Tarrant v. Incorporated Village of Roslyn

19 Misc. 2d 238, 187 N.Y.S.2d 133, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3934
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 Misc. 2d 238 (Tarrant v. Incorporated Village of Roslyn) 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
Tarrant v. Incorporated Village of Roslyn, 19 Misc. 2d 238, 187 N.Y.S.2d 133, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3934 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Marcus G. Christ, J.

In this action the plaintiffs seek a judgment declaring their right to use their land located in the Village of Bo sly n for apartment house purposes. Plaintiffs’ land is situated on the westerly side of Main Street about opposite the point at which East Broadway intersects the easterly side of Main Street and terminates. The land has an over-all area of approximately 7 acres and has frontage along the westerly side of Main Street. Approximately 200 feet of such frontage lies to the south of the Main Street-East Broadway intersection and the remaining 50 feet of frontage lies north of such intersection. The entire parcel of 7 acres is irregular in shape with varying depths back from the Main Street frontage ranging up to about 500 feet.

The plaintiffs acquired title to this parcel of land in 1945. At that time, as it had been since the adoption of the original zoning ordinance in 1932, this land was divided into two use districts. The Main Street frontage to a depth of 150 feet was classified as a Besidence B District in which one-family resi[240]*240dences were permitted. The balance of the parcel back of such frontage was classified as an Apartment District. Concededly, under this pattern of zoning 6/7ths of plaintiffs’ land was zoned for apartment house use and l/7th thereof, abutting the westerly side of Main Street, was zoned for one-family residential use.

Pursuant to stipulation, the court viewed the plaintiffs ’ property and the surrounding area in the presence of counsel for both sides. In respect of its physical contours, plaintiffs’ land possesses certain distinctive aspects. After the initial depth of 150 feet along the Main Street frontage, the property rises with increasing steepness. This severe rise reaches its summit and ends at the rear of plaintiffs’ property. There on relatively level land there is a large apartment house development extending to the west and northwest of plaintiffs’ property. The land situated on the easterly side of Main Street, south of the intersection of Main Street and East Broadway and across the street from plaintiffs’ property, has been developed with a group of apartment house buildings. The arrangement of such group of buildings is such that it faces, generally, on the southerly side of East Broadway. The site upon which these buildings have been erected is similar in contour to plaintiffs ’ property in that its low point is along the East Broadway frontage with an increasingly steep rise as it extends back in a southerly direction. Adjoining plaintiffs’ property on the south is other land with frontage along the westerly side of Main Street which has been developed with a group of apartment house buildings. This land, like plaintiffs’, has its low point along the Main Street frontage and rises sharply as it extends in a westerly direction to the rear.

At one time plaintiffs owned land at the rear of their property, and on top of the rise with frontage on Edwards Street which is a highway providing access to the apartment development lying to the west and northwest of plaintiffs ’ land. This frontage the plaintiffs sold and thereafter acquired a 30-foot strip of land with frontage on Edwards Street which provides a means of reaching the rear of plaintiffs’ main parcel.

In 1954 the plaintiffs applied to the Board of Appeals of the Village of Roslyn for a variance to permit them to extend the apartment house use classification applicable to 6/7ths of their property to the remaining l/7th of their property represented by the Main Street frontage which was then zoned to a depth of 150 feet for one-family residential use. That application was granted by the Board of Appeals on October 13, 1954. It is admitted that no time limitation was imposed,' either by the terms of the resolution adopted by the Board of Appeals or [241]*241by any provision contained in the zoning ordinance, on the plaintiffs’ exercise of the rights granted to the plaintiffs by the favorable action taken by the Board of Appeals on plaintiffs’ application for a variance. It is urged by the defendants that the granting of the variance in October, 1954 was without force and effect and several grounds are asserted to establish the invalidity of the determination made by the Board of Appeals at that time. The admitted fact is, however, that no one sought to review the granting of the variance. The right to challenge the determination of the Board of Appeals was not one reserved exclusively to private property owners; it was a right enuring to the benefit of the Board of Trustees and to any officer, department or bureau of the Village of Roslyn (Village Law, § 179-b; Matter of Fox v. Adams, 206 Misc. 236; cf. Town of Greece v. Smith, 256 App. Div. 886). Not having chosen to utilize the statutory right of review within the time prescribed • for that purpose the Board of Trustees cannot now be heard to assert for the first time that the action taken by the Board of Appeals in 1954 was invalid.

From October 13,1954 when the afore-mentioned variance was granted until April 16, 1956 the village authorities took no action in respect of the zoning status of plaintiffs’ property. On the last-mentioned date the plaintiffs submitted to the Building Inspector an application for a permit to construct an apartment house on plaintiffs’ premises, including the portion as to which the Board of Appeals had granted the variance in 1954. The Building Inspector refused to entertain the application, returned such application and notified the plaintiffs that the Board of Trustees considered the 1954 variance invalid. Thereafter, this action was commenced by service of the original complaint which then included only what is now set forth in the amended complaint as the first cause of action. The relief sought in such original complaint was a judgment declaring that the denial of plaintiffs’ application for a building permit was illegal, unconstitutional and void because it 1 ‘ prohibited the plaintiffs from building upon or using their property pursuant to, or otherwise exercising the rights duly vested in them ”.

After this action had been commenced under the original complaint on or about June 3, 1957, the Board of Trustees enacted an amendment to the zoning ordinance and the zoning map on July 1, 1957. That amendment reclassified 6/7ths of plaintiffs’ property from an Apartment District, the classification it had held for approximately 25 years, to a Residence B District in which one-family dwellings were permitted. Thus, by this amendment, the only-family residential classification, [242]*242which at no time since the inception of zoning in 1932 had ever applied to more than l/7th of plaintiffs’ property, was extended to encompass the entire area of seven acres.

The complaint was thereafter amended to set forth a second cause of action in which the relief sought is a judgment declaring the invalidity of the rezoning of plaintiffs’ property insofar as “it attempts to prohibit the use by plaintiffs of the premises described [in the amended complaint], for the erection of multiple dwellings, by unreasonable and arbitrary restrictions which are burdensome and confiscatory in their operation and prohibits the use of plaintiffs’ premises for any use to which the same are reasonably adapted ’ ’.

With respect to the first cause of action set forth in the amended complaint, the court finds that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Misc. 2d 238, 187 N.Y.S.2d 133, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarrant-v-incorporated-village-of-roslyn-nysupct-1959.