Schreiber v. Town of Cheektowaga

195 Misc. 748, 91 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2603
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 Misc. 748 (Schreiber v. Town of Cheektowaga) 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
Schreiber v. Town of Cheektowaga, 195 Misc. 748, 91 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2603 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Samuel J. Harris,

Official Referee. The plaintiffs have brought this action to enjoin the enforcement hy the defendant town and its officers of a certain ordinance on the ground that such ordinance is in violation of the Constitution of the State of New York and of the Constitution of the United States in that it is arbitrary and unreasonable. The ordinance was adopted by the town hoard of the town on the 28th day of June, 1948, In order to Regulate Sand Bank and Gravel Pits, Topsoil Removal and Other Excavations in the Town ”. Authorization to adopt ordinances of this kind is to he found in section 136 of the Town Law which as amended reads as follows: The town hoard may provide by ordinance for the licensing and otherwise regulating of * * * 12. In any town in the counties of Erie and Monroe, or in a county adjoining a city having a population of one million or more, or in any town adjacent to such a county, the operation and use of any lands or premises for the excavation of sand, gravel, stone or other minerals and the stripping of top soil therefrom.” Section 1 of article I of the ordinance contains as a declaration of policy:— It is hereby declared to he the policy of the Town Board to provide for the proper use of land to prevent all manner of excavations which create pits, holes, or hollows in the earth, leaving it in a hazardous or dangerous state, or cause soil erosion which depletes the land of its natural vegetative cover and supply of organic material, renders such land unproductive and unsuitable for agricultural purposes and undesirable for building homes, resulting in lower land values. By this ordinance the Town Board seeks to remove the danger to health and life caused by deep excavations remaining in the ground; and the stripping of topsoil thereby resulting in damage to agricultural crops through dust storms in dry weather, hy exposure of the bare earth -to wind action and in wet periods by pools of water, which ordinance will promote the safety, health and general welfare of the people of the Town.”

The Town of Cheektowaga is situate in the county of Erie and lies east of the city of Buffalo, south of the town of Amherst, [750]*750north of the town of West Seneca and west of the town of Lancaster all of which towns are in Brie County. The Town of Cheektowaga was incorporated in March, 1939. It contains 29.23 square miles. Its population by the 1940 Federal census was 25,006 and the present estimate of such population is somewhat over 40,000. The Town of Cheektowaga, like the towns adjoining, includes within its territorial borders residential, industrial, agricultural and various other types of life that are now found in towns contiguous to large urban centers. A certain portion of the town in the northwest part thereof contains cemeteries; there are scattered throughout the town church establishments, parks and railroad yards. Partly on the east border of the town of Cheektowaga which separates it from West Seneca and partly through the town itself there runs Cayuga Creek the waters of which creek finally reach the Buffalo River and thus Niagara River. The lands in the vicinity of this creek are rich in topsoil consisting of so-called Genesee loam, a soil of great value in germination and growth of vegetable matter. In other parts of the town and largely the northerly part thereof are sand, gravel and stone formations; in past years such formations have been worked and quarried to a considerable depth. Such use of these formations has resulted in abandoned excavations and a dangerous situation. The topsoil formations of Genesee loam have for years been the subject of operations by concerns which stripped the land of such topsoil for the purpose of marketing the same in other vicinities both in and out the town of Cheektowaga where topsoil is not so rich. Among those who have been engaged in such occupation - and are now so engaged are the present plaintiffs. At the time of the adoption of the ordinance in question the plaintiffs owned certain property in the town of Cheektowaga located adjoining Cayuga Creek and containing some sixteen acres. This property was purchased by the plaintiffs in February, 1947, for the sole purpose of stripping the topsoil for removal and sale. At the time of the adoption of the ordinance, June 28, 1948, the plaintiffs had stripped the soil to a depth of several feet from such premises except for some four acres thereof. At the same time a corporation known as the Buffalo Topsoil Corporation was stripping and selling topsoil from property on Rowley Road in the town of Cheektowaga. So soon as the ordinance was adopted the plaintiffs ceased working on their premises. Subsequent to the adoption of the ordinance and such cessation of work and prior to the 6th day of October, 1948, the members of the town [751]*751board made a further investigation and study of the properties of the Buffalo Topsoil Corporation and of the plaintiffs on which work had ceased by reason of the prohibition contained in the ordinance. After such study and investigation and on the 6th day of October, 1948, after publication of notices and a hearing the town board of the town of Cheektowaga by a majority vote adopted two resolutions which exempted the property on which the Buffalo Topsoil Corporation had been working at the time of the adoption of the ordinance and the premises on which the plaintiffs had been working at that time from the effect of the ordinance. As part of the resolution granting exemption to the Buffalo Topsoil Corporation on October 8, 1948, there is recited: “ The majority of the Board has inspected said property and it has determined that this particular property is not subject to the provisions of the ordinance, since it is clear that the work that the petitioner has been doing and desires to do does not threaten to be detrimental to the public health, morals or safety of the general welfare in any respect * * * Bach piece of property was covered by separate resolutions and although the resolution reciting the exemption of the plaintiffs’ property has no such preamble it is fair to conclude that it was the object of the majority of the board to adopt the resolution affecting the plaintiffs’ property for .the same reason as given in the adoption of the resolution in reference to the property of the Buffalo Topsoil Corporation as quoted above, and the adoption of the resolution of October 6, 1948. Immediately after the adoption of the resolutions on October 6, 1948, the plaintiffs resumed the removal of topsoil; and in the course of their business the plaintiffs made new contracts for the sale of such soil and in order to carry out the contracts purchased and put into use additional conveyances and machinery. By resolution on the 9th day of May, 1949, •without any notice to the plaintiffs and without a hearing the board of the town rescinded the two resolutions of October 6, 1948, and served a notice of such rescission on the plaintiffs on the 10th day of May, 1949. At that time there was remaining unstripped of the original sixteen acres about an acre and a half of topsoil on the plaintiffs’ premises. Consequent to such resolution and notice the plaintiffs have brought this action.

The ordinance adopted June 28, 1948, which is here being attacked among other things forbade stripping or removal of topsoil within ten feet of any property line and that after removal the stripped premises “ shall be graded to the level [752]*752of the abutting highway or the original grade if the same were below the level of the highway.” Further the ordinance provided for the application of “ dust-down ” and of limestone or fertilizer and the filling of grass seed over the denuded area.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 Misc. 748, 91 N.Y.S.2d 403, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schreiber-v-town-of-cheektowaga-nysupct-1949.