Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v. Washington County Sewer Dist. II

CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 11, 2026
DocketCV-25-0958
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v. Washington County Sewer Dist. II (Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v. Washington County Sewer Dist. II) 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 Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v. Washington County Sewer Dist. II, (N.Y. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v Washington County Sewer Dist. II - 2026 NY Slip Op 03719
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Law Reporting
Bureau
Thomas J.K. Smith, State Reporter

Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v Washington County Sewer Dist. II

2026 NY Slip Op 03719

June 11, 2026

Appellate Division, Third Department

Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.

This decision is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.

In the Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P., et al., Respondents,

v

Washington County Sewer District II et al., Appellants.

Decided and Entered:June 11, 2026

CV-25-0958

Calendar Date: April 21, 2026

Before: Garry, P.J., Ceresia, Powers And Mackey, JJ.

Johnson & Laws, LLC, Clifton Park (April J. Laws of counsel), for appellants.

Goldman Attorneys PLLC, Albany (Paul J. Goldman of counsel), for respondents.

[*1]

Garry, P.J.

Appeal from an order and judgment of the Supreme Court (Amy Quinn, J.), entered June 10, 2025 in Washington County, which partially granted petitioners' application, in a combined proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 and action for declaratory judgment, to declare invalid Local Law No. 2024-01 of County of Washington.

In this litigation, petitioners — the present owners of a multiunit residential development — challenge the legality of a fee required to connect their property to respondents' sewerage system. Some background is needed to understand, and thus analyze, that fee. Respondent Washington County Sewer District II (hereinafter WCSDII), formed in 1983, operates a wastewater collection system through which the sewer systems of the Village of Hudson Falls, the Village of Fort Edward and the Town of Fort Edward are conveyed to a wastewater treatment plant before being discharged into the Hudson River (see generally County Law art 5-A). To finance WCSDII's debt service and operation and maintenance costs, respondent Washington County enacted Local Law No. 1989-04, which established a schedule of charges for the discharge of sewage into WCSDII's sewerage system, including annual ad valorem assessments for debt service (see Local Law No. 1989-04 of County of Washington, art III, §§ A, D); annual operation and maintenance costs apportioned among users in accordance with their proportional share of such costs (see Local Law No. 1989-04 of County of Washington, art IV, § A); and extraneous flow charges proportionate to users' volume discharge (see Local Law No. 1989-04 of County of Washington, art IV, § F; see generally County Law § 266). The 1989 local law also permitted the collection of those same charges from out-of-district users, provided they were computed in the same manner as the charges for in-district users (see Local Law No. 1989-04 of County of Washington, art V, §§ A, B).

In 2006, WCSDII entered into an agreement with nonparty Ark Development Group, LLC — a predecessor in title of petitioners — whereby WCSDII agreed to provide sewer disposal treatment services to the subject property, located in the neighboring Town of Kingsbury, "on the same terms and conditions as may be established for those users located within [the district]" and Ark agreed to pay a fee "based upon the assessed value of the subject property, water usage, unit charges,[FN1] sewer types, and other such factors as may be utilized" by WCSDII (see generally County Law § 265). By its own terms, that agreement was set to terminate if the property became included within the boundaries of a duly formed sewer district. That occurred in 2007, when, upon Ark's proposal, the Town of Kingsbury formed Kingsbury Sewer District No. 2 (hereinafter KSD2). In exchange for the establishment of KSD2, Ark agreed to plan for, undertake and finance the construction of the infrastructure and improvements required for the establishment of the new sewer district and to arrange for the transfer [*2]of same to the Town or KSD2 upon its completion at no cost to the Town.

The type of charge that is at issue on this appeal was first imposed, informally, in or around 2005 and was later codified in 2013 when Washington County amended Local Law No. 1989-04 to authorize various new miscellaneous charges upon a finding that new users both inside and outside WCSDII should bear responsibility for improvements necessitated by their demand and recognizing that such out-of-district property owners had not contributed to district taxes (see Local Law No. 2013-09 of County of Washington § 2 [a]). Those new charges included a connection fee (see Local Law No. 2013-09 of County of Washington § 5). For in-district property owners, the connection fee was set at $1,000, in addition to any applicable review fees, with the fee required to be segregated and used to mitigate "inflow and infiltration" — that is, stormwater and groundwater that enters the sewer system and increases the overall flow (Local Law No. 2013-09 of County of Washington § 5). For out-of-district property owners, the fee was set at $2,500, again in addition to review fees, and was required to be "used for expanding and improving the existing sewage treatment plant and collection system of [WCSDII]" (Local Law No. 2013-09 of County of Washington § 2). In apparent conformity with its prior practice, WCSDII implemented those connection charges on a per-unit basis.

In 2021, the Town of Kingsbury, on behalf of KSD2 and another sewer district, entered into an intermunicipal agreement with Washington County, on behalf of WCSDII, for sewer operation, maintenance and billing (see generally County Law § 265). In exchange for its services and oversight of the sanitary sewer system servicing the Town's users, WCSDII agreed to bill the Town's users its "costs and expenses incurred . . . under [the] agreement," including, but not limited to, a set usage charge (or equivalent dwelling unit charge for nonmetered uses) to cover operating expenses, an equivalent ad valorem charge as charged to WCSDII users, and a surcharge per user or equivalent dwelling unit for future repair or replacement of KSD2 infrastructure connected to WCSDII. Charges for those not yet connected to KSD2 and WCSDII were not explicitly addressed.

Petitioner Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. acquired the subject property and all rights to the project being developed thereon at some point in early 2022, and Schermerhorn later conveyed same to petitioner Dean Quarry Apartments, LLC and became the sole member thereof. As ultimately developed, the property consists of nine buildings with a total of 252 residential units. Petitioners advise that the project is substantially complete. Once connected, the property's main sewer line will require a single connection to an existing manhole owned by KSD2, which will then flow within KSD2's infrastructure to WCSDII's system per the 2021 intermunicipal agreement.

In 2023, Washington County updated [*3]

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Matter of Schermerhorn Residential Holdings, L.P. v. Washington County Sewer Dist. II, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-schermerhorn-residential-holdings-lp-v-washington-county-nyappdiv-2026.