126 Misc. 2d 543 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1984
OPINION OF THE COURT
On April 28,1981, the Town of Clarkstown, Rockland County, New York, enacted a Local Law No. 7 as Code of the Town of Clarkstown (Code), chapter 22A (Amusement Devices). Section 22A-2 of such Code required any person seeking to operate or maintain, inter alla, “any electronic or video game” within the town to first obtain a permit for such use by application and the payment of a license fee of $25 for each such amusement device. However, Code § 22A-2 was amended on June 8, 1982, by Local Law No. 8 which raised the fee for a permit/license for each machine to the sum of $125 each, i.e., a 500% increase in the original permit fee enacted approximately 14 months earlier.
All of the plaintiffs herein are owners of coin-operated amusement devices within the Town of Clarkstown and have quite naturally objected to this staggering increase in the fee amount per device. Plaintiffs jointly own and control approximately 235 such amusement devices and the newly enacted fee of $125 per device distributed jointly among the plaintiffs comes to a total of approximately $30,000, whereas prior to such fee increase the total sum expended by plaintiffs for such applications per device would have totaled approximately $6,000.
Defendants in response and in opposition to this motion claim that the issue of fact which would preclude its granting is that of legislative intent involved and that, therefore, this motion should be denied. This court disagrees. Whatever issue there may have been as to legislative intent in the enactment of such ordinance originally, it is certainly clear from the defendants’ affidavit wherein members of the Town Board speak in substance to the control and regulation of video machines as follows: “Socially unredeeming coin-operated video amusement games”; which “psychologically mesmerize or robotize children”; which such machines cause such children to “squander pocket money * * * teach violent and aggressive behavior * * * lead children to truancy * * * neglect of homework * * * damage of eyes * * * encourage betting * * * to prevent gambling and pornography * * * [which such] insidious and unredeeming amusement devices” cause a “hypnotic effect on youngsters” and by use of these “parasitic machines” such children “waste hours in dark and noisy video dens” and the “Town Board felt the spreading video industry must be regulated and increasing their license fee was a start * * * If all video machines were voluntarily removed from town * * * the town would be better off [as such machines] attract crowds of youth [which are] a very real and potential source of trouble”.
“You got trouble my friend, right here in River City, with a Capital T and that rhymes with Vee, and that stands for Video”. (Robert Preston, The Music Man — with apologies.)
The problem, as pointed out by plaintiffs, is that the only regulation of the businesses or machines is the issuance of a
Police inspection and regulation is part of the ordinary work of the police force everywhere and it cannot be used to uphold a license fee. (Dugan Bros. v Zorn, 145 Misc 611.) Other than the actions of the town clerk in preparing lists of those machines affected in issuing the appropriate permit stickers, there is in effect no “regulation” which takes place by defendant. The moneys garnered go into the general Town fund and it is more than adequately apparent from the affidavits of the Town Board members that the function of the raising of the per device fee from $25 to $125 was not for regulation but to prevent the
In the opinion of this court, such fee was not only arbitrarily determined in its amount but the defendant has failed to show a rationale for realistic relationship between the licensing fee and the cost by the Town to process such applications and “regulation” of such machines. (Cf. Melron Amusement Corp. v Town of Mamaroneck, Supreme Ct, Westchester County, index No. 17378/81, Dec. 30,1982, Beisheim, J.) While the Town has been granted authority under Town Law to enact fees in certain matters, there is implied therein a limitation that the fees charged must be reasonably necessary toward the accomplishment of the statutory purpose. (Cf City of Buffalo v Stevenson, 207 NY 258.) Such power to exact fees must be circumscribed by a limitation that such fees charged must be reasonably necessary to the accomplishment of their regulatory program. (Cf. Jewish Reconstructionist Synagogue N. Shore v Incorporated Vil. of Rosyln Harbor, 40 NY2d 158; see also, Orange & Rock-land Utils, v Town of Clarkstown, 80 AD2d 846.) There is an additional requirement that fees imposed “should be assessed or estimated on the basis of reliable factual studies or statistics”. (9 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations, § 26.36, at 78.)
Accordingly, the court does find, declare and adjudge on plaintiffs’ first cause of action that the fee promulgated pursuant to the Town of Clarkstown Code § 22A-2 as amended June 8, 1982, is unconstitutional as applied and is clearly disproportionate to the cost of issuance, inspection and regulation as takes place within the Town.
Judgment for plaintiff on cause of action No. 1 declaring the enactment in 1982 of the amendment of Town Code § 22A-2 wherein such fee per machine was raised to the sum of $125 is declared unconstitutional and such fee shall revert nunc pro tune to the original fee of $25 per device.
On plaintiffs’ second cause of action the court does declare and adjudge in plaintiffs’ favor and finds under the circumstances that such amendment as discussed above was not only for the legitimate purpose of “regulating” such devices but also for the illegal purpose to serve both as a de facto revenue raising device and to limit the number of such machines in an arbitrary and capricious manner.
It should be noted that this court does not determine the Town is without power at all to enact a fee schedule/license fee for the
In light of the above two rulings and it appearing that neither party has actually briefed or argued plaintiffs’ motion as to the third cause of action, such action is dismissed without prejudice as moot.
Plaintiffs’ fourth cause of action sounds in one for damages only.
Motion for summary judgment granted on liability only and the plaintiffs shall schedule an inquest to be held in Supreme Court, Rockland County, in Special Term, on notice to defendants as to the amount of such damages, if any.