91 A.D.2d 739 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1982
— Appeal from an order and judgment of the Supreme Court at Special Term (Kahn, J.), entered August 19, 1981 in Albany County, which, inter alia, granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment on the first cause of action, dismissed defendant’s affirmative defenses, and dismissed the third-party complaint. Salem Hills Sewage Disposal Corporation (Salem) is organized pursuant to article 10 of the Transportation Corporations Law to operate a sewage treatment plant serving a residential subdivision in the Village of Voorheesville under a State Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit (SPDES) issued by plaintiff. In November, 1978, following a hearing on charges that defendant violated the SPDES permit by discharging effluent into a creek in excess of limitations of flow and analysis levels and failing to make certain repairs to its collection system, a consent order was made by plaintiff requiring defendant to abate its violations and comply with a schedule which required monitoring, submission of engineering reports and completion of corrective action. On November 28, 1980, plaintiff commenced this action to restrain defendant’s violation of the consent order, to require compliance with the order, and for assessment of civil penalties. In its third-party complaint, defendant impleaded the Village of Voorheesville seeking money damages for statutory breaches and negligence because the village failed to provide a fair, reasonable and adequate rate pursuant to section 121 of the Transportation Corporations Law. Special Term granted plaintiff summary judgment for an injunction restraining defendant’s violation of the consent order, dismissed the affirmative defense alleging the order to be unenforceable because it was subject to the condition precedent that defendant would be issued a reasonable rate, ordered corrective measures be completed in 120 days, and dismissed the third-party complaint. Salem has appealed. It is necessary to first determine whether summary judgment granting enforcement of plaintiff’s order was proper. Defendant argues that the order was predicated upon an express oral agreement as a condition precedent that it receive an increase in its rates from the village in order to obtain funds required to comply with the order. Nothing in the order indicates