Orange County Legislature v. Diana

40 Misc. 3d 278
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 Misc. 3d 278 (Orange County Legislature v. Diana) 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
Orange County Legislature v. Diana, 40 Misc. 3d 278 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Robert A. Onofry, J.

This petition, filed by petitioner Orange County Legislature, pursuant to article 78 of the CPLR, seeks a judgment: (1) declaring respondent County Executive’s unilateral action in declaring the 2013 operating budget adopted by petitioner Orange County Legislature on December 12, 2012, as null and void, in excess of the County Executive’s authority and jurisdiction, and otherwise arbitrary, capricious and an abuse of his discretion; (2) declaring the revised budget as adopted by Orange County Legislature on December 12, 2012, over the respondent County Executive’s veto, as being the duly adopted 2013 operating budget for Orange County for budget year 2013; (3) enjoining the respondent County Executive in the nature of mandamus to follow and properly implement said operating budget in accordance with the Orange County Charter and further directing the respondent Budget Director to certify and file said adopted 2013 operating budget in accordance with the State Finance Law; and (4) enjoining respondent County Executive, and those under his direction and control, from closing the Valley View Nursing Home during fiscal year 2013 and requiring respondent County Executive to withdraw his closure plan for Valley View Center for Nursing Care and Rehabilitation from consideration by the New York State Department of Health; and upon this cross motion by respondents, County Executive Diana and Budget Director Blair, pursuant to CPLR 2215, 3001, 3212 and 6314, for a judgment: (1) vacating the preliminary injunction heretofore issued on February 6, 2013; (2) for summary judgment in favor of respondents on their declaratory judgment action; (3) dismissal of the petition, or, alternatively, (4) directing that an evidentiary hearing be conducted, on an expedited basis, if the court concludes that such hearing is warranted; and (5) for such other [280]*280and further relief as to the court may seem just, equitable and proper:

It is ordered, that the petition of the Orange County Legislature, insofar as it seeks, inter alia, article 78 relief in the nature of mandamus, is granted to the extent hereinafter set forth; and it is further ordered, that consistent with the foregoing, respondents’ cross motion, which seeks summary judgment, pursuant to CPLR 3212, and a dismissal of the petition, is denied and the answer is dismissed; and it is further ordered, that consistent with the foregoing, the court, sua sponte, grants to petitioner summary judgment; and it is further ordered, that consistent with the foregoing, and to the extent that petitioner and respondents seek a declaration, pursuant to CPLR 3001, of their respective rights and legal relations, such declaratory relief is granted to the extent set forth herein; and it is further ordered, that consistent with the foregoing, and to the extent petitioner seeks injunctive relief, pursuant to article 63 of the CPLR, such injunctive relief is granted to the extent set forth herein.

Introduction

Petitioner, Orange County Legislature, commenced this proceeding, pursuant to article 78 of the CPLR. It is a proceeding which emanates from an interbranch dispute between Edward Diana, Orange County Executive, and the Orange County Legislature over the adoption and implementation of the 2013 Orange County budget, and in which each side seeks, inter alia, various modes of injunctive and declaratory relief.

At issue, and the catalyst for the dispute, is whether the Valley View Center for Nursing Care and Rehabilitation (Valley View), the County’s sole nursing home/residential care facility, will continue to remain open and operational for budget year 2013 (a priority established by the Orange County Legislature) or whether the County Executive possesses the inherent statutory power, under the Orange County Charter (the Charter), to unilaterally close the facility for budgetary reasons without the Legislature’s approval. It is a dispute presented in the context of the adoption of the 2013 budget itself; the procedural validity and legitimacy of which requires this court’s examination of the power and authority reposed in the executive and legislative branches by the Charter, the Charter’s inherent system of checks and balances, the validity of the legislative amendments purportedly adopted to the County Executive’s proposed budget, [281]*281including the extent to which, if at all, such amendments remained within the confines of the state’s 2% tax cap, the County Executive’s veto of those amendments, the Legislature’s override of that veto and the County Executive’s declaration of the same as “null and void” and “unlawful.”

Orange County operates under a charter form of government, the underpinnings of which are derived from state constitutional and legislative authority.1 The Charter also outlines the procedure for the adoption of the county budget; a procedure which contemplates the submission of a proposed budget to the Orange County Legislature by the County Executive, the Legislature’s subsequent examination of, and where applicable amendment to, the proposed budget, the acceptance and/or veto of the Legislature’s changes by the County Executive, and the Legislature’s acquiescence to, or override of, such veto. Superimposed upon the county budgetary process is the neces[282]*282sity for compliance with General Municipal Law § 3-c2 which imposes upon the County (indeed virtually all municipalities with the exception of the City of New York and the counties within its boundaries) a 2% cap on the real property tax levy, absent the adoption of a local law authorizing a levy in excess of the cap.

The County Executive argues that the budgetary amendments effectuated by the Legislature were defective in two respects: (1) that the Legislature’s November 14, 2012 resolution (Resolution No. 272 of 2012) increased the 2013 tax levy over the 2% tax cap and by doing so it was required to (but failed to) pass a corresponding local law, by at least 60% of those entitled to vote thereon, as required by General Municipal Law § 3-c; and (2) that the Legislature’s subsequent override of his veto on December 12, 2012 was procedurally defective in that it amended, and in effect ratified, the Legislature’s resolution of November 14, 2012, Resolution No. 272, which impermissibly exceeded the tax cap but included a different levy amount.

The County Executive further argues, inter alia, that he possesses the inherent power and authority to close Valley View; power and authority derived from the express grant of authority conferred upon him by the County Charter, and necessarily implied from the Charter and state law. This power and authority, he asserts, is superior to, and exists independently of, the Legislature’s power derived from its adoption of a budget resolution purporting to fund Valley View for an entire year.

In opposition, the County Legislature argues that the County Executive has misconstrued and misinterpreted its budget resolution of November 14, 2012 (Resolution No. 272), a resolution, it asserts, which neither increases nor decreases the County Executive’s proposed tax levy, which itself was under the tax [283]*283cap. In sum, the Legislature argues that the clear intent of the same was that the County Executive’s tax levy, as it applied to Valley View, was neither increased nor decreased, but merely reallocated. Thus, since the tax levy was under the 2% tax cap, no local law was required. Correspondingly, it argues that its veto override vote of December 12, 2012 (Resolution No.

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Related

Fitzpatrick v. County of Orange
45 Misc. 3d 238 (New York Supreme Court, 2014)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 3d 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orange-county-legislature-v-diana-nysupct-2013.