Tursellino v. Paduano

202 Misc. 74, 107 N.Y.S.2d 839, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2433
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1951
StatusPublished

This text of 202 Misc. 74 (Tursellino v. Paduano) 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
Tursellino v. Paduano, 202 Misc. 74, 107 N.Y.S.2d 839, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2433 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Baar, J.

This is a motion by defendants to dismiss the complaint either pursuant to subdivision 5 of rule 106 of the Rules of Civil Practice or for summary judgment under rule 113, or that the court pursuant to rule 212 in the exercise of its discretion refuse to take jurisdiction, and dismiss the complaint.

In a joint complaint wherein each of the two plaintiffs pleads an asserted cause of action against the City of New York and certain of its officials, a judgment is sought declaratory of rights and for incidental injunctive relief, based on the imposition of charges for the use of the defendant city’s sewer system. The constitutionality of the statutes involved is assailed.

The removal of human and industrial waste and the treatment and sterilization of it is one of the most important services rendered in a community. It must be given front rank with other facilities furnished by government, without which the warp and woof of the fabric which makes up the pattern of life in a complex municipality would be miserably and unutterably threadbare. It is as necessary for simple creature existence as air, food and water. It has been said, perhaps with some flippancy yet with considerable truth, that civilization has progressed as the plumbing craft has advanced; and the fur[77]*77nishing to a people of an adequate and proper water supply and a sewage disposal system certainly fits into that category. Hence it is not surprising to learn that the City of New York owns and operates a sewer system consisting of 4,600 miles of underground pipe lines and thirteen sewage treatment and disposal plants, the assessed value of which is over $220,000,000, though its actual value is probably much greater; that the city’s sewer system carries away over one billion gallons of sewage daily, of which four hundred and eighty-two million gallons are treated and disposed of by sewage treatment and disposal plants. The cost of constructing sewage and disposal plants is the one part of the system which has always presented a financial problem because it is so tremendous.

In addition to the inherent basic necessity of an adequate sewer system hereinabove discussed, a legal obligation has been placed on the municipality by the Interstate Sanitation Commission, a tri-State body created by the Legislatures of the States of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. In 1948 a proceeding was instituted by that body to compel the city to adopt and carry out a plan for discontinuing the discharge of raw sewage into the waters surrounding the city. After proceedings, in accordance with law, the commission issued an order (1) fixing December 31, 1959, for the completion of a sewage treatment system in accordance with standards specified by the tri-State commission; (2) requiring the city to undertake and carry out the first stage of a plan submitted by it which would take five years to complete at an estimated cost of slightly less than $95,000,000; and (3) requiring the city to submit to the commission prior to February 1, 1954, a program of proposed construction to complete the pollution abatement program no later than December 31, 1959. It is estimated that the complete ten-year program will cost approximately $250,000,000. Because of the vastness of the program, the lack of a sufficient margin of debt-incurring power to finance it by bonds payable from assessments or from real estate, and the requirements of the city to comply with the timetable established by the Interstate Sanitation Commission, the city was compelled to avail itself of the “ sewer rent ” method of financing which has been authorized since 1929 (L. 1929, ch. 678) by subdivision 26 of section 20 of the General City Law. Under the framework of the laws involved the surplus sewer rental receipts, after payment of current maintenance and annual debt service charges, may be used only for the construction of sewage disposal and treatment plants and intercepting sewers and may not be put [78]*78in the general fund of the city. (Local Laws, 1950, No. 67 of City of New York; Administrative Code of City of New York, § 82d9-91; Local Laws, 1950, No. 102 of City of New York.) Out of this situation arises the present litigation instituted by the two plaintiffs herein.

In the first cause of action the plaintiff Tursellino alleges that he is a licensed manufacturer of ice, operating a plant in the borough of Queens in a building on a substantial parcel of land, equipped with expensive machinery, having an aggregate value in excess of $400,000; he alleges further than in the manufacture of ice large amounts of water are used and that about 95% of the water purchased from the City of New York is consumed in the manufacture of ice and the remainder is discharged into the common sewer of the City of New York; that he produces about 100 tons of ice a day. He then alleges the enactment of the various statutes by the State Legislature and the city council and the adoption by the board of estimate of the City of New York of regulations pursuant thereto relating to sewer rents and by virtue of which sewer rents are authorized, levied, collected and administered; that in April and September, 1949, he executed a first and second mortgage to the Seamen’s Bank for Savings in the city of New York and the Frick Company for $60,000 and $113,900, respectively; that said mortgages were immediately thereafter recorded, and that subsequently the City of New York imposed a charge for sewer rents against the premises of the plaintiff which became a lien on January 1, 1951, prior and superior in legal effect to the mortgages above referred to. He then alleges further that the sewer service charge is not a tax; that the purported lien is not a tax lien and not entitled to priority; that the statutory enactments, both State and municipal, are unconstitutional and void insofar as they purport to grant the municipalities the right to establish a lien for sewer rents prior and superior to existing mortgages, in violation of section 10 of article I of the "United States Constitution; that the creation of a lien for sewer rents is not a valid exercise of the State’s taxation power, and is an unconstitutional taking of property without due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and of section 6 of article I of the New York State Constitution; that the attempt to create a prior lien, as above set forth, is an impairment of the obligation of contract, here specifically the mortgage contracts, in violation of section 10 of article I of the United States Constitution, and that the sewer service charge is unreasonable, inequitable, unlaw[79]*79ful and unjust and far in excess of the benefits conferred upon the plaintiff; that the plaintiff will be caused irreparable damage and injury in that he will be deprived of his property without due process of law since the sewer rent is one third of the amount of the water bill, whereas only about 5% of the water purchased by the plaintiff enters the common sewer from the premises of the plaintiff, and finally, that he has no adequate remedy at law.

The plaintiff, Supreme Coal & Ice Corp., in the second cause of action set forth in the complaint makes substantially the same allegations as does Tursellino, the coplaintiff, except that there is no averment concerning or involving any previously existing mortgage liens against its property.

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Bluebook (online)
202 Misc. 74, 107 N.Y.S.2d 839, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tursellino-v-paduano-nysupct-1951.