Town of Gardiner v. Stanley Orchards, Inc.

105 Misc. 2d 460, 432 N.Y.S.2d 335, 1980 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2527
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 105 Misc. 2d 460 (Town of Gardiner v. Stanley Orchards, Inc.) 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
Town of Gardiner v. Stanley Orchards, Inc., 105 Misc. 2d 460, 432 N.Y.S.2d 335, 1980 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2527 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1980).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Leonard A. Weiss, J.

Plaintiff, Town of Gardiner, seeks a preliminary injunction under CPLR 6301 to restrain defendants from (1) further preparation of a site located on their real estate in the Town of Gardiner for construction of a mobile home and (2) the placing of a mobile home on this site.

Defendants, Stanley Orchards, Inc. and Stanley Cohn, cross-move for an order dismissing plaintiff’s complaint on the grounds that the Town of Gardiner Local Law No. 3 for the year 1972 which defendants are allegedly violating is unconstitutional under both the New York and United States Constitutions rendering said local law unenforceable and thereby requiring this court to vacate any temporary restraining order and denying any requests for a preliminary injunction.

Defendants own property in the Town of Gardiner. On [461]*461March 20, 1980, the defendants filed an application for a building permit with the Town Clerk for the Town of Gar-diner seeking permission to place a mobile home on a parcel of land they own which is not part of a mobile home park or a mobile home subdivision. The defendants never filed with the town clerk, or any other official of the town, “Permission in writing [from] all land owners within 500 feet of the boundaries of the property on which a mobile home is to be placed” which is required under the provisions of section 20 of Local Law No. 3-1972 of the Town of Gardiner. The Gardiner Town Board considered defendants’ application at its May 13, 1980 meeting and unanimously refused to issue the building permit. On June 10,1980, the defendants again appeared before the town board and were informed that if they placed the mobile home in a less objectionable place on their property, they might be granted the permit. In July, 1980 the supervisor for the town observed that at the site where defendants had requested a building permit, electricity was brought in, a septic system was being installed and a well was in the process of being built. On July 16,1980, Mr. Justice Aaron E. Klein of this court signed an order to show cause containing a temporary restraining order for the town which enjoined the defendants from further preparation of the site from placing a mobile home on the site pending hearing and determination of the town’s underlying action for a permanent injunction because defendants were in violation of the provisions in Local Law No. 3 for the year 1972.

In support of its application for a preliminary injunction, the town urges (1) it has met its burden of proof that the defendants have acted in violation of Local Law No. 3 for the year of 1972 and that the preliminary injunction is required to prevent further injury to the plaintiff which would result if the defendants continued to act in disregard of said law; (2) that the defendant’s answering affidavit admits that he has not complied with the subject local law and has made no allegation or showing of injury because the defendants have been restrained from preparing the site for the installation of a mobile home; (3) that the purpose of preserving the status quo will be served if this court grants a [462]*462preliminary injunction; (4) that there is a presumption of constitutionality which the defendants have not overcome in seeking to have Local Law No. 3 declared unconstitutional; and (5) that the defendants have failed to exhaust their administrative remedies, making this proceeding premature, because they did not make any effort to apply for a waiver to the town board as they are permitted to do under section 22 of Local Law No. 3-1972 for the Town of Gardiner.

Defendants urge that (1) the Gardiner Local Law is an unconstitutional violation of the defendants’ right to due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and sections 6 and 11 of article I of the New York State Constitution because the health, safety and general welfare of the citizens of Gardiner is not served by the grant of authority to private landowners in the subject local law to determine whether another property owner can make use of his land in a manner which is not potentially dangerous or offensive to other residential uses; (2) that the subject local law violates equal protection because it provides for the possibility that one landowner who is surrounded by consenting neighbors will be able to place a mobile home on his land whereas another landowner who is not surrounded by consenting neighbors will not be able to make such use of his land and that this distinction is wholly without rational basis or relationship to the town’s police power; and (3) that the absence of standards or guides in the local law which accompany the delegation of authority to private citizens to block issuance of a trailer permit is violative of the due process clause in the Fourteenth Amendment as an unconstitutional delegation of governmental power to private citizens.

In reply to the defendants’ arguments, the town urges that Local Law No. 3, when read in its entirety, suffers from no constitutional infirmity because section 22 expressly reserved to the town board the authority to waive, subject to appropriate conditions, any of the requirements set forth in the law. Defendants, in their reply to the plaintiff’s main contentions, urge that they have standing to challenge the constitutionality of the local law on its face as [463]*463part of their defense and counterclaim to plaintiff’s action for injunctive relief and that the doctrine of exhaustion of administrative remedies does not bar them from seeking dismissal of the complaint as they request in this motion.

Initially, this court considers whether the defendants’ failure to make application to the town board for a waiver pursuant to section 22 of the Local Law operates to bar the defendants from attacking the constitutionality of the law which they are allegedly violating. New York courts which have considered challenges to zoning enactments on constitutional grounds have distinguished between challenges to the enactment based solely upon language contained in the statute which can be brought by any adversely effected property owner and challenges to the application of the enactment in a specific situation which can only be brought by an adversely effected property owner who has exhausted all administrative remedies provided in the zoning statute which he finds objectionable. In Levitt v Incorporated Vil. of Sands Point (6 NY2d 269, 273), the Court of Appeals said: “We disagree, however, with the opinion of the Appellate Division insofar as it held that plaintiffs were precluded from raising the issue of confiscation by their failure to apply for a variance under the provisions of the ordinance. The theory of this action is that plaintiffs are entitled as a matter of right to a judgment declaring the unconstitutionality of the ordinance; they do not ask for the relaxation of an assumedly valid regulation” (also see Polak v Kavanah, 48 AD2d 840). In Janas v Town Bd. of Town of Fleming

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Bluebook (online)
105 Misc. 2d 460, 432 N.Y.S.2d 335, 1980 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-gardiner-v-stanley-orchards-inc-nysupct-1980.