Meltzer v. City of New York

146 A.D.2d 397
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 9, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 146 A.D.2d 397 (Meltzer v. City of New York) 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
Meltzer v. City of New York, 146 A.D.2d 397 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Smith, J.

The central question raised by this appeal is whether the July 15, 1986 vote by the Landmarks Preservation Commission, (Landmarks Commission) or its October 3, 1986 letter entitled "Notice of Approval”, indicating its approval of certain alterations to the interior of the Beacon Theater, subject to stated conditions precedent, constitutes a reviewable "final determination” within the meaning of CPLR 7801, making the issues raised by the petition "ripe” for judicial review.

[399]*399In December of 1979, the Landmarks Commission, pursuant to Administrative Code of the City of New York § 25-303 (a), designated portions of the interior of the Beacon Theater, located at 2124-34 Broadway, New York City, as a landmark. In doing so the Commission stated: "the interior of the Beacon Theater survives as one of the great movie palaces of New York * * * it is a lavish space * * * designed * * * to create an exciting theatrical experience * * * and * * * through its design the interior * * * offers a sense of the fantasy and drama of the theater.”

The theater had not been used as a movie palace for sometime prior to 1979 and in recent years has been used primarily for rock and roll concerts.

On or about February 6, 1986, the owner of the theater, respondent Beacon Broadway Company and its net lessee, Babylon Enterprises, Inc. (the Babylon Group) filed an application with the Landmarks Commission for a certificate of appropriateness (Certificate) pursuant to the Administrative Code § 25-309 (formerly § 207-8.0). The Babylon Group sought permission to put a cabaret and discotheque, including a dance floor, bar, restaurant, and kitchen area, in the theater.

The proposed alterations were to include the removal of seats from the orchestra area and from a balcony. Certain landmark protected lighting fixtures also were to be removed and along with the seats stored in a warehouse for future restoration. Mechanical, electrical and lighting systems were to be permanently upgraded. A nonpermanent, free-standing dance floor with a mechanical supporting superstructure for a network of cables, a sprinkler system, lights and loud speakers, were to be constructed. On the second and third floors a kitchen and pantry were to be added and on a balcony, restaurant tables and chairs. Finally, the Babylon Group planned to establish an escrow fund which would allow for restoration of the theater at the end of its seven-year lease.

The application aroused intense public interest. Hundreds of letters were received by the Landmarks Commission both in support of and in opposition to approval. The Landmarks Commission considered testimony by architects, engineers, acoustical consultants, heating, ventilation and air-conditioning specialists, a scenic designer, architectural historian, and representatives of various preservationist groups.

[400]*400At a public executive session held on July 15, 1986 the Commission voted to grant a certificate provided that certain conditions were satisfied by the applicants and on October 3, 1986 the Commission issued a notice of approval letter. The letter states in bold capital letters "this is not a permit”. The letter goes on to advise the applicants that the Landmarks Commission has voted to grant a certificate but that approval is subject to a number of conditions which provisions "must be met in order to further assure the continued preversation [sic] of the landmark”. These provisions include the following: submission of a survey detailing which portions of the structure are to be removed and which are to be incorporated into the design and the address of the warehouse in which the removed portions are to be placed; development by the applicant, in conjunction with the Commission’s staff, of a detailed plan for the new installations which minimizes the adverse impact on the theater’s interior; approval of detailed construction drawings and work outline; submission of a declaration establishing an escrow account, together with a letter of credit or evidence of other appropriate commitment of funds needed to restore the theater at the end of the three-year approval period, and establishment of an ongoing monitoring and inspection program during the cabaret’s period of operation. The notice of approval closed by stating: "At such times as a set of construction drawings outlining all work and details, as well as all other provisos contained herewith are in place, a Certificate of Appropriateness will be issued in conformance with the action taken by the Commission. No work described in this letter is authorized to proceed prior to the issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness.”

Thereafter, the Committee to Save the Beacon Theater (the Committee), a staunch opponent of the proposed alterations, commenced the instant proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78. The petition alleged that the Commission’s approval, as evidenced by the notice of approval, was arbitrary and capricious because the proposed alterations would damage the interior of the Beacon, that the proposed uses were improper, that the Commission held Babylon to a lower standard of appropriateness because of the temporary nature of its proposed alterations (Administrative Code § 25-307 et seq., formerly § 207-6.0 et seq.), and that no environmental review had occurred. (New York State Environment Quality Review Act; New York City Executive Order No. 91.)

The owner of the theater, the lessee corporation and the [401]*401City of New York, on behalf of itself and the Landmarks Commission, each answered the petition, the city arguing, inter alia, that the petition should be dismissed as premature since no certificate of appropriateness had been issued. In this regard an affidavit by the Commission’s chairperson, Gene Norman, was submitted in which he stated that a certificate of appropriateness could not be issued until detailed construction drawings which accurately reflect the proposal had been submitted. He further indicated that the intermediate step of writing notice of approval letters was instituted by the Commission in part to accommodate applicants who "were reluctant understandably to expend the substantial sums necessary to have construction drawings prepared for submission with a permit application without some indication from the Commission that they were not pursuing a design that had no chance of approval.” The chairperson noted that the need to review detailed construction drawings was especially strong in this case "given the nature of some of the unresolved details”, design revisions in the proposal and conditions which had been established by the Commission.

However, thé lessee’s architect Charles Pratt, a former member of the Landmarks Commission, in an affidavit described the Commission’s July 8, 1986 vote as a final determination, noting that Administrative Code § 25-308 requires that the Commission resolve an application for a Certificate within 90 days and that the agency considers its 90 days to run from the time a request for a Certificate is filed until the Commission votes. In response to the Pratt affidavit, the Commission’s chairperson submitted a second affidavit in which he stated that where an applicant has failed to satisfy the conditions set forth in a notice of approval, the Commission could vote to deny the Certificate and hence, the notice cannot be considered a final determination.

The Committee also commenced an action against the owners and lessee of the Beacon Theater seeking an order barring alteration of the theater.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A.D.2d 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meltzer-v-city-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1989.