In this аction for a permanent injunction, plaintiff seeks an order preliminarily enjoining and restraining the defendants from using premises known as 54 Maple Avenue, in the City of Troy, New York, heretofore purchased by the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene and leased to the New York State Association of Retarded Children, Inc., Rensselaer County Chapter, for use as a halfway house or hostel for the mentally retarded. The defendant, New York State Department of Mental Hygiene, hаs made a cross motion for judgment dismissing the complaint upon the grounds that the court lacks jurisdiction of the person of the defendant and the subject matter of the action and upon the ground that the complaint fails to state a cause of action. The claim that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action and of the person of the defendant Mental Hygiene Department (CPLR 3211, subd [a], pars 2, 8), is without merit and denied.
The plaintiff herein is an owner of premises аs tenant by the entirety which are in close proximity to the subject premises which the defendants are presently using as a hostel or home for mentally retarded adults. The subject property is situated in an R-2 residential district in the City of Troy in which the proposed use by the defendants is not permitted. The defendants have not nor do they intеnd to make any application to the city’s zoning authorities for approval of the use, it being their position that said use is in furtherance of a
The issue raises the ancient dichotomy of distinguishing between governmental and proprietary functions of State and local governments. Section 1.03 of article 1 оf the Mental Hygiene Law states that "The protection and promotion of the mental health of the people of the state and the prevention оf mental illness, mental retardation * * * are matters of public concern. The state and local government shall share responsibility * * * for developing plans, рrograms, and services for the care, treatment and rehabilitation of the mentally retarded”. Next, section 11.01 of article 11 of the Mental Hygiene Law, entitled "Declaration of purpose”, states that "This article is designed to enable and encourage local governments to develop in the community prevеntive, rehabilitative, and treatment services offering continuity of care; to improve and to expand existing community programs for the mentally ill, the mentally retаrded * * * whose conditions * * * are associated with mental disabilities * * * to plan for the integration of community, regional, and state services and facilities for the mеntally disabled.” In furtherance of the afore-described statutory State purpose to aid the mentally ill, section 11.33 of article 11 of the Mental Hygiene Law statеs that "The commissioner shall have the power to operate or cause to be operated community residential facilities as hostels for the mentally disabled”.
Clearly, the purchase of the premises at 54 Maple Avenue in the City of Troy and the leasing of the same by the State to the local chapter of the State Association of Retarded Children was in furtherance of a legitimate State purpose and the operation of the subject premises is gоvernmental in nature and thereby exempt from the provisions of the zoning ordinance of the City of Troy. (County of Westchester v Village of Mamaroneck,
It does not follow, however, that because a use is governmental in nature and thereby less restricted than a proprietary use, that the sovereign can arbitrarily select a site in any community for the operation of the faсility in furtherance of the governmental purpose. As Judge Jones noted in People v Renaissance Project (
The applicаtion for a preliminary injunction is denied. The cross motion to dismiss the verified complaint for a permanent injunction on the ground it fails to state a cause of action (CPLR 3211) is granted, without prejudice to the plaintiff’s commencement of an article 78 proceeding to review the acts of the defendants, if the plaintiff so elects within the time limited for the commencement of such a proceeding.
