OPINION OF THE COURT
In аn action to have a zoning ordinance declared unconstitutional as applied to plaintiff’s property, the issue is not whether other zoning would be appropriate or whether the property is zoned for its highest and best use but whether the existing zoning classification deprives the owner of any use to which it is reasonably adapted. To be successful in such an action, the property owner must overcome the presumption of constitutionality of the ordinance by establishing beyond a reasonable doubt that he cannot obtain a reasonable return on the property under any of the uses, other than public or quasi-public uses, permitted by the ordinance. Because plaintiff’s proof was insufficient, undеr that standard, to establish that the present zoning of plaintiff’s property is confiscatory, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
I
Plaintiff owns an irregularly shaped 12.6-acre parcel of land which bridges the line between the Town of Bedford and the Town/Village of Mount Kisco. The Mount Kisco
To the west and south of the Bedford portion liеs another parcel, also owned by plaintiff, which fronts on Route 172, which is zoned Planned Business-Office (PB-O) and on which are situated two medical buildings and two office buildings. Opposite those buildings on the south side of Route 172 is land within Mount Kisco which is zoned for limited office use and on which there are two commercial office buildings. Opposite the plaintiff’s property on the south side of Route 172, also in Mount Kisco, the land is zoned for multifamily residential use and a marsh preserve.
To the north of the plaintiff’s property on the west side of McLain Street the land is zoned for, and has been developed as, two-acre residential use. Along the east side of McLain Street and running north from Route 172 is a 296-acre estate, zoned for two-acre and four-acre residential use, on which is situated a large mansion presently occupied by a charitable foundation, under a five-year special use permit granted by the Town of Bedford in 1979, as a study center.
The property was acquired by plaintiff in 1978 for $265,000. In February, 1979, plaintiff petitioned the Town Board of the Town of Bedford to rezone the property as a new planned business-office park district, similar to the town’s PB-0 classification, but including as a permissible use a conference center and incidental service businesses, access to the property to be from Route 172 only. The Bedford Planning Board recommended rezoning as PB-0 rather than plaintiff’s proposed new park district, on condition that a buffer of not less than 100 feet be provided adjacent to adjoining residential property. After two public hearings held by the town board, at which, among other objectants, the Mount Kisco Planning Board and the Westchester County Planning Board objected that the traffic
Plaintiff then commenced the instant action for a declaratory judgment and for damages, alleging that because of the development of abutting lands its property cannot be used for any purpose permitted by R-2A zoning and that, therefore, continuation of that zoning classifiсation denied it due process of law and entitled it to damages for the denial of its constitutional and civil rights. After trial Supreme Court in an opinion which noted that development of plaintiff’s property for office use would have no significant traffic effect on Route 172, that plaintiff had demonstrated significant economic injury, and that the town had failed to estаblish that R-2A zoning was required by public interest, declared the zoning unconstitutional. It held, however, that plaintiff was not entitled to damages. The judgment entered dismissed plaintiff’s cause of action for damages but on the due process causes of action declared the zoning unconstitutional as applied to plaintiff’s property.
The Appellate Division held that рlaintiff had failed to sustain its burden of proof in a number of respects, that the Trial Judge had incorrectly applied the area variance standard of proof stated in Matter of Fulling v Palumbo (
Plaintiff appeals as of right on both constitutional (CPLR 5601, subd [b], par 1) and modification (CPLR 5601, subd [a], par [iii]) grounds. It argues that the Appellate Division, not the Trial Judge, applied the wrong standard of review, that it sufficiently demonstrated both the value of the property at time of purchasе and the fact that the property cannot be used for any purpose permitted by the present classification, that the confiscatory nature of the present zoning and the town board’s refusal to rezone
II
Concerning standard оf review, plaintiff argues first that on evidence which conflicts or from which conflicting inferences may be drawn, the Appellate Division cannot reverse unless the trial court’s decision is so clearly erroneous that it can be said that it is not supported by the evidence. For more than 50 years, however, since the 1925 amendment to the Constitution (art VI, § 5), the rule has beеn that the power of the Appellate Division is not so limited, that its authority is as broad as that of the trial court (Jacques v Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
The second branch of the argument is that the trial court referred to Matter of Fulling v Palumbo (
Nor should our affirmance in Socha v Smith (
That does not mean that in a confiscation case thе municipality does not run a risk if in reliance upon the burden of proof on the property owner it introduces no proof. As in every case, when the proponent presents proof sufficient to permit the trier of fact to decide in his or her favor, the opponent must counter that proof or risk an adverse determination. Only in that general sense can it be said that there is any obligation on the municipality to go forward with proof (see Matter of Spears v Berle,
This is because area variance applications seek to relax one or more incidental limitations relating to a permitted use whereas confiscation cases are brought to upset the legislatively adopted use restriction in favor of a less restrictive use classification. In area variance cases financial hardship is one of the factors to be considered but, by itself, is not determinative (Conley v Town of Brookhaven Zoning Bd. of Appeals,
The Socha and Salamar Bldrs. cases, upon which plaintiff relies, are not to the contrary. Although the Fulling burden-shifting discussion was referred to by the Appellate Division in Socha (
Ill
Whether the existing zoning permits of a reasonable return requires proof from which can be determined the rate of return earned by like property in the community and proof in dollars and cents form of the owner’s investment in the property as well as the return that the property will produce from the various uses permissible under the existing classification (Matter of Village Bd. v Jarrold,
The owner’s investment is, however, neither limited to nor exactly the same as the amount paid upon purсhase of the property. Taxes, expenses and other carrying charges to the extent they exceed income may properly be added, as may improvements made (see Matter of Crossroads Recreation v Broz, supra, at p 44; Town of Hempstead v Lynne,
The other side of the equation is the return obtainable from the uses permitted by the existing zoning. That does not require a showing that the property is not suitable for public or quasi-public uses permitted by the zoning, such as for a church, school, college, public library, municipal building or park (Matter of Village Bd. v Jarrold,
Whether the property will provide a reasonablе rate of return involves consideration of factors such as its topography, the zoning and use of nearby properties even though not within the same municipality, traffic on adjoining streets, and the length of time since structures of the type permitted have been erected in the area, among others (Vernon Park Realty v City of Mount Vernon,
IV
It is against that background that we are to determine the correctness of the order appealed from. We agree with the Appellate Division that plaintiff’s proof was deficient in several respects and, to the extent that its decision may be regarded as evaluating the facts differently than did Special Term, conclude that it is the Appellate Division’s decision which “‘is conformable with the weight of evidence’ ” (Rorie v Woodmere Academy,
The deficiencies in proof related to special permit uses and the price paid by plaintiff for the property. Much of the testimony to which plaintiff рoints as satisfying its burden relating to special permit uses related to public and quasi-public uses and was, therefore, irrelevant. Although there was testimony touching on use for a club, sanitarium and landscape nursery, use as a nursing home was not considered. Moreover, club use was said to be unsuitable “Because it doesn’t represent highest and best use. A tennis club would never return the income that office use, office building use, would.” But there is no constitutional requirement that the highest and best use or the greatest income obtainable be allowed (Dauernheim, Inc. v Town Bd.,
Concerning the price paid by plaintiff for the property, plaintiff’s argument that “[tjhere was no evidence in the instant case to indicate that Plaintiff’s original purchase of
With respect to weight of the evidence, we note simply that plaintiff relied heavily on the fact that its property fronts on Route 172 and, it is claimed, is. surrounded on three sidеs by nonresidential uses. The evidence presented when the trial was reopened shows, however, that although the property to the west is zoned for research office use, its owner, American Ultramar Limited, had submitted to the Mount Kisco Planning Board a proposal for construction of an office building but never followed up on it and had no present plan to build and that a taking of the property for street use was under consideration. It showed also that the 296-acre property east of McLain Street is being used under a time-limited conditional permit and is zoned two-acre and four-acre residential, and that the properties to the north of plaintiff’s parcel are improved with residences. Although traffic on Route 172 and the commercial buildings along its route may well affect so much of plaintiff’s property as fronts for 218 feet on Route 172, when we consider plaintiff’s property as a whole in relation to its surroundings, as we must, we have no difficulty in concluding that the weight of the evidence supports the decision of the Appellate Division rather than that of Special Term.
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Jasen, Jones, Wachtler, Simons and Kaye concur.
Order affirmed, with costs.
