OPINION OF THE COURT
Petitioners brought this CPLR article 78 proceeding against the Nassau County Board of Assessors challenging the Board’s grant and renewal of a real property tax exemption under RPTL 420-a (for “property [used] exclusively for religious * * * purposes” [subd (1) (a)]), with respect to the land and building owned and occupied by appellant Yun Lin Temple in the Village of Old Westbury. The Temple is a religious corporаtion organized in California as a religious non-profit public benefit corporation. Its charter recites that it is dedicated to the promulgation, promotion and study of Black Sect Tibetаn Tantric Buddhism.
Petitioners are residents of the Village whose homes are either immediately adjacent to or nearby the Temple’s property. Their petition alleges that they have been injured in being subject to higher real property taxes as a result of the wrongfully granted exemption to the Temple property. Petitioners do not contest that the Temple’s exclusive use of the property is, as the Temple asserts, for purely non-profit religious purposes of teaching, meditation and the spiritual development of members of that Buddhist sect. Rather, petitionеrs assert that the Temple lost its entitlement to the statutory religious use exemption because of non-compliance with the Village’s zoning ordinance (requiring a special permit for use аs a house of worship in the residential district where the Temple’s property is located) and, as a foreign religious corporation, for failing to obtain authority to do business in this State under the Businеss Corporation Law, and to obtain authority to conduct activities in this State pursuant to the Not-For-Profit Corporation Law.
On objections in point of law by the Board and the Temple’s motion tо dismiss, Supreme Court dismissed the petition on the grounds that petitioners lacked standing and that entitlement to the religious use exemption under RPTL 420-a was not dependent upon an applicant’s cоmpliance with local zon *408 ing laws or the requirements of the Business Corporation Law or Not-For-Profit Corporation Law.
The Appellate Division reversed (
Petitioners claim that, as real property owners of Nassau County, thеy have standing because they are directly harmed financially in a calculable (albeit small) amount by an erroneous grant of a religious use exemption from taxation of the Temple’s рroperty. They point .out that the effect of taking the Temple’s property off the tax rolls is to reduce the total assessed value of all non-exempt properties in the County. They сlaim injury to the extent that the tax rate applied to the remaining total assessed property in the County (including their own) must be increased to make up for the lost revenue attributable to the removal of the Temple’s property from the tax rolls.
While petitioners may have thus demonstrated that, as County real property owners and taxpayers, they have incurred some possiblе measurable financial damage from the challenged tax exemption granted the Temple for its single parcel here, that alone cannot be deemed enough to confer stаnding without entirely overruling
Van Deventer v Long Is. City
(
“It is quite apparent that if the plaintiffs conten *409 tion is well founded very few assessments could stand assaults, and that the collection of revenues for governmental purposes would be very uncertain, and that interminable litigation would attend its collection” (id., at 138).
Time has not diminished thе validity or seriousness of the concerns that led this Court in Van Deventer to deny taxpayer standing in situations such as presented here.
Our later decision in
Matter of Dudley v Kerwick
(
We are not called upon here to determine the scope of derelictions by assessors, which must be in some mannеr systemic in nature, that would afford taxpayer standing by analogy to the Matter of Dudley v Kerwick precedent. Here, petitioners have not alleged anything more than a legally erroneous determination to grant a religious use tax exemption regarding a single parcel of real estate, which concededly would only have an insignificant impact upon the tax base of Nassau County. Dudley was never intendеd to confer general taxpayer standing under these circumstances. Indeed, in affording the limited recognition of the petitioners’ right to sue in Dudley, the Court justified conferring standing for the very reason that “рetitioners here have alleged far more than erroneous determinations regarding some of the property in the town” (id., at 551 [emphasis supplied]).
Likewise, petitioners have not satisfied our two-fold test for standing to challenge governmental action — that is, injury in fact, which harm “falls within the ‘zone of interests,’ or
*410
сoncerns, sought to be promoted or protected by the statutory provision under which the agency has acted”
(Society of Plastics Indus. v County of Suffolk,
Nor do petitioners satisfy the zone of interest requirement for standing. Society of Plastics Indus. v County of Suffolk (supra) is instructive on this issue. In that case, a Suffolk County plastic products maker, and other non-local parties, sought to challenge under the State Environmental Quality Review Act a local law рrohibiting the countywide use of plastic products by retail food establishments. In Society of Plastics Indus., we concluded that the local petitioner’s assertion of incurring environmental harm from the local law was “tenuous” (i d., at 777) and no different from the environmental impact upon “the public at large” (id., at 778). As already discussed, petitioners’ asserted injury-in-fact in the instant case suffers from the same shortcomings. In addition, рetitioners’ claim is that the Temple violated the Village’s zoning ordinance and failed to seek required authorizations under the Business Corporation Law and Not-For-Profit Corporation Law. Cоmpliance with such totally unrelated local and State legislation is not within the zone of interest of RPTL 420-a, and petitioners do not contest that the Temple otherwise fully qualifies for an exemрtion under the provision. Petitioners thus lack standing to challenge the Board’s determination.
Petitioners do not qualify for “Common-Law Taxpayer Standing”
(Matter of Transactive Corp., supra,
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the petition dismissed.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Smith, Ciparick, Wesley and Rosenblatt concur.
Order reversed, etc.
