Mamaroneck Beach & Yacht Club, Inc. v. Fraioli

12 Misc. 3d 1023
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Misc. 3d 1023 (Mamaroneck Beach & Yacht Club, Inc. v. Fraioli) 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
Mamaroneck Beach & Yacht Club, Inc. v. Fraioli, 12 Misc. 3d 1023 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Jonathan Lippman, J.

Factual and Procedural Background

This motion for contempt against respondents, when viewed in light of the two other related proceedings growing out of the same facts as this proceeding, is only the latest step in petitioner’s so far fruitless efforts to obtain approval for a site plan application which complied with the requirements found in the current version of the Zoning Code of the Village of Mamaroneck. Despite the fact that petitioner initiated the approval process for its site plan application on January 9, 2004, to date, respondents’ review of it has been in a perpetual holding pattern as the result of: (1) the vigorous opposition efforts of a local neighborhood group, Shore Acres Property Owners Association (SAPOA); (2) respondents’ appeal of the court’s April 2004 decision; and (3) respondents’ position that the Village of Mamaroneck’s Board of Trustees’ enactment of successive moratoria on all development in the Marine Recreation Zoning District— the zoning district in which the petitioner’s property is located — has stayed respondents’ ability to review and render a determination on petitioner’s site plan application.

As set forth in more detail below, the instant CPLR article 78 proceeding, originally commenced by order to show cause on April 15, 2004, involved petitioner’s request for an order of mandamus compelling respondents to initiate their review of petitioner’s site plan application and to render a determination thereon. A second article 78 proceeding (Index No. 11159/04) brought in July 2004 sought to annul the Village Board’s decision to deny petitioner a variation from a moratorium that had been enacted on April 26, 2004 and which had the effect of staying the review and approval of all applications for development of properties located in the Marine Recreation Zoning District (the MR District). The third proceeding, a declaratory judgment action (Index No. 8818/05) brought in May 2005, currently sub judice, seeks an order from this court declaring the moratoria that have been successively enacted since 2004 to be

“ultra vires, void, and an illegitimate use of the police and zoning power, in that they are not a reasonable, necessary, and limited response directed at [1025]*1025redressing a genuine crisis or emergency, or to consider comprehensive zoning changes, but a pretext to assuage strident community opposition to the Club’s plans to improve its property as of right, as permitted by the 1985 zoning ordinance and the LWRP [the Village’s Local Waterfront Revitalization Program]” (complaint 11 64).

The facts underlying the instant article 78 proceeding are not in dispute. Petitioner owns a beach and yacht club located on a 12.84-acre site in the MR District in the Village of Mamaroneck. Petitioner initially presented its proposal to the Planning Board in July 2003. Based on input received from the Planning Board and the Village’s planning consultant, Frank Fish of Buckhurst Fish & Jacquemart, Inc., on or about January 9, 2004, petitioner submitted its application for site development approval to the Planning Board.

The application involves petitioner’s proposal to make alterations to its existing clubhouse, to construct a new yacht club building, and to construct 31 seasonal residences, 20 cabanas, and 26 parking spaces (the project). The main controversy surrounding the project has to do with the construction of 31 seasonal residences (ranging in size from 700 to 1,000 square feet) which would house petitioner’s “snow bird” members during those months of the year that they utilize petitioner’s facilities (most likely for the months of April to October).

In the cover letter to the application dated January 9, 2004, petitioner requested that the application be placed on respondents’ January 22, 2004 agenda, and further set forth its understanding of the actions the Planning Board would undertake at that meeting (i.e., that the Planning Board would declare its intent to be lead agency pursuant to New York’s State Environmental Quality Review Act [SEQRA], ECL 8-0101 et seq. and begin its SEQRA and site plan review process). On or about January 14, 2004, the building inspector issued a memorandum to the Planning Board which set forth his determination that the application was consistent with certain provisions of the Zoning Code, including his view that the seasonal residences proposed were a permitted accessory use. Thereafter, in a memorandum dated February 18, 2004 from the Village’s planning consultant, Mr. Fish stated that: (1) it was the Building Department’s view that the Planning Board had a complete application before it and could proceed with its SEQRA and site [1026]*1026plan review; (2) it is “the opinion of both the Building Inspector and of Kevin Plunkett . . . [the Village Attorney] that the proposed seasonal housing can be considered accessory uses to the principal permitted use of the clubhouse.[1] Accordingly, the application is deemed appropriate as submitted in terms of its listing of permitted principal and accessory uses”; and (3) the Planning Board may proceed with its review despite the fact that the CZM (the Village’s Harbor Coastal Zone Management Commission) had not yet rendered a decision with regard to whether the application was consistent with the “local waterfront revitalization plan” (see verified petition, exhibit C, at 2).

On March 12, 2004, the attorney representing SAPOA sought review of the building inspector’s January 14, 2004 determination by filing an appeal with the Village’s Zoning Board of Appeals (the ZBA). It was SAPOA’s view “that the proposed construction of thirty-one (31) additional residential units on the site far exceeded] the permitted residential use of the property under Zoning Code former § 342-35 (B) (6) which contemplates minor residential uses as accessory to the principal permitted use as a Club” (verified petition, exhibit E). In the meantime, the Planning Board had placed petitioner’s application on its agenda for a public hearing at the Planning Board’s March 25, 2004 meeting. After learning that the Planning Board intended to proceed with their review of the project, in a letter dated March 22, 2004, SAPOA’s lawyer advised the Planning Board of SAPOA’s position that its appeal to the ZBA stayed all proceedings (including proceedings before the Planning Board) with regard to petitioner’s application until the ZBA rendered a determination on the appeal (see verified petition, exhibit F). During this same time period, the Village’s manager, in a memorandum dated March 10, 2004, had separately written to the Planning Board’s chairperson and advised him that the Village Board was considering the enactment of a moratorium so the Planning Board “may want to consider withholding any further action at this time pending the Board reaching a decision on declaring the moratorium” (verified petition, exhibit H).

[1027]*1027When petitioner appeared for the public hearing on March 25, 2004, the Planning Board adopted the position set forth in SAPOA’s lawyer’s letter and advised petitioner that no further action would be taken on the application since it was stayed pursuant to the provisions of Village Law § 7-712-a (6). At that point, petitioner sought relief from this court. Thus, on April 15, 2004, the day before the Village Board noticed the public hearing with respect to the moratorium, petitioner commenced this article 78 proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Misc. 3d 1023, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mamaroneck-beach-yacht-club-inc-v-fraioli-nysupct-2006.