The Village of Lloyd Harbor, having a population of about 1,800 and located a few miles from the business section of the Town of Huntington, is a community of homes. The village zoning ordinance, as amended in 1936, classified all of its land as residential, with the exception of a small area zoned for business. In 1950, after the latter area had been sold for residential use, the ordinance was changed to provide that the entire village be zoned as residential and restricted to single-family dwellings.
In 1953, plaintiffs purchased an eight-acre parcel, within the village, on which they built a house. A year later, the village acquired a two-acre plot. Located thereon, about 450 feet from plaintiffs’ home, is a large Tudor-style barn. In existence for many years, it was long used for the storage and garaging of tractors and other farm equipment. The village plans to remodel the structure into a sort of municipal headquarters to be used (1) to furnish an office for the village clerk, a meeting place for the village trustees, discussion of village affairs and courtroom facilities for the village police justice; (2) to provide a locker room and toilet facilities for highway employees; and (3) to house a police car, two enclosed garbage trucks, a tractor, snow removal equipment and smaller appliances used in connection with the repair and maintenance of roads.
The highway repair equipment is used at most three days a week, the garbage trucks twice a week. The latter leave the barn at a quarter to eight in the morning on those two days, pick up the refuse and take it directly to an incinerator located outside of the village. The trucks are always empty when they start out from the barn and when they return to it, and no garbage is at any time disposed of within the village of Lloyd Harbor. The barn’s outward appearance will not be affected by the increased uses to which it will be put, the record evidence being ample that the building will be attractively landscaped and that its operations will be inconspicuous and unobtrusive.
When plaintiffs learned what was planned, they brought
The court at Special Term dismissed two causes of action, the first and third, and the Appellate Division dismissed the remaining one. Both courts agreed that a municipality could not he prevented from performing a governmental function merely because such performance would violate a zoning ordinance, but they differed in their delineation of the “ governmental ” and the “ proprietary.” The Appellate Division, after finding that on the proof adduced “ neither the structure in question nor the manner in which the village proposes to use it # * constitutes a nuisance in fact ”, went on to decide that all of the proposed uses were governmental and could, therefore, be carried on in a residential zone despite the ordinance’s restrictions.
In the very nature of things, a municipality must have the power to select the site of buildings or other structures for the performance of its governmental duties. Accordingly, it necessarily follows, a village, is not subject to zoning restrictions in the performance of its governmental, as distinguished from its corporate or proprietary, activities. (See, e.g., Village of Larchmont v. Town of Mamaroneck,
Once we conclude that a village is free to locate its governmental operations in any district it chooses, we are left with the question whether the uses planned for the village building are of a governmental or proprietary character.
Insofar as the structure may be used as a courtroom, a meeting place for the village trustees or an office for the village clerk, there is no problem; it is conceded that such uses are governmental. However, it is plaintiffs’ contention that the building is to be used only as a garage for police cars and for highway department trucks and equipment employed in the repair of highways and in the collection of garbage, and it is urged that, in carrying out such activities, the village performs a corporate function and acts in a proprietary capacity.
Whether a particular activity involves a governmental function or one proprietary is a matter not always easy of determination. Past decisions, mostly in the field of tort liability (see, e.g., Brush v. Commissioner,
As we have already intimated, even if the 1936 zoning ordinance, with its provision for a business district, were still in force, unaffected by the 1950 amendment, the village would be free to place its governmental operations where it did, in the structure on its two-acre plot. That being so, we do not reach the question, suggested by plaintiff’s allegations, as to whether a municipality may be constitutionally and validly zoned solely for residential purposes. (Cf. Matter of Fox Meadow Estates v. Culley,
In short, then, since the village plans to use the erstwhile barn in connection with the performance of governmental func
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. Plaintiffs point to our 1935 affirmance-without-opinion in O’Brien v. Town of Greenburgh (
