Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty v. Environmental Protection Agency of America

55 F.R.D. 445, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13137
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 21, 1972
DocketNo. 72-C-71
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 F.R.D. 445 (Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty v. Environmental Protection Agency of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of the Freeholders & Commonalty v. Environmental Protection Agency of America, 55 F.R.D. 445, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13137 (E.D.N.Y. 1972).

Opinion

ZAVATT, District Judge.

The motion of the defendant Environmental Protection Agency of the United States of America (E.P.A.) to dismiss the complaint is granted.

The plaintiffs, the unnamed, alleged Trustees of the Freeholders and Commonalty of the Town of Huntington (hereinafter the “Trustees of the Freeholders”), have instituted this suit for various forms of relief, including the restraint of the defendants from implementing a program for waste water treatment and disposal until such time as a trial-like hearing is held by the defendant E.P.A. to consider the impact of proposed sewage treatment programs upon “the Regional Ecological Systems affected by such programs.”

The defendant, County of Suffolk, served and filed its answer on March 16 and 17, 1972, respectively. The defendant E.P.A. filed its notice of motion to dismiss the complaint upon several grounds, including the threshold ground that the plaintiffs do not legally exist. On January 31, 1972, the State of New York moved for leave to intervene as a party defendant. That motion was granted and an order for leave to so intervene, signed on January 31, 1972, was entered February 4, 1972. The motion to dismiss was heard on April 24, 1972 and granted, with prejudice and costs, upon the ground that the plaintiffs, Trustees of the Freeholders, have no standing to sue.

It is fundamental that a party bringing an action in a Federal court [447]*447must have “standing to sue.” See Wright, Law of Federal Courts, § 13, at 39 (1970). This status is personal and does not exist where one seeks to assert the rights of another. See Tileston v. Ullman, 318 U.S. 44, 63 S.Ct. 493, 87 L.Ed. 603 (1943).

The lengthy complaint purports to establish the standing of the plaintiff to sue by purporting to trace the history of the “Trustees of the Freeholders” from “certain 17th Century Colonial Charters” to and including “. . .an act of the state legislature which divided the Town [Town of Huntington] into two distinct Townships [Huntington and Babylon]” in 1872. Reference in the complaint to this Act of 1872 must be intended as a reference to ch. 105 § 1 [1872] N.Y.Sess.Laws 248, passed March 13, 1872. The complaint omitted any reference to ch. 492, § 1, [1872] N. Y.Sess.Laws, passed May 3, 1872, which abolished the office now asserted to be held by the plaintiffs.1

In order to understand the present day status of the plaintiffs, “Trustees of the Freeholders,” a brief synopsis of the history of the plaintiffs is essential. The origin of the “Trustees of the Freeholders” is found in certain royal patents granted between the years 1666 and 1694 to the inhabitants (freeholders and commonalty) of the Town of Huntington, who, during that period, were referred to as the “Freeholders and Inhabitants.”

The Nicolls Patent

The first of these patents, the Nicolls Patent, dated November 30, 1666, was a grant by James, Duke of York and Albany, to:

Jonas Wood,
William Severedge,
Robert Seely,
John Ketcham,
Thomas Scudamore,
Isaach Platt,
Thomas Joanes and Thomas Weeks
in the behalfe of themselves and their Afsociates the ffreeholders and Inhabitants of the sd Towne [of Huntington] their Heires, Suceefsors and Afsignes.”

This patent ratified, confirmed and granted

“all ye Lands that already have beene or hereafter shall bee Purchased for and on the behalfe of the said Towne of Huntington whether from the Natives Proprietors or others within the Limitts and Bounds herein exprest

It also confirmed and granted

“Unto the said Patentees and their Afsociates their Heirs Suceefsors and Afsignes all the Privileges belonging to a Towne within this Government . They the said Patentees and their Afsociates their Heirs Suecefsors and Affignes Rendering and Paying such Duties and Acknowledgmts as now are or hereafter shall bee Constituted and Established by the Lawes of this Colony under Obedience of his Royall Highnefse his Heires and Suceeffors.” 2

This patent created all the territory, from Cold Spring to Nessaquake River and from the Sound on the North to the sea on the South, as the Town of Huntington. It gave no right to the Town to purchase other land, but confirmed [448]*448the title of the freeholders and other inhabitants of the Town to such land as had already been purchased or might be purchased thereafter, pursuant to a license from the colonial governors. It “conferred no official powers upon the persons named in the Patent. They were not mentioned as trustees, nor invested with authority to act in behalf of the Freeholders and Commonalty [non-land owning inhabitants] in the management or disposal of the Town property, but title was simply confirmed in them in behalf of the inhabitants.” 3

The Dongan Patent

“In 1688, Thomas Dongan, then Governor of the Colony [of New York], required the inhabitants of the Town [of Huntington] to make purchases from the Indians of other territories, and summoned them to appear and show cause by what title they held their lands, in order, as is alleged, that they might be compelled to take out a new Patent. Difficulties arose between him and the Town concerning the payment of the quitrents, and in that year he seized their Patent of 1666, and made them pay his full demands for quit-rents, and issued to them a new Patent.” 4

The Dongan Patent, dated the second day of August 1688, established for the first time a number of public officers of the Town of Huntington designated as “The Trustees of the Freeholders and Commonalty of the Town of Huntington.” The first such officers were appointed by Governor Dongan and named as such in the Patent of 1688. They were granted full authority over all the property of the Town. Thereafter, nine Trustees, one Clerk, one Constable and two Assessors were to be chosen annually by a majority of the people of the Town at a Town meeting assembled on the first Tuesday of May. The Patent provided for the assessment and payment of a yearly rate, or tax, to defray the expenses of the Town Government and authorized the Trustees to levy sufficient taxes for that purpose.5

The grant under the Dongan Patent ran to

“. . .ye said Inhabitants & freeholders ye freemen of Huntingtonn affores d Comonly Called by y e name of ye freeholders & Inhabitants of ye Towne of Huntingtonn or by whatsoever Name or Names they are Called or named & their Heirs & Suceefsors forever hence forward are & shall be one Body Corporate & Politique in Deed & Name . . . ”6 (emphasis added)

Although the Dongan Patent required the annual election of Trustees, it does not appear that any Trustees were elected by the people until April 9, 1694. During this six year period, those who had been appointed as Trustees by Governor Dongan by the Dongan Patent continued to act as Trustees.7

The Fletcher Grant

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Bluebook (online)
55 F.R.D. 445, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-the-freeholders-commonalty-v-environmental-protection-agency-nyed-1972.