Robert E. Kurzius, Inc. v. Incorporated Village of Upper Brookville

67 A.D.2d 70, 414 N.Y.S.2d 573, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10076
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 26, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 A.D.2d 70 (Robert E. Kurzius, Inc. v. Incorporated Village of Upper Brookville) 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
Robert E. Kurzius, Inc. v. Incorporated Village of Upper Brookville, 67 A.D.2d 70, 414 N.Y.S.2d 573, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10076 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Shapiro, J.

This appeal involves, among other issues, the constitutional validity of a zoning ordinance of the defendant Incorporated Village of Upper Brookville (hereinafter village). Except for a small area along Route 25-A zoned for business, the remainder of the land in the village was zoned for single homes with a minimum lot size of at least two acres in some portions of the village and of at least five acres in the other portions. The plaintiffs are the owners of approximately 50 acres of land which are located within the five-acre minimum lot zone. They attack the zoning of this land on a number of grounds. In our opinion the sole ground which calls for extended consideration is their contention that the five-acre minimum lot zoning is constitutionally invalid. We agree with that contention.

THE FACTS

The village is located in the Town of Oyster Bay. Shortly after its incorporation it adopted a building zone ordinance covering the entire village. That ordinance restricted single-family dwellings to two-acre minimum lots. In 1951 a small part of the village, an area along Route 25-A, was zoned for business. In April, 1959 the village retained Francis Dowd McHugh, an architect specializing in urban and community development, to make a study of the village’s zoning and [72]*72planning. His studies showed that the area of the village totaled 2,737 acres or approximately four and one-quarter square miles. He testified that when he embarked on his study the village was semirural and largely open. There were then some residences located in several places in the village which were on lots less than two acres in size. There were other residences which were located on lots of from two to five acres. There were several farm areas and some residences with five acres or more of land. The commercial area consisted of only two or three properties. He also testified that the estimated population of the village at the time of his study in 1959 was 900 and that the 1960 census showed a population of slightly more than 1,000. In January, 1976 the population of the village was 1,232. The witness testiñed further that on the basis of his study it was his opinion that the village could accommodate a population of about 3,500.

After being retained by the trustees and the planning board of the village, McHugh had several meetings with them which he described as "constant informal meetings”. At one meeting, held on November 30, 1959, he noted that 500 acres in the village were then vacant, and 2,200 acres were used residentially, of which 1,260 were of a "farm and estate character”. He then proposed that 1,260 acres be zoned with a two-acre minimum and that the balance be zoned with 5, 10 and 20-acre mínimums. The minutes of the meeting reveal that four of the trustees had misgivings as to a 20-acre minimum residential unit surviving a court test. The minutes also indicate that the chairman of the planning board and the mayor of the village "stressed the importance of consulting the large landowners to give them opportunity to express their views and position on any such proposals.”

The witness then testified that thereafter he and the mayor, and "usually” the chairman of the planning board, met with some of those landowners (naming three of them) who owned considerable acreage in the village. These meetings were arranged by either the mayor or the chairman of the planning board and were held separately with each of the large landowners. The witness testified that he had not changed his mind concerning the 2, 5, 10 and 20-acre mínimums he had proposed but that the people with whom he was meeting "changed their desires to the various types of density.”

McHugh also testified that at later meetings the village officials finally decided that the 10 and 20-acre proposal was [73]*73"too ambitious” and adjusted it to 8 acres. This was confirmed by the minutes of the meeting of the planning board and board of trustees held on March 13, 1960. At a later meeting of the planning board held on May 11, 1960, it was decided to take no formal steps towards the adoption of the plan proposed by the witness "until further opportunity for study and conference with property owners whose substantial property interests were at stake and upon whose cooperation the Village Board desires to rely.” After the May 11 meeting the board of trustees of the village and the planning board announced that a public meeting on the subject would be held on June 15, 1960. The letter announcing the meeting noted that since World War II the village’s population had increased to 500 by 1950, had doubled since 1950, that the village was continuing to grow and that if the present two-acre minimum lot zoning prevailed with respect to the entire village it could expect to have an ultimate population of approximately 3,500. The letter also stated that "the mass majority of the residents would like to see the Village stay exactly as it is.” Under the heading "How Are These Aims To Be Achieved?” the letter stated that this could be done, "[b]y maintaining the present two-acre minimum in * * * [those] sections of the Village which best lend themselves to further development, and by raising the minimum acreage requirement in the least developed and most beautiful areas which at the same time because of their rugged contour are the least appropriate for close development.” The letter continued that "It is the belief of the trustees, the Planning Board and our two professional consultants, that the above zoning is about the minimum which can be expected to preserve the rural aspect of the Village as we now know it. It envisages a probable total population of 1,850 people. ”

The zoning ordinance which was finally adopted by the village on December 11, 1960 established the following criteria for placing property in a two-acre zone:

"(a) Adjacent areas (of Upper Brookville and a neighboring village) are now so developed or subdivided;
"(b) Topography generally is under 5% slope, without major watercourse, and not necessarily wooded, but is suitable for such development;
"(c) Access (via existing County or State road) is most convenient to the Long Island and the Oyster Bay Expressways; and
[74]*74"(d) Adjacent areas are now more open uses or they may be retained as 'Reservation’ type of use in order to ensure permanent open space for such close development.”

The ordinance also established these somewhat different criteria for placing property in the five-acre minimum lot zone:

"(a) Topography generally is rolling; or with slopes over 5% but also with relatively flat plateau suitable for dwelling and farming; wooded areas of native trees and watercourses also are prominent natural features;
"(b) Existing uses are of the same general character, or presently larger estates may suitably be utilized for Suburban estate purposes in future;
"(c) Adjacent areas (within the Village and along its peripheries) generally have similar character, or such areas are now or may reasonably be expected to become permanent open uses; and
"(d) Access to railroad and highway is generally less convenient.”

The new five-acre minimum lot zone was called "OP-1” or "Suburban Estate”.

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Bluebook (online)
67 A.D.2d 70, 414 N.Y.S.2d 573, 1979 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-e-kurzius-inc-v-incorporated-village-of-upper-brookville-nyappdiv-1979.