-mile from the generating station the transmission line is to be installed underground in compliance with a condition imposed by the Town Board on its grant of the permit to erect the generating station at the site above mentioned. For that reason and for the reason that the right of way condemnation proceedings had not been concluded with respect to land north of New York State Route 25A, the present application relates to the right of way beginning on the south side of Route 25A and running south and east for a distance of three and one-tenth miles to the town line of the Town of Smithtown.

The petitioner states that this right of way runs first through a sparsely settled residential area, then for six tenths, of a miV [719]*719through land of the United States Government on which the Veterans’ Administration Hospital is located, thence through a relatively undeveloped residential area and a former sand pit to the westerly boundary line of the town garbage dump which it follows for a distance of three tenths of a mile and thence runs easterly to the town line. The respondent, on the other hand, says that the route of the right of way runs through some of the finest high ground wooded residential areas in the town which are zoned for residential use on two-acre (Residence A) and one-acre (Residence B) plots, and where the character has been established for custom built residential development. To thrust this, the largest transmission line in petitioner’s system, through such an area, denuding the right of way of trees over its width, varying from 200 to 250 feet, and erecting thereon steel towers varying in height from 90 feet to 120 feet, three or four abreast with three arms to each tower, carrying high tension lines, the respondent found, would adversely affect the character of the neighborhood and depreciate the values of the surrounding properties.

The petition to the Board of Appeals was for a special use permit pursuant to section 2-B of article IX of the Building Zone Ordinance “ to construct, operate and maintain an electric transmission line consisting of steel towers, wires, counterpoises, conduits, pipes, cables and other appurtenant overhead and underground facilities ” on its right of way and for a variance of section 1 of article XII of said ordinance to permit the construction of steel towers in excess of 85 feet.

Section 2-B of article IX, so far as is here pertinent, reads:

“ Section 2. The Board of Appeals may in a specific case after the refusal of the Building Inspector to issue a building permit after a public notice and hearing, and subject to appropriate conditions and safeguards, determine and vary the application of the regulations herein established in harmony with their general purpose and intent as follows: * # *

“ B. Grant a permit for any public utility in any district.”

The ordinance provides general standards which are applicable to special exception permits. These are found in section 6 of article IX and read:

“ Section 6. Standards. The Board of Appeals shall not grant a permit for any special exception unless it shall first determine that:

“A. It is reasonably necessary for the public health or general welfare and interest.

[720]*720“ B. It is appropriately located with respect to transportation facilities, water supply, fire and police protection, waste disposal and similar facilities.

“ 0. Neighborhood character and surrounding property values are reasonably safeguarded.

‘ ‘ D. Úse will not cause undue traffic congestion or create a traffic hazard.”

After an exhaustive hearing, lasting more than five and one-half hours on two evenings, during which some 18 witnesses were heard and 34 exhibits were introduced by the petitioner and a number of letters, memoranda and objecting statements were presented by the opposition, the board adjourned the proceedings to receive recommended findings and written briefs from both sides. Then upon considering this voluminous mass of testimony and other evidence and data the board made its findings.

Among the findings the board concluded that the transmission line was reasonably necessary for the public health and general welfare and interest but that the proposed overhead transmission line would have an overpowering effect that would dominate the area and consequently would depreciate land values and adversely affect the character of the neighborhood. For this reason the board denied the application.

The petitioner now argues that the grounds invoked by the board to deny its application must be sustained by competent evidence in the record. As a general statement this is true. Whatever decision is made by an administrative board must find its reasonable basis in competent evidence, i.e.,“fit and appropriate proof in the particular case ”. (Richardson, Evidence [8th ed.], § 4.) Here I cannot say that this board on the fit and appropriate proof before it could not reasonably reach the conclusion it did. The statements of the objectants appearing in the record may not have reached the level of admissible evidence in a court. ‘ ‘ At all events, when there is evidence in the record, whatever inferences therefrom are proper will be presumed, in aid of the dispensing resolution, to have been drawn by the Board. The statements of the witnesses do not have to comply with the technical requirements applicable to testimony in court. They are not even under oath. It is enough that reasonable men could view them as entitled to probative effect.” (Cabdozo, C. J., in People ex rel. Fordham Manor Reformed Church v. Walsh, 244 N. Y. 280, 287.)

With these rules in mind I believe that the board could give probative effect to the general opinion of the objectants’ wit[721]*721ness, David Brener, a real estate expert without personal experience in sales near transmission lines, who said that “ the value of land in the immediate area will be affected adversely by transmission towers. I also think that it will affect land as a stone dropped into water. The ripples extend outward from the towers, and the land will be affected in about that order.” This statement the board may well have found to have support in the testimony of petitioner’s experts. One, George P. Tobler, shown one of the petitioner’s photographic exhibits depicting a transmission tower in the front yard of a residence was asked “ Do you think that would affect the saleability of that home? ” and he replied “ I would say probably ”. The other, William L.

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Bluebook (online)
49 Misc. 2d 717, 268 N.Y.S.2d 366, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-island-lighting-co-v-horn-nysupct-1964.