195 Misc. 748 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1949
Official Referee. The plaintiffs have brought this action to enjoin the enforcement hy the defendant town and its officers of a certain ordinance on the ground that such ordinance is in violation of the Constitution of the State of New York and of the Constitution of the United States in that it is arbitrary and unreasonable. The ordinance was adopted by the town hoard of the town on the 28th day of June, 1948, “ In order to Regulate Sand Bank and Gravel Pits, Topsoil Removal and Other Excavations in the Town ”. Authorization to adopt ordinances of this kind is to he found in section 136 of the Town Law which as amended reads as follows: “ The town hoard may provide by ordinance for the licensing and otherwise regulating of * * * 12. In any town in the counties of Erie and Monroe, or in a county adjoining a city having a population of one million or more, or in any town adjacent to such a county, the operation and use of any lands or premises for the excavation of sand, gravel, stone or other minerals and the stripping of top soil therefrom.” Section 1 of article I of the ordinance contains as a declaration of policy:— “ It is hereby declared to he the policy of the Town Board to provide for the proper use of land to prevent all manner of excavations which create pits, holes, or hollows in the earth, leaving it in a hazardous or dangerous state, or cause soil erosion which depletes the land of its natural vegetative cover and supply of organic material, renders such land unproductive and unsuitable for agricultural purposes and undesirable for building homes, resulting in lower land values. By this ordinance the Town Board seeks to remove the danger to health and life caused by deep excavations remaining in the ground; and the stripping of topsoil thereby resulting in damage to agricultural crops through dust storms in dry weather, hy exposure of the bare earth -to wind action and in wet periods by pools of water, which ordinance will promote the safety, health and general welfare of the people of the Town.”
The Town of Cheektowaga is situate in the county of Erie and lies east of the city of Buffalo, south of the town of Amherst,
The ordinance adopted June 28, 1948, which is here being attacked among other things forbade stripping or removal of topsoil within ten feet of any property line and that after removal the stripped premises “ shall be graded to the level
From the testimony I find that the ordinance adopted on June 28, 1948, in reference to the removal of topsoil is not arbitrary or unreasonable and that it is distinctly for the public good of the town and its inhabitants. The testimony establishes that the removal of topsoil in this vicinity creates erosion, interferes with the stream of the creek, does away with animal and vegetable life and at times creates dust that is unhealthy. The Federal Government in the vicinity of the town of Cheektowaga is working on stream protection; such protection as planned is for the benefit of the town and its people and in a larger sense for the benefit of the inhabitants of western New York; interference with such plan of stream protection would be detrimental to this project of the Federal Government. For these reasons it must be concluded that the ordinance itself is one that is intended for and will protect the welfare of the community both from the standpoint of economy and of health. For these reasons the ordinance as adopted on June 28, 1948, is held to be constitutional and not invalid.
Reference has been made to the resolutions adopted by the town board under date of October 6, 1948, exempting the property of the plaintiffs and of another owner from the provisions of the ordinance on the ground that the use of these properties for topsoil stripping “ does not threaten to be detrimental to the public health, morals or safety or the general welfare in any respect.’’ What the town board did when they adopted these two resolutions of exemption was to pass them for the reasons therein stated as an amendment to the ordinance of June 28, 1948. This being so the plaintiffs had a right under such amended ordinance or resolution to proceed with stripping the topsoil off the premises that they then occupied for that purpose. Owners similarly situated, if there be any, would be entitled to a similar exemption. The later resolution of May 9, 1949, which purported to rescind the resolution of October 6,1948, was passed without notice and not in the manner which would give it the effect of a subsequent amendment to the original ordinance; I therefore hold that the resolution of May 9, 1949, in reference to the property of the plaintiffs is invalid.
This may be regarded as my decision in this action and the issues therein. On such decision may be entered judgment holding the ordinance as passed June 28, 1948, and as amended October 6, 1948, to be constitutional and enforcible and granting the plaintiffs an order restraining the defendant and its officers from interfering with the removal of the remaining topsoil on the premises now owned and being worked by the plaintiffs. Judgment to be without costs.