United Citizens v. Zoning Board of Appeals

109 Misc. 2d 1080, 441 N.Y.S.2d 626, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3029
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1981
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 Misc. 2d 1080 (United Citizens v. Zoning Board of Appeals) 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
United Citizens v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 109 Misc. 2d 1080, 441 N.Y.S.2d 626, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3029 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Anthony J. Ferraro, J.

Petitioners maintain this proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 for an order of this court reviewing, reversing and annulling a determination of the respondent Zoning Board of Appeals of the City of Mount Vernon which granted a variance to intervenor-respondents.

Intervenor-respondents sought leave to construct 30 single-story attached units on six acres of open land remaining on their parcel of 29.5 acres in order to provide housing for the elderly.

The parcel in question was purchased in 1865 to establish a home for orphans. An orphan farm school was built [1081]*1081in 1866. In 1869 a charitable corporation was formed with power to purchase and hold real estate and to “establish, maintain, control, govern and manage any orphan house, farm school, industrial school, hospital, asylum, retreat or other institution necessary and proper for the carrying out of the general object of the said corporation”. In 1897 a home for the aged was constructed. Thereafter, intervenorrespondents, hereinafter referred to as “Wartburg”, established a three-level concept of elderly care consisting of residences providing minimal care, intermediate facilities providing detailed care and a nursing home to provide intensive care. The proposed construction contemplates a fourth level of elderly care in single-family attached units. In each unit the wall behind the bed will be fitted with lifesaving equipment and the wall opposite the bed will be equipped with a closed-circuit television camera. This arrangement will allow the administration of all needed care short of hospitalization without moving the patient and enable a healthy spouse to live with a sick partner. The attachment of the units enables the residents to be close to their neighbors yet independent and facilitates the rendering of care.

Petitioners contend on this application (1) that the respondent zoning board had no jurisdiction to grant a use variance allowing attached and semidetached residential units because semidetached units are prohibited in any zoning district, (2) that the proposed construction constitutes a “large scale planned unit development” which is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the city council, (3) that Wartburg failed to follow lawful procedure in processing its application, (4) that respondent zoning board failed to prepare its own findings of fact and conclusions of law, (5) that the findings and conclusions provide no basis for the relief granted, and (6) that respondent zoning board failed to comply with the requirements of the Environmental Conservation Law of the State of New York.

Although the parcel in question is located in a one-family residential zone, it had been used for the purpose of providing housing and schooling for orphans and housing and health care for the elderly prior to the enactment of the zoning ordinance. In furtherance of its corporate purposes, [1082]*1082Wartburg has already constructed multistory buildings upon its property consisting of an orphanage, a home for the aged, cottages for the housing of orphans, a school, auditorium, administration building and a nursing home.

The rule is fundamental that nonconforming uses in existence when a zoning ordinance is enacted are constitutionally protected and must be permitted to continue notwithstanding any contrary provisions of a subsequently enacted zoning ordinance. (People v Miller, 304 NY 105.)

Likewise, and equally fundamental is the rule that nonconforming uses may not be extended or expanded and once abandoned are forever forfeited. (Matter of Off Shore Rest. Corp. v Linden, 30 NY2d 160.)

However, if the extension or expansion of the nonconforming use forms an integral part of the original part of the original contemplation for the entire parcel, then the right to such extension or expansion becomes vested from the inception and is likewise constitutionally protected. In Matter of Syracuse Aggregate Corp. v Weise (72 AD2d 254, affd 51 NY2d 279) the court allowed the owner to excavate his entire 25-acre parcel although only five acres had been excavated prior to passage of the prohibitory ordinance. The court stated (pp 257, 259-260) that the test for determining whether a nonconforming use may be extended depended on:

“ ‘[W]hether the nature of the incipient non-conforming use, in the light of the character and adaptability to such use of the entire parcel manifestly implies an appropriation of the entirety to such use prior to the adoption of the restrictive ordinance’ ”.

“Special Term erred in its application of the rule that nonconforming uses may not be expanded, implementing a blanket rule that no additional land, beyond that utilized as of the time the ordinance became effective, may ever be entitled to nonconforming usage.”

The Court of Appeals in affirming, by Jasen, J. (supra), concluded that where quarrying operations are conducted on a distinct parcel and the activities manifest a clear intent to appropriate the entire parcel for quarrying, the extent of protection afforded by the nonconforming use will [1083]*1083extend to the entire parcel even though extensive excavation was limited to a small portion of the parcel.

Stating it in another way, Mr. Justice Gabrielli held in Matter of Dolemite Prods. v Kipers (39 Misc 2d 627, 633) that a nonconforming use can be extended:

“provided it can be shown that (1) it was an expansion of a nonconforming use on lands previously owned by the petitioner *** and that (2) it has always been the intent of the petitioner to develop and use the entire lands owned by it, for the questioned purposes and that this was or should have been known to all involved ***
“Although not every expansion or extension of certain operations will be permitted, the view has been taken that it is not essential that a nonconforming use exercised at the time a zoning ordinance is enacted should embrace an entire tract in order to entitle an owner to subsequently employ it all for the use. To so hold would deprive owners of the use of their property as effectively as if an ordinance was so drawn as to be completely prohibitive of all use. (8 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations [3d ed.], §25.208, p. 521; De Felice v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals, 130 Conn. 156; Village of Ossining v. Meredith, 190 Misc. 2d 142.)”

This principle authorizing expansion of nonconforming uses has been enunciated in the following reported cases among others: Town of Somers v Camarco (308 NY 537), where excavation of sandpit on two tracts was authorized as a constitutionally vested right before enactment of the ordinance; People v Perkins (282 NY 329), wherein a conviction for violation of a zoning ordinance, because defendant enlarged a business nonconforming use in a residential zone, was reversed; Matter of Fairmeadows Mobile Vil. v Shaw (16 AD2d 137), involving an expansion of a trailer park to other parts of petitioner’s lands; Telimar Homes v Miller (14 AD2d 586), allowing continued development on quarter-acre parcels after rezoning ordinance was amended to require half-acre parcels; Matter of Empire City Racing Assn. v City of Yonkers (132 Misc 816), wherein court upheld the right to construct nonconforming barns in a residential area in conjunction with the continued and expanded operation of a racetrack.

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Bluebook (online)
109 Misc. 2d 1080, 441 N.Y.S.2d 626, 1981 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-citizens-v-zoning-board-of-appeals-nysupct-1981.