Opn. No.

CourtNew York Attorney General Reports
DecidedFebruary 5, 1990
StatusPublished

This text of Opn. No. (Opn. No.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opn. No., (N.Y. 1990).

Opinion

Requestor: Honorable Thomas C. Jorling, Commissioner Department of Environmental Conservation 50 Wolf Road Albany, New York 12233

Written by: Robert Abrams, Attorney General

Your counsel raises the issue whether temporary conveyance by the State of approximately 50 acres of reforestation land, located in the Town of Brasher, St. Lawrence County, to the New York State Urban Development Corporation (the "UDC") to facilitate construction and operation by the State of an alcohol and substance abuse treatment correctional annex, pursuant to L 1983, ch 56, as amended (the "Prison Construction Act"), would violate provisions of Article XIV, § 3(1) of the N Y Constitution or Environmental Conservation Law, § 9-0501(1).

The subject parcel is located in a forest preserve county but, as reforestation land, is not part of the forest preserve (ECL, §§9-0101[6][c], 9-0501[1]).

Article XIV, § 3(1) of the New York Constitution applies to reforestation land, including reforestation lands within the forest preserve counties, and provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

"1. Forest and wild life conservation are hereby declared to be policies of the state. For the purpose of carrying out such policies the legislature may appropriate moneys for the acquisition by the state of land, outside of the Adirondack and Catskill parks as now fixed by law, for the practice of forest or wild life conservation. The prohibitions of section 1 of this article [requiring that the forest preserve be forever kept as wild forest lands, and prohibiting alienation and the sale, removal and destruction of timber] shall not apply to any lands heretofore or hereafter acquired or dedicated for such purposes within the forest preserve counties but outside of the Adirondack and Catskill parks as now fixed by law, except that such lands shall not be leased, sold or exchanged, or be taken by any corporation, public or private".

This provision, by its terms establishes that reforestation is a policy of the State. The Legislature is authorized by this provision to appropriate funds to acquire land outside the Adirondack and Catskill Parks for reforestation purposes. Thus, this provision of the Constitution is a limited authorization for the Legislature to expend funds to acquire land only for reforestation purposes. Once land is acquired for reforestation, it seems clear under this provision that funds may be appropriated only for purposes consistent with reforestation.

This straight-forward reading of section 3(1) of Article XIV is consistent with the overall scheme established by Article XIV for use of land owned by the State in forest preserve counties. Land owned by the State within the Adirondack Park is forever wild (Art XIV, § 1, read in conjunction with § 3[1]). Trees may not be removed, destroyed or sold nor may the land be alienated. Land purchased outside the Park for reforestation must be used for that purpose (harvesting of trees and other consistent activities permitted) and may not be alienated (Art XIV, § 3[1]). Isolated small parcels of land in forest preserve counties but outside the Park may be (a) dedicated to reforestation purposes or (b) used for any other State purpose or may be alienated (Art XIV, § 3[2]). Thus, these provisions establish three categories of use by the State of land in forest preserve counties, each with different restrictions on use. The "forever wild" category is most restrictive, the reforestation land category is less restrictive in that reforestation activities are permitted, and the third category, applying to isolated small parcels, is least restrictive.

The record of debate of the Constitutional Convention of 1938 makes clear that Article XIV, § 3(1) is intended to prohibit alienation of reforestation lands within the forest preserve counties so as to preserve such lands forever for use for reforestation purposes (Revised Record, pp 1296-1316 and 2697-2703).

The current constitutional provision, substantially enacted in 1938, replaced a 1931 amendment requiring that the Legislature annually appropriate specific sums of money for the acquisition by the State of land outside the Adirondack and Catskill Parks for reforestation purposes (former N Y Const, Art VII, § 16). While the program required by the 1931 provision was carried out in its first year, the Legislature neglected the direction of the Constitution and appropriated a lesser sum in subsequent years (Constitutional Convention of 1938, Revised Record, p 1297). In 1938, the Constitution was amended to eliminate this ineffectual attempt to mandate appropriations by the Legislature and "in place thereof commit[ted] the State to the policy of wild life conservation and reforestation . . . [and authorized] the Legislature to appropriate moneys for the acquisition of land outside of the Adirondack and Catskill parks for the practice of forestry and wild life management" (id., p 2698). In providing that land acquired for reforestation purposes is not subject to the "forever wild" provision (Art XIV, § 1, providing that land owned by the State in the forest preserve may not be alienated nor may timber thereon be sold, removed or destroyed), while specifically providing that reforestation land in forest preserve counties may not be sold, exchanged or taken by any public or private corporation, the purpose of the 1938 amendment is clear. The purpose was to permit on reforestation land the cutting of trees and the undertaking of other activities consistent with the use of the land for forest and wild life conservation while ensuring through the no-alienation provision that the land would be forever dedicated to this purpose by the State (Constitutional Convention of 1938, Revised Record, p 1314). The question of whether to include the no-alienation provision in Article XIV, § 3(1) was fully debated and the Constitutional Convention voted to include the restrictive language in the proposed amendment (id., Revised Record, pp 1296-1316, 2697-2704).

Environmental Conservation Law, § 9-0501(1) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

"1. In order to provide for the acquisition of lands . . . which are adapted for reforestation and the establishment and maintenance thereon of forests for watershed protection, the production of timber and other forest products, and for recreation and kindred purposes, the department may acquire in the name of the state . . . reforestation areas which shall consist respectively of not less than five hundred acres of contiguous lands, which shall be forever devoted to the planting, growth and harvesting of such trees as shall be deemed by the commissioner best suited for the lands to be reforested . . . Plantations and other forests thereon shall be established, managed and protected under his supervision pursuant to such provisions of law as shall from time to time be established or to such rules and regulations as may be prescribed by him" (emphasis supplied).

Under this provision, once land is acquired by the State for reforestation, "it must be `forever devoted' to this purpose" (Towner vJimerson, 67 A.D.2d 817, 818 [4th Dept, 1979]).

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Related

Towner v. Jimerson
67 A.D.2d 817 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1979)

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