People ex rel. Swedish Hospital in Brooklyn v. Leo

120 Misc. 355
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 120 Misc. 355 (People ex rel. Swedish Hospital in Brooklyn v. Leo) 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
People ex rel. Swedish Hospital in Brooklyn v. Leo, 120 Misc. 355 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

Callaghan, J.

After the superintendent of buildings had refused a permit for the erection or extension of a garage to accommodate more than five automobiles and the interveners had appealed to the board of standards and appeals, a committee of that board was appointed for the purpose of examining the premises in question. This committee reported that the appeal should not be granted. Thereafter, and on the 19th day of August, 1919, a resolution was adopted by a vote of four to three affirming the decision of the superintendent of buildings in denying a permit to the interveners. The interveners did not have the consents of the owners of eighty per cent of the frontage within the district affected by the proposed garage. On the 30th day of September, 1919, the board of appeals, upon the application of the interveners, without any reason disclosed by its records, granted permission to reopen the proceeding.

A notice was thereafter served upon the relator. It again appeared and objected to proceeding on various grounds, one of which was that there was no power in the board to reopen the proceeding after it had been closed by a denial of the application.

The matter was, however, further considered and on the 29th day of June, 1920, a resolution was passed making a variation in the application of the “ use district regulations of the building zone resolution ” and granting the application. Upon a petition setting forth all the facts a writ was issued out of this court, requiring the board of appeals to certify its proceedings to this court for review.' Thereafter the interveners applied for and received permission to intervene in this proceeding.

The premises in question are known as 157-159 Rogers avenue and are located between Sterling place and St. Johns place. The [357]*357Swedish Hospital is located directly opposite the premises in question upon a plot of land having a frontage of 143 feet on Rogers avenue and 162 feet on Sterling place. That institution treats annually between 1,500 and 1,800 patients.

The relator here moves for a final order sustaining the writ of certiorari and the respondents for a final order dismissing the writ.

It appears from the return that after the board granted the application it reversed the ruling of the superintendent of buildings under the discretionary powers vested in it under section 7a and section 20 of the zoning resolution.

These motions present two questions: (1) Had the board power to open and rehear the application after it had been formally denied; and (2) had the board the power under the zoning resolution, to vary the provisions thereof, in view of the situation existing here?

On the 13th day of May, 1919, the board of standards and appeals amended section 2 of article 4 of its rules, providing for the final disposition of a case. As then amended article 4, subdivision 2a, of the rules provides: “ The final disposition of any application or appeal before the Board of Appeals, shall be in the form of a resolution either reversing or modifying the order, requirement, decision or determination appealed from and granting the application or appeal or affirming the order and denying the application on appeal.” By that rule the board provided a method for the final disposition or termination of appeals pending before it.

The committee of inspection recommended that the appeal be denied for the reason that the property in question “ is situated directly opposite an extension of the Swedish Hospital and that a garage should not be permitted opposite to a ward for sick and injured people; this fact justifies this Board in withholding its approval.” But presumably the board was not led to denying the application solely for the reasons set forth in the report of the committee of inspection, as the resolution denying the application stated “ that applicant failed to prove to the satisfaction of the board that the premises in question had been used for a garage for more than five motor vehicles on and previous to July 25, 1916.”

The record before the board does not disclose any reason for reopening the proceeding, although the return seems to indicate that a reconsideration was ordered because of the use to which the neighboring property, as well as that of the property in question, had been put for some time prior to the adoption of the zoning resolution.

The question of the right of the board of appeals to rehear an application after it had once been denied is squarely presented upon these applications. This board is a quasi judicial body. [358]*358People ex rel. Cotton v. Leo, 194 App. Div. 921. The general rule, therefore, is that such a board is not vested with the power to reopen and rehear a proceeding which has once been terminated. People ex rel. Smith v. Clarke, 174 N. Y. 259; Osterhoudt v. Regny, 98 id. 222; People ex rel. Chase v. Wemple, 144 id. 478, 482. The zoning resolution, having been passed by the sanction of the legislature, has the force of a statute, but nothing therein contained gives the board power to reopen and review its acts, after it had once determined and terminated the proceeding. Its jurisdiction is, therefore, limited to hearing and determining appeals. This board by its own rules specified the manner in which an appeal might be finally terminated. The resolution of August nineteenth was in accordance with its rules. The rule against reopening and rehearing applications once terminated has been enforced against the state industrial commission. Matter of Conley v. Upson Co., 197 App. Div. 815. The authority relied upon to the contrary is that of Matter of Equitable Trust Co. v. Hamilton, 226 N. Y. 241. That case affirms the rule that when quasi judicial bodies finally act, their determination is final unless reversed by a superior body. The question under review was the right of a board of supervisors to reopen and rehear a claim which had once been rejected. That decision rests largely upon the proposition that the audit of a claim by the board of supervisors is administrative rather than judicial and affirms the rule announced in People ex rel. Hotchkiss v. Supervisors, 65 N. Y. 222, where it was said that the board of supervisors was quasi judicial only in a very largely qualified sense ” and not in any such sense as renders an erroneous or improper audit or allowance incapable of correction by the body commiting the error; ” and further that “ boards of supervisors are mere local legislative bodies, in many respects of limited power.”

The board of appeals can in no sense act other than in a quasi judicial capacity. It does not perform á single administrative or legislative act. As its' name implies it' is an appellate tribunal. It passes upon matters formally brought to its attention much the same as courts. It hears evidence and argument and decides controversies as the evidence dictates. It cannot act without some evidence. The record here shows that it denied this application for good reason and upon sufficient evidence to sustain its conclusion. There was not a scintilla of evidence presented to the board to warrant it in changing its final disposition of this proceeding. Presumably it had thoroughly considered the matters before it. A committee of its members had viewed the premises and they had heard the parties in favor of and in opposition to the [359]*359application.

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Bluebook (online)
120 Misc. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-swedish-hospital-in-brooklyn-v-leo-nysupct-1923.