TIORONDA, LLC. v. New York

386 F. Supp. 2d 342, 61 ERC (BNA) 1149, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19924, 2005 WL 2187012
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 2, 2005
Docket04 CIV. 7357(SCR)
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 386 F. Supp. 2d 342 (TIORONDA, LLC. v. New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TIORONDA, LLC. v. New York, 386 F. Supp. 2d 342, 61 ERC (BNA) 1149, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19924, 2005 WL 2187012 (S.D.N.Y. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER

ROBINSON, District Judge.

This case presents the question of whether the abbreviated procedure by which New York law permits the State of New York to take private property comports with constitutional due process requirements. After considering, and ultimately rejecting, Plaintiffs claims to be entitled to additional opportunities to be heard not now guaranteed by New York’s Eminent Domain Procedure Law, the court finds that Plaintiffs claim to be entitled to additional notice has a likelihood of success on the merits.

I. Background

A. Factual History

i. The Property To Be Taken By Eminent Domain

Tioronda, LLC (the “Plaintiff’ or “Tior-onda”) is a limited liability corporation organized under the laws of the state of New York. Its place of business is in the City of Beacon, Dutchess County, New York

George E. Pataki (“Pataki”) is the Governor of the State of New York. Joseph H. Boardman (“Boardman”) is the Commissioner of the Department of Transportation for the State of New York (Pataki, Boardman and the State of New York are *345 collectively referred to herein as “Defendants”).

The Plaintiff acquired the Tioronda Estate (the “Property”), including the Tioron-da House and its sixty-eight acre estate in the City of Beacon, from the Craig House Sanitarium in May 2008. 1 The Property is bounded on the west by Fishkill Creek, on the east by New York State Route 9D and on the south by Grandview and South Avenues. Adjoining the Property to the north is a subdivision called Eastlyne. The City of Beacon owns a drainage easement that abuts the Property along the border of Eastlyne and ends at Fishkill Creek.

The Property was the original estate of General Joseph Howland, who constructed the home that sits on the Property in 1859-60. While Howland was actively engaged in the Civil War, Henry Winthrop Sargent, a noted gardener and horticulturalist, landscaped the estate and, in doing so, planted several rare trees. In the early 1980s, the Property was designated by the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (“OPRHP”) for listing on the New York State and National Register of Historic Places. One of the features of the Property that is still in existence is a historically and hortieulturally significant tree known as a Sargent’s Weeping Hemlock.

Before acquiring the Property, Tioronda learned that the drainage system in place for the Eastlyne subdivision emptied onto the Property, rather than into Fishkill Creek. The drainage has created a thirty-foot deep and sixty-foot wide gully on the Property and the soils that are downstream of the drainage pipe have been rapidly eroding.

Tioronda was aware, at the time it acquired the Property, that the New York State Department of Transportation (“DOT”) was planning to reconstruct part of Route 9D bordering on the Property (“Project”), and that part of the Project involved the State taking a drainage easement and turning the raw, eroded gully into a constructed drainage channel. The Project is estimated to cost $6.5 million, of which eighty percent will be paid by the Federal Highway Administration (“FHWA”) and twenty percent will be paid by the City of Beacon. The State, however, agreed to reimburse the City of Beacon for three-quarters of its twenty percent share, leaving only five percent as the effective local share of the costs.

The DOT’s drainage plan involves the construction of a new drainage pipe that would run along the edge of the Eastlyne subdivision and the acquisition of the portion of the Property that is adversely affected by the drainage flow (“Acquired Land”). The plan also includes the construction of a new stone-lined ditch where the previous landscapers had placed a grassy swale for drainage. The drainage plan proposed by the DOT would, according to Plaintiff, do irreversible damage to the roots of the Sargent’s Weeping Hemlock tree and cause harm to federally-protected wetlands on the Property not taken by the State.

John Stewart, the Managing Director of Tioronda (“Stewart”), retained an environmental engineering firm, Stearns & Wheler, LLC, to examine the existing and proposed drainage systems and determine whether a drainage system better than the one proposed by the DOT could be constructed. Stearns & Wheler examined three alternative designs and, based on ease of implementation and minimal environmental impact, preferred a system involving continuing the line along the existing municipal easement and discharging *346 the water into an existing drainage system within the Eastlyne subdivision. This proposed system would bypass the Property entirely.

ii. Summary Of Applicable New York Law

Article 2 of New York’s Eminent Domain Procedure Law (“EDPL”) sets forth the procedures that most condemnors must follow prior to acquiring property. Specifically, it requires condemnors to hold a hearing to review the public use of the project and its impact on the environment. See EDPL § 201. Further, the EDPL requires that condemnors give notice of the hearing by publication and, since January of 2005, has required that the effected property owner be given individualized notice, either by personal service or certified mail. See EDPL § 202.

Within ninety days of the conclusion of public hearings, condemnors are also required to publish their determinations and findings, see EDPL § 204(A), which triggers an exclusive thirty-day period in which such determination and findings may be appealed. See EDPL § 207. Recent amendments to the EDPL also require that individuals whose properties are being condemned also be given individualized notice of both the publication of the determination and findings and the thirty-day time limit on judicial challenges thereto. See EDPL § 204(C).

Crucially, however, the EDPL also contains special provisions that allow the State of New York 2 to begin and end eminent domain proceedings without holding an adversarial proceeding or providing the condemnee some of the other procedural protections required by Article 2 (“Special Procedure”). State agencies may resort to the Special Procedure under various conditions described in EDPL § 206, including when the condemnor “pursuant to other state, federal, or local law or regulation ... considers and submits factors similar to those enumerated in subdivision (B) of section two hundred four, 3 to a state, federal or local governmental agency, board or commission before proceeding with the acquisition and obtains a license, a permit, a certificate of public convenience or necessity or other similar approval from such agency, board, or commission .... ” EDPL § 206(A). The Special Procedure is also available when “in the opinion of the condemnor the acquisition is de minimis in nature so that the public interest will not be prejudiced by the construction of the project....” EDPL § 206(D). 4

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386 F. Supp. 2d 342, 61 ERC (BNA) 1149, 2005 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19924, 2005 WL 2187012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tioronda-llc-v-new-york-nysd-2005.