Ward v. City of New Rochelle

20 Misc. 2d 122, 197 N.Y.S.2d 64, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3956
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 20 Misc. 2d 122 (Ward v. City of New Rochelle) 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
Ward v. City of New Rochelle, 20 Misc. 2d 122, 197 N.Y.S.2d 64, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3956 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

Frederick G. Schmidt, Off. Ref.

This action, to declare an amendment to the Zoning Ordinance of the City of New Rochelle, unconstitutional, as it affects the plaintiff’s property, and to declare that she has a vested right to develop her property in accordance with the provisions of the R-1A district zone of the 1955 New Rochelle Zoning Ordinance, and to restrain the city from enforcing certain amendments to its Zoning Ordinance as they affect the plaintiff’s property, was referred to me to hear and determine.

This case presents an unusual situation, unlike any of the usual zoning cases. In 1955, after extensive study, the city adopted a comprehensive Zoning Ordinance, in which the plain[124]*124tiff’s property was placed in an R-1A district, the highest residence district then provided. Lots were required to contain 10,000 square feet, with a 100-foot frontage at the building line, rather than 7,500 square feet formerly permitted.

In 1956 the New Rochelle City School District requested the plaintiff to give it 13.3 acres of her property, referred to in the testimony as 13% acres, to be used for the erection of an elementary school, with its surrounding recreational area. She had a total of 62.2 acres in her entire property. Mrs. Ward was willing to make this gift of land, admittedly worth $140,000, and constituting more than 20% of her property, on condition that the school parcel conform to the overall development of her property, which could only mean a development in accordance with the Zoning Ordinance as it then existed. Mrs. Ward was interested primarily in knowing what she could later do with the remaining portion of her property, if she gave the school site to the City Board of Education. The Board of Education of the City School District was required by the Education Law to apply to the City Planning Board for approval of the proposed school site.

Thus, the City Planning Board, as the representative of the city, had a duty in connection with this school site, as well as a duty as the representative of the same city, to pass on the plat plan, which showed location of the school site and the location of streets and lots. Obviously, these must be correlated in a complete and harmonious plan of the whole property.

Mrs. Ward engaged Leland H. Lyon, an architect, to prepare a plat plan of her entire property, showing its subdivision, including the school site. He represented her in her negotiations with the Board of Education and the Planning Board. He had died prior to the hearing before me.

The Planning Board meeting of December 10, 1956, is crucial in the matter. At the hearing before me, Charles A. Hughes, the City Planning Engineer, read from the minutes of this meeting, as follows: ‘ ‘ Mr. Brace explained to the Board that the Board of Education asked Mrs. Ward to give a piece of land for an elementary school and she said that she was willing if it conformed to an over-all development of her property. She commissioned Mr. Leland H. Lyon to set aside 13% acres for the school, and plan a proposed temporary subdivision of the remaining land. This subdivision of the remainder of her land was not for building at this time but for the placement of the school and the preserving of her better pasture lands. Mrs. Ward stated that there would be no additional land for a park, and also requested that the Board of Education pave and extend [125]*125Broadfield Road. Mr. Brace continued by stating that in this subdivision some things were obtained that were hard to get formerly and the Board had been striving for — namely, that no lots are fronting on Pine Brook Boulevard or Quaker Ridge Road, and land was provided for the widening and straightening of Pine Brook Boulevard and Quaker Ridge Road. Mr. Lyon remarked that the school building itself only takes up one acre of the land, and that the rest could be planned for landscaping and a school recreation area. Mr. Horgan made a motion that the subdivision be approved upon condition that the property which Mrs. Ward proposed to give to the Board of Education is accepted by the Board of Education and used by the Board for school purposes, and the playground area made available to the community in consideration of the Board waiving the 10% on this subdivision. The motion was seconded by Mr. Jacobson and unanimously approved by the Board.”

Mr. Brace, referred to in the minutes, was an assistant to Mr. Hughes. Thus, the plat plan was approved by the Planning Board at this meeting, with three conditions:

1. That the Board of Education of the City School District accept the gift of the property, and

2. That the land be used for school purposes, and

3. That the playground area be made available to the community in consideration of the board waiving 10% on this subdivision under the ordinance regulating approval of subdivisions, 10% of the land; in this case, 6.2 acres would have been required to be given for recreational purposes. Since testimony showed that the school itself was to occupy only one acre, this third provision more than met the usual requirements. Attention is also called to the benefit the city obtained under this plat plan in having no lots face on two important highways, Pine Brook Boulevard, and Quaker Ridge Road, and further, in receiving land for the widening and straightening of these roads, without cost to the city.

The plaintiff was duly notified in writing by the Planning Board of the approval of the subdivision map and of the three conditions imposed. The board also approved the school site.

On December 19, 1956, the Planning Board again met and considered an upzoning of vacant tracts of land in the city and asked Mr. Hughes and the Corporation Counsel for a report on the Ward property and as to whether the gift of the school site was dependent on certain conditions. Mr. Raymond, the Planning Consultant of the city, at that meeting commented that regardless, the Planning Board cannot commit the Council with respect to zoning. Mrs. Ward was not informed of this meeting [126]*126or of anything that transpired there, until after the delivery of her deeds.

By deeds dated December 29, 1956, and January 8, 1957, Mrs. Ward conveyed the school site to the City Board of Education. . No conditions appeared in the deeds, probably because she believed, and with good reason, that the plat plan had been approved, and that all three conditions, of which she had been notified, had been met, and because she knew nothing of the matters considered at the board’s meeting on December 19,1956. Mr. Hughes testified that she had met the three conditions.

The Planning Board met again on January 14, 1957, after Mrs. Ward, in apparent reliance on the action of the board, taken on December 10, 1956, had delivered her deeds. At this meeting the board deleted the third condition and disapproved the subdivision map and recommended to the Common Council that the Zoning Ordinance be amended by placing the undeveloped areas of the city in a new district, where 20,000 square-foot lots, with a width of 150 feet at the building line, would be required.

There is no statutory authority for a planning board, having once approved a plat plan, later to disapprove it. Only when the plat plan is presented does the board have the right to approve, modify and approve, or disapprove. If it disapproves, it must state its reasons. Here, the board approved the plan and later purported to disapprove it, because one condition, that with reference to recreation, had not been met.

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Bluebook (online)
20 Misc. 2d 122, 197 N.Y.S.2d 64, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-city-of-new-rochelle-nysupct-1959.