101 A.D.2d 654 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1984
Proceeding initiated in this court pursuant to EDPL 207 to annul a determination of respondent which held that the action to condemn petitioners’ property was exempt from EDPL article 2. f Respondent plans to construct a “bike/hike trail” along the Mohawk River in Schenectady County. A segment of the proposed path passes over land owned by Niagara Mohawk Power Company, from which petitioners have the right to remove topsoil. It also passes over a small section of land which petitioners own. Respondent contracted with Niagara Mohawk for a license to construct the trail over its property, subject to any outstanding easements or rights of way. It was unable to reach a similar agreement with petitioners. Petitioners subsequently began to remove topsoil from the land covered by their digging rights by excavating trenches across the route over which the path was to be built. 11 On November 3,1983, respondent initiated condemnation proceedings pursuant to the Eminent Domain Procedure Law against petitioners’ property interests. It attempted to expedite this process by declaring itself exempt from compliance with the procedural requirements of EDPL article 2 on the ground that petitioners’ removal of topsoil from the site of the proposed path constituted an “emergency”, as well as because the taking involved was de minimis so that the public interest would not be prejudiced thereby (EDPL 206, subd [D]). Petitioners have instituted this proceeding for a review of respondent’s determination that it is exempt from the procedural requirements of EDPL article 2. H Pursuant to the terms of the recently amended EDPL 207 (L 1982, ch 356, § 6, eff June 21, 1982), this court does not have jurisdiction of the instant proceeding. While EDPL 207 (subd [A]) once provided for judicial review by the Appellate Division of a condemning authority’s “determination and findings made pursuant to this article”, the scope of this review has been limited. As amended, EDPL 207 (subd [A]) now provides for this court’s review of a condemnor’s “determination and findings made pursuant to section two hundred four of this article” (emphasis added). A condemnor’s determination