Judges: Burke
Filed Date: 10/21/1960
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The controversy hereby remanded for a determination of the material issues arises out of, and questions the validity of, the rezoning of real property owned by the plaintiff in the Village of Scarsdale. Plaintiff has, since 1922, continually occupied and used the premises (an interior plot of 3.4 acres) as a building supply yard in a business zone district of the Heathcote section of Scarsdale. However, in October of 1955, despite plaintiff’s written protest, the Board of Trustees of the village, via an amendment to the building zone ordinance, placed plaintiff’s entire tract in a unique and newly established Residence B District.
Plaintiff urges that the board’s enactment (in June of 1955, prior to the adoption of the zoning ordinance) of Local Law
On the trial plaintiff produced evidence which, it contends, demonstrates that the limitation and conditions imposed by the new zoning were intended to eliminate and impair the use and value of the property for any purpose whatever, other than its present nonconforming use. Plaintiff sought a declaratory judgment, therefore, that the rezoning of its property was over-burdensome, unreasonable and confiscatory, and, therefore, unconstitutional.
The trial court, although finding that plaintiff produced evidence which might be sufficient to prove that the property could not be practically or profitably used for residential purposes, dismissed the complaint stating, inter alia, that, because of the existence of a nonconforming use, there is no deprivation of property or justiciable controversy (citing Headley v. City of Rochester, 272 N. Y. 197).
It is our opinion that the trial court erred in failing to decide whether the alleged deliberate confiscation and alleged resulting depreciation in the value of plaintiff’s property, regardless of the existence of a nonconforming use, constitutes a present invasion on plaintiff’s property rights. If it does so, the existence and maintenance of the ordinance and the threat to continue it under these circumstances would entitle plaintiff to equitable relief. (Dowsey v. Village of Kensington, 257 N. Y. 221, 229; Euclid v. Ambler Co., 272 U. S. 365, 386.) The plaintiff, having asserted an invasion of his property rights, must be allowed (although a nonconforming business use exists) to try to prove that the property is so situated that it has no possibility for residential and zoned uses, and is most readily adapted to a use now precluded under the zoning ordinance. (Vernon Park Realty v. City of Mount Vernon, 307 N. Y. 493, 499.)
On the contrary, in the case at bar, not only is there no opportunity for condemnation compensation, but if there is evidence that the property cannot be reasonably adapted to any use permitted by the zoning ordinance, the ordinance may be found to be confiscatory. We do not agree that this wrong, i.e., invasion of plaintiff’s rights, can be held to be remediless merely because of the existence of a nonconforming use.
Defendant’s argument that there is an administrative remedy (i.e., application for a variance) which has not been but should be exhausted is without merit. It is well established that such a burden may not be imposed upon a plaintiff as a prerequisite to the maintenance of an action challenging the constitutionality of the zoning ordinance. (Ulmer Park Realty Co. v. City of
Here plaintiff does not seek to remedy the effect of a valid regulation, but rather to strike it as confiscatory and unconstitutional. In the latter situation, relief is afforded by means of a direct attack upon the terms of the ordinance (Matter of Otto v. Steinhilber, supra, p. 75). “Indeed, an application for a variance here * * * would be futile * * * since the Zoning Board of Appeals has no power to remake the zoning map under the guise of granting a variance [cases cited] ” (Levitt v. Incorporated Vil. of Sands Point, 6 N Y 2d 269, 273). Where, as here, the pleadings allege that the ordinance in and of itself destroys the marketability and value of the property for commercial and residential uses, an application for a variance is not a condition precedent to a judicial remedy. (Euclid v. Ambler Co., 272 U. S. 365, 386, supra.)
Accordingly, the judgment should be reversed and the case remitted to Special Term, with costs to abide the event, for a determination of the material issues presented by this record.
Chief Judge Desmond and Judges Dye, Fuld, Froessel, Van Voorhis and Foster concur.
Judgment reversed, etc.