Matter of Ranco Sand & Stone Corp. v. Vecchio

124 A.D.3d 73, 998 N.Y.S.2d 68
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 26, 2014
Docket2012-05135
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 124 A.D.3d 73 (Matter of Ranco Sand & Stone Corp. v. Vecchio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Ranco Sand & Stone Corp. v. Vecchio, 124 A.D.3d 73, 998 N.Y.S.2d 68 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Dickerson, J.E

Introduction

The petitioner, Raneo Sand and Stone Corp. (hereinafter Raneo), owns a parcel of real property in Kings Park. The subject parcel has been leased to third parties for use primarily as a bus yard and trucking station. In 2002, Raneo filed an application with the Town of Smithtown to rezone the subject parcel to change its zoning designation from residential to heavy industrial. Several years later, the respondents Patrick Vecchio, Thomas J. McCarthy, Edward Wehrheim, Patricia Biancaneillo, and Robert J. Creighton, constituting the Town Board of the Town of Smithtown (hereinafter the Town Board), upon determining that the proposed zoning change may have a significant effect on the environment, issued a positive declaration pursuant to the State Environmental Quality Review Act (ECL art 8; hereinafter SEQRA), requiring Raneo to prepare and circulate a draft environmental impact statement (hereinafter DEIS). Raneo commenced this proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 against the Town and the members of the Town Board (hereinafter collectively the respondents) seeking to annul the Town Board’s determination approving a resolution issuing a SEQRA positive declaration on the ground that the approval of the resolution was arbitrary and capricious.

*75 On this appeal, we address whether, under the particular circumstances of this case, the issuance of a SEQRA positive declaration constitutes a matter ripe for judicial review, or merely a preliminary step in the decision-making process. Upon considering all of the relevant factors and circumstances, we conclude that the matter, at this stage, does not give rise to a justiciable controversy ripe for review.

Factual and Procedural Background

Raneo is a domestic corporation, with its principal place of business in the County of Suffolk. Peter J. Horan was the sole owner of Raneo until his death in 1998. Upon Horan’s death, and at all times since, Raneo has been owned by Marilyn A. Ho-ran, Peter J. Horan’s widow, as majority owner, and by Matthew Metz as minority owner.

Raneo owns a 2.16-acre parcel of real property (hereinafter the subject parcel) located at 154 Old Northport Road, Kings Park, in the County of Suffolk. Raneo acquired title to the subject parcel by deed dated December 29, 1992. Raneo leased the subject parcel to third parties, and the parcel was developed and utilized as a bus yard and trucking station with administrative offices and a single-family residence built more than 60 years ago, which is used by a security guard. Raneo itself does not occupy any portion of the subject parcel.

In 2002, Raneo filed an application with the Town to rezone the subject parcel to amend its zoning designation from R-43 (residential) to HI (heavy industrial). A hearing on the application was held on November 6, 2002. On March 17, 2004, the Planning Board of the Town of Smithtown (hereinafter the Planning Board) voted to recommend the approval of Ranco’s application for rezoning.

No further action on the application was taken for more than five years, until August 11, 2009, at which time the Town Board adopted a resolution issuing a positive declaration pursuant to SEQRA, upon concluding that the proposed rezoning of the subject parcel “may have a significant effect on the environment and that preparation of a draft environmental impact statement will be required.” Among the stated reasons for requiring this level of environmental review was that the proposed use of the subject parcel would be incompatible with existing residential land uses in the vicinity.

By notice of petition and verified petition dated December 3, 2009, Raneo commenced this proceeding pursuant to CPLR *76 article 78, seeking to annul the Town Board’s determination approving the resolution issuing a SEQRA positive declaration, which required Raneo to prepare and circulate a DEIS, on the ground that the determination was arbitrary and capricious. Raneo also sought relief in the nature of mandamus, directing the Town to process the application for rezoning in the absence of the DEIS.

In support of its petition, Raneo relied on the fact that an adjacent 3.36-acre parcel at 152 Old Northport Road (hereinafter the adjacent parcel) had been rezoned after litigation from residential to heavy industrial without any formal environmental review. The adjacent parcel was owned by the Peter J. Horan Trust, of which Marilyn A. Horan was the sole beneficiary. Setting forth the events that resulted in the rezoning of that property, the petition alleged that, in 1987, Peter J. Horan had submitted an application to the Town Board to rezone the adjacent parcel from R-21 and R-43 to HI. Following public hearings, the Town Board denied the application on May 3, 1988, but the Town Board did not issue a SEQRA positive declaration prior to its denial of the rezoning application. Thereafter, Peter Horan commenced a declaratory judgment action (hereinafter the prior action) against, among others, the Town, challenging the denial of the rezoning application for the adjacent parcel. In an order dated April 5, 1991, the Supreme Court, Suffolk County (Floyd, J.), denied the Town’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, and this Court affirmed that order (see Horan v Town of Smithtown, 194 AD2d 714 [1993]).

Shortly after Peter J. Horan’s death, a motion was made in the prior action to amend the caption to substitute Marilyn A. Horan, as the executor of the estate of Peter J. Horan, and to amend the complaint. In an order dated December 23, 1999, the Supreme Court granted that relief, noting that, according to the parties’ representations, notwithstanding the residential zoning designation of the adjacent parcel, it had, in fact, been used for light and heavy industrial purposes. Prior to issuing its order, with the consent of both parties and counsel, the Justice presiding over the proceeding visited the adjacent parcel in May 1999. In the order dated December 23, 1999, the court drew on the observations it had made during its visit when it stated, in part,

“the ineluctable conclusion seems to be that the Town of Smithtown has been inexcusably lax in the enforcement of its zoning ordinance over the past *77 ten years, or has permitted a de facto change in the nature of the area without enacting the necessary legislation to make the on-going activities legal.
“On the face of what the undersigned has observed to date, the Town of Smithtown should have taken some remedial action long ago: either enforcement of zoning restrictions, or reasonable modification of its zoning ordinance.
“Indeed, the major environmental effects that have resulted from the heavy industrial and light industrial uses and mining operations ... in the residentially zoned area have been permitted to go on and increase under the watch of the Town of Smithtown, apparently without any formal environmental assessment of the impact. To allow the situation to continue merely to allow the Town of Smithtown to pass on the cost of environmental review to another party is not a persuasive reason to deny relief to the plaintiff that may be warranted by the current facts and circumstances.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 A.D.3d 73, 998 N.Y.S.2d 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-ranco-sand-stone-corp-v-vecchio-nyappdiv-2014.