Shapiro v. Town of Oyster Bay

27 Misc. 2d 844, 211 N.Y.S.2d 414, 1961 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3312
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 Misc. 2d 844 (Shapiro v. Town of Oyster Bay) 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
Shapiro v. Town of Oyster Bay, 27 Misc. 2d 844, 211 N.Y.S.2d 414, 1961 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3312 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1961).

Opinion

Bernard S. Meyer, J.

Fundamental to the declaration of the invalidity of a zoning ordinance as it applies to a particular parcel of property are the principles that complainants must establish such invalidity not merely by a preponderance of evidence but beyond a reasonable doubt, and that the court’s function is limited to the declaration of what the zoning classification may not be and does not extend to fixation of the proper zoning classification. The present action concerns an irregularly shaped parcel of approximately two and one-quarter acres located at the northeast corner of South Oyster Bay Road and the Long Island Expressway service road. The parcel is zoned Residence “ D ”, which requires a minimum plot of 7,000 square feet. Complainants contend that that classification is invalid because (1) it bears no relation to the public health, safety or general welfare; (2) it does not conform to a comprehensive plan and to the zoning purposes fixed by section 263 of the Town Law; and (3) it is confiscatory. Complainants demand judgment (a) declaring the ordinance invalid insofar as it restricts the parcel to Residence “ D ”; (b) declaring the ordinance invalid insofar as it prevents the development of the parcel for business purposes; and (c) declaring that the failure of the town to grant complainants’ application for rezoning from Residence “ D ” to Business “ F ” was unconstitutional. Since there is evidence that the property would be suitable for an apartment, a permissible Residence “ E ” use, and the evidence does not show that the general welfare mandates its use for business, the last two declarations requested could not, in any event, be made. Nor on the whole case, have complainants sustained their burden of proving the Residence “ D ” zoning of the parcel invalid. The complaint is, therefore, dismissed, without costs.

With the consent of both parties the court has viewed the subject property, the shopping areas to the north and south of it and the properties between the subject property and those shopping areas. The parcel in question, together with the property of the Syosset Fire District, form, roughly, a trapezoid, the Fire District owning a plot 100 by 175 feet in the northwest corner of the trapezoid, the entire trapezoid bounding for 250 feet on the north and 362 feet on the east by property presently used for residences, for 360 feet on the south on the Expressway service road and for 345 feet on the west on South Oyster Bay Road. At the present time the Expressway ends at South Oyster Bay Road, but eventually the exit for westbound traffic from the Expressway to the service road will enter the service road a short distance from the southeast corner of the subject parcel. [846]*846South Oyster Bay Road is a heavily travelled four-lane highway. On the northwest corner of South Oyster Bay Road and the Expressway, a Business “ F ” parcel is occupied by an automobile sales agency. Between the Expressway and Jericho Turnpike on the north there is a drainage sump, and there are 11 homes on the east and west sides of South Oyster Bay Road used for professional offices (doctors, dentists, chiropractor). Along Jericho Turnpike to a depth of approximately 200 feet there is a shopping area running east and west from South Oyster Bay Road. From the subject parcel to Jericho Turnpike is a distance of approximately 4,000 feet. To the south of the Expressway, between the Expressway and Northern State Parkway, there is on the east side of South Oyster Bay Road a medical center which is presently for sale, and on the west side of the road a farm stand, a real estate office and two doctors offices, all within the area zoned ResidenceD ”. South of the Northern State Parkway and also a distance of approximately 4,000 feet from the subject parcel is a large shopping center, in an area zoned Business F ”.

Complainants’ case is based on the contentions that the public welfare requires available neighborhood shopping facilities within a half-mile of a residential area, that a comprehensive zoning plan requires neighborhood shopping facilities on the parcel in question, and that the traffic on South Oyster Bay Road and the Expressway service road, the location of and noises emanating from the firehouse, the location of and light and noises emanating from the car sales agency opposité the subject parcel and the fact that there is too little shopping area in relation to the residences now in existence make it impossible to sell houses built on the property at a price that would include any return for the land. The court rejects the town’s argument that, because complainants sold to the fire district the property on which the firehouse is located, any hardship resulting from its location must be considered self-imposed. It is not disputed that the fire district has the power of eminent domain. Complainants may not be penalized because they negotiated the taking price rather than require that a condemnation proceeding be instituted. It rejects also complainants’ attempt to bolster their case by pointing to the facts that on subdivision maps covering the 40 acres developed by them and their predecessors, the entire trapezoid was shown as ‘ ‘ Future Proposed Business, ’ ’ and that contracts entered into with purchasers contained similar notice. While those facts could have bearing in litigation between complainants and the purchasers, they are totally irrelevant to the present determination. Zoning is a legislative [847]*847function vested in the municipal governing body, in this case, the Town Board. Neither the filing of a map by a property owner nor its approval in any form not encompassing specific consideration of the classification by the Town Board can change the zoning or create an estoppel that will work such change.

Oases such as Dowsey v. Village of Kensington (257 N. Y. 221); Matter of Isenbarth v. Bartnett (206 App. Div. 546, affd. 237 N. Y. 617), and Evanns v. Gunn (177 Misc. 85, affd. 262 App. Div. 865), which have upset residential zoning classifications because of insufficient relationship to public health, safety, morals and general welfare have involved situations in which the development of the surrounding area was contrary to the zoning imposed on the parcel in question and in which it appeared the zoning classification was fixed “ in order that the beauty of the village as a whole may be enhanced.” In each a general pattern contrary to residential zoning was clearly established ; in Dowsey for apartments and business; in Isenbarth for business, no residences having been built for more than 20 years; in Evanns by rezoning a single parcel residential, leaving it entirely surrounded by business. In the instant case much of the development on which complainants rely is for professional use, a use permitted by Residence “ D ” zoning. Only the automobile sales agency and the real estate office are contrary to that zoning. It cannot be said, therefore, that the zoning of complainants’ property is arbitrary in its relation to the police power (see Gardner v. Le Boeuf, 24 Misc 2d 511, 516).

Complainants strenuously argue, however, that the distance of other shopping facilities from the subject parcel and from the many homes in the vicinity of subject parcel mandate, as part of comprehensive planning, the use of the property for neighborhood shopping. They rely on the last sentence of section 263 of the Town Law, which provides:

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Bluebook (online)
27 Misc. 2d 844, 211 N.Y.S.2d 414, 1961 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shapiro-v-town-of-oyster-bay-nysupct-1961.