Filed Date: 11/24/1982
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeal from an order and judgment of the Supreme Court at Special Term (Bryant, J.), entered February 5, 1982 in Broome County, which, inter alia, dismissed petitioner’s application, in a proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78, to annul determinations of the Planning Commission and the Zoning Board of Appeals of the City of Binghamton. On April 1,1981, petitioner was issued a certificate of occupancy and compliance to operate, as a retail establishment within a roadside business (RB) zone, a “general merchandise, book, card, magazine store”. The certificate forbade any change of occupancy or use inconsistent with the above description. Shortly after the store opened, a building inspector discovered that petitioner had installed 32 coin-operated, individually occupied, “peep show” booths in an area encompassing 40% of the store’s retail space. As a consequence, the inspector concluded that the store no longer qualified as a “retail business”, but instead had taken on the character of a movie arcade. Such an arcade not being a principal permitted use within an RB zone, the inspector classified the store as an “indoor recreation facility, indoor theater”, a permitted use. This new designation carried with it, however, the requirement that petitioner submit a development plan for the city planning commission’s approval prior to being permitted to operate the facility. Petitioner submitted the plan under protest, presumably maintaining that the building continued in the “retail business” category. Like the inspector, the planning commission determined that the building was “an indoor recreational facility, indoor theater” and approved the development plan, but on condition that a stockade-type fence be installed to buffer petitioner’s property from an adjoining residential district and that no sign be erected on the east side of the building. The zoning board of appeals affirmed the classification but, because of lack of jurisdiction, declined to entertain petitioner’s request to allow a sign previously installed on the east side of the structure to remain. In the article 78 proceeding which followed, Special Term found neither the reclassification nor the sign restriction arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable and dismissed the petition. Because an article 78 proceeding is an unsuitable vehicle for testing the constitutionality of legislation, we are not obliged to consider petitioner’s