MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Plaintiffs challenge housing regulations promulgated by the City of New York Department of Housing Preservation and Development (“HPD”) and applicable to Cad-man Towers, Inc. (“Cadman Towers”) on the grounds that the regulations violate the Due Process, Equal Protection and Takings Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment as well as 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982); they also mount state-law claims based on Article 78 of New York's Civil Practice Law and Rules, N.Y.Civ.Prac.L. & R. §§ 7801 et seq. (McKinney 1981), and on the New York State Constitution. BACKGROUND: Plaintiffs David Silberman (“David”) and Fanny Silberman (“Fanny”) are a married couple in their eighties. Plaintiff Stephen Silberman (“Stephen”), age 26, is their grandson. David and Fanny are shareholders of Cadman Towers and have resided there for many years. Defendant Cadman Towers is a cooperative housing company organized under Article 2 of New York’s Private Housing Finance Law, N.Y.Priv. Hous.Fin.Law §§ 10-37 (McKinney 1976) (the “Mitchell-Lama Law”), financed by loans from New York City and, pursuant to Sections 23 and 32 of the Mitchell-Lama Law, N.Y.Priv.Hous.Fin.Law §§ 23, 32 (McKinney 1976), is subject to regulation by HPD.
Approximately four years ago, Stephen moved in with David and Fanny, apparently motivated in part by David’s poor health. David and Fanny would customarily spend the winter months in Florida, during which time Stephen would live alone in their apartment. In November of 1987, 1 while in Florida, David suffered a severe stroke, apparently his third; as a result, he has not been able to travel back to New York, and Fanny has remained in Florida with him. While David is confined to a wheelchair and has significant after-effects of his stroke, his prognosis is guardedly optimistic, and he hopes to return to New York in the not-too-distant future.
HPD has promulgated regulations (the “Regulations”) applicable to housing companies subsidized by New York City pursuant to the Mitchell-Lama Law, including Cadman Towers. Pursuant to Article II, Section 15 of the Regulations, a tenant/cooperator may “co-occupy” an apartment with a person other than another tenant/cooperator, provided he or she first obtains written permission from the housing company and from HPD.
2
As a gener
The Regulations require that each tenant/cooperator and each occupant (whether or not a member of the tenant/cooperator’s immediate family) submit certain financial information on an annual basis; if rent or maintenance charges are based on income, the income of the occupant will be included in the calculation. Plaintiffs have for the last four years submitted reports to Cad-man Towers containing information about Stephen’s income.
Article VI, Section 3 of the Regulations provides that a member of the immediate family of a tenant/cooperator may become a co-owner of shares if (i) the individual has been a bona fide resident of the apartment for at least two years, during which time the apartment was such individual’s primary residence, (ii) the individual’s income has been included in income affidavits filed annually by the tenant/cooperator, and (iii) both the individual and the shareholder intend to remain in joint occupancy. Plaintiffs claim that for several years they have attempted to have Stephen listed as a co-owner of David and Fanny’s shares in Cad-man Towers, and to have Stephen’s name added to their occupancy agreement. Plaintiffs have submitted documentation regarding one such request, in 1988; this was rejected on the ground that HPD’s regulations do not permit grandchildren to become joint owners of their grandparents’ co-op shares. See Exhibit F to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction.
In March of 1989 Cadman Towers commenced proceedings to evict the Silbermans on the grounds that (i) David and Fanny were no longer using the apartment as their primary residence
4
and (ii) Stephen was illegally occupying the apartment.
5
In early May of 1989 plaintiffs were served with a notice that a hearing had been scheduled in this matter before an HPD Hearing Officer for June 1, 1989. Plaintiffs brought this action on May 25, 1989, by way of an order to show cause. On June 13, 1989, this Court approved a stipulation by which the parties agreed that the HPD hearing would be adjourned until plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction was determined. On July 14, 1989, HPD cross-moved for dismissal. The parties have agreed that the plaintiff's motion
DISCUSSION
1.
Due Process:
Plaintiffs argue that the Regulations, by excluding grandchildren such as Stephen from the definition of “immediate family”, violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment in that they impermissibly intrude on the ability of the Silbermans to maintain their integrity as a family. In support of their argument, plaintiffs cite
Moore v. City of East Cleveland, Ohio,
Moore
is part of a long tradition insulating the “private realm of family life”,
Prince v. Massachusetts,
The question for this Court, therefore, is twofold: whether HPD’s Regulations interfere with any right of plaintiffs which is so fundamental to the integrity of their family as to warrant the strict scrutiny applied in Moore and, if not, whether the Regulations otherwise run afoul of the standards generally applied under the Due Process Clause in cases not involving fundamental interests. 7
In this case, plaintiffs’ interests simply do not fall within the scope of
Moore
or any other case in the tradition of which it is a part. It is apparent that the Regulations do not and have not prevented Stephen from living with his grandparents; indeed, as defendants have pointed out, the only obstacle to their living together is David’s and Fanny’s continued presence in' Florida. Further, defendants have conceded that if David and Fanny were to
Under these circumstances, the Due Process Clause only requires that the challenged Regulations exhibit a “rational relationship to permissible state objectives”.
Moore,
2. Equal Protection: If Stephen were David’s and Fanny’s son, HPD regulations would permit him to become a co-owner of the co-op shares, in which case his ability to remain in the apartment would not depend on David’s and Fanny’s primary residence; however, since Stephen is David’s and Fanny’s grandson, the Regulations prohibit him from becoming a co-owner. Plaintiffs assert that such a classification is violative of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. Their argument has three separate components. First, they assert that the definition of “family” in the HPD regulations, when compared with other New York statutes and with regulations for Mitchell-Lama housing promulgated by the New York State Division of Housing and Community Renewal (“DHCR”), is irrational. Second, according to plaintiffs, the purpose of the regulations asserted by HPD is contrary to the statute’s purpose of protecting the family. Third, they argue that even if the validity of the purpose asserted by HPD is accepted, the regulations are not rationally related to that purpose.
The Equal Protection Clause, of course, does not preclude legislatures from creating classifications which result in differential treatment; rather, it requires “that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike.”
City of Cleburne, Tex. v. Cleburne Living Center,
Cases involving the rational basis test have not always presented a consistent approach to either the standard or its application; formulations range from the extremes of deference illustrated in cases as far back as
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co.,
9
and, more recently,
United States R.R. Retirement Board v. Fritz,
10
to the relatively rigorous formulation first employed in
Royster Guano Co. v. Virginia.
11
Recent caselaw provides good reason to doubt that the
Royster Guano
standard is an appropriate formulation of the rational basis test;
12
in the eyes of some, however, the rational basis test has in recent years “[taken] on a new, more pen
In this case, there is some dispute as to the purpose of the Mitchell-Lama Law and the Regulations. Plaintiffs argue that both the Mitchell-Lama Law and the general structure of the Regulations demonstrate that their primary purpose is to protect families from the assorted problems associated with unsafe and inadequate housing. Defendants assert that the Mitchell-Lama Law seeks, among other things, to make housing available to targeted preference populations, and that the Regulations attempt to “further the City's legitimate interest in minimizing the passage of apartments to those falling outside the statutory priority scheme”. See Municipal Defendants’ Memorandum of Law at
17.
The parties have not submitted any supporting material comparable to a legislative history demonstrating HPD’s purposes in promulgating the Regulations, and the Regulations themselves do not contain an express statement of purpose.
Defendants’ description may not fully indicate the extent to which the Regulations reflect a compromise between potentially conflicting legislative purposes; on balance, however, it appears to be a more accurate characterization of the purpose of both the Regulations and the Mitchell-Lama Law than the description suggested by the plaintiffs. The Mitchell-Lama Law seeks to remedy the housing problems of low-income families and persons, N.Y.Priv.
The primacy which plaintiffs would give to “families” in this context is unwarranted. While the statute does seek to protect “families”, it nowhere defines the term. In addition, individuals are included in the class the statute seeks to protect, and regardless of whether families or individuals are involved, the statute particularly seeks to protect persons of low income. Furthermore, the statute specifically provides that priority is to be given to veterans or their surviving spouses and, in certain circumstances, to the elderly and disabled. In the event of a conflict between family members of moderate income and individuals of low income (who may qualify for priority as veterans, disabled persons or elderly persons), the statute suggests that priority be given to low-income individuals; however, when family members are already in residence, no specific mechanisms for resolving such conflicts are mandated by the statute. The Court cannot agree that under this statute, “families” trump all others in the protected class, or that the definition of family necessarily includes grandchildren. Rather, the statute embodies a variety of purposes, all involving the provision of safe, adequate and affordable housing to people of low income, with multiple and at times conflicting priorities as to how such housing is to be allocated. There is no immediate reason to assume that the Regulations have a purpose which conflicts with those specified by the statute. Insofar as may be abstracted from the text of the Regulations themselves, 19 they establish occupancy priorities based on income as well as certain statutorily specified factors, they provide for enforcement of primary residency and income requirements on an ongoing basis, and they set strict limits on the transfer of occupancy rights, to ensure maximum availability of subsidized units on an equitable basis. So stated, there is nothing invidious or impermissibly discriminatory about the goals the statute and the Regulations seek to attain. 20
At this point the inquiry shifts to whether there is a rational relationship between the substance of the Regulations and their purpose. In the main, Supreme Court cases illustrate a high degree of deference in determining what may “rationally” be said to justify a statute.
21
It is true that other cases show a much greater willingness to challenge an asserted relation
a State does not violate the Equal Protection Clause merely because the classifications made by its laws are imperfect. If the classification has some ‘reasonable basis’, it does not offend the Constitution simply because the classification ‘is not made with mathematical nicety or because in practice it results in some inequality’.
United States R.R. Retirement Bd. v. Fritz,
The fact that a classification represents a compromise between different legislative purposes is of itself not objectionable; the classification will be upheld “unless the varying treatment of different groups is so unrelated to the achievement of any combination of legitimate purposes that [a court] can only conclude that the legislature’s actions were irrational.”
Parham v. Hughes,
The focal point of plaintiffs’ complaint is Stephen’s inability to become a co-owner of the apartment. The Regulations provide two different ways in which an immediate family member may establish such a right. First, if a tenant/cooperator’s lease or occupancy agreement is terminated for reasons other than cause, immediate family members in occupancy of an apartment may, under certain circumstances, succeed to the lease or occupancy agreement. 22 Second, any immediate family member who has resided in an apartment for two years may become a co-owner. 23
The Regulations require significantly greater scrutiny of the family member’s financial eligibility for purposes of applying to succeed to an apartment than for applying to become a co-owner.
24
No one
In essence, the challenged portions of the Regulations define conditions under which certain family members are both subject to less rigorous income ceilings than new applicants and permitted to bypass the waiting lists. Plaintiffs do not challenge the existence of a procedure of this type, and thus the Court assumes that, generally speaking, it is not constitutionally infirm. What plaintiffs challenge is where HPD has drawn the line: leaving children inside the privileged circle, leaving grandchildren outside.
The Court believes that there is a readily apparent justification for such a distinction. Given a policy that permits some family members to exceed normal income limits and bypass the waiting list, it is clear that a line must be drawn somewhere; otherwise, families could dominate apartments in perpetuity, to the detriment of the statute’s goals. Of course, Moore intimated that the Constitution protects the rights of uncles, aunts and cousins to share a household, as well as grandparents. Plaintiffs have not suggested — nor, in the opinion of the Court, could they — that the Equal Protection Clause requires that the Regulations’ definition of “immediate family” include such collateral family members. If these family members can reasonably be excluded, it is difficult to see why grandchildren may not. Viewing collateral family members as a class, it cannot be said to be irrational to assume that the exclusion of grandchildren, much like the exclusion of aunts, uncles, nephews, nieces or cousins, will work minimal disruption of families, strike at relatively few people whose financial status qualifies them for the apartments, and eliminate a potentially large number of claimants who, if given such preferential treatment, would otherwise prevent apartments from becoming available to serve people with qualifying incomes, many of whom have been waiting for years to get an apartment.
Plaintiffs argue, however, that when contrasted with other New York and Federal statutes, and with regulations promulgated by DHCR under the Mitchell-Lama Law, the Regulations’ definition of the term “immediate family” stands alone in-excluding grandchildren, and that for this reason the Regulations’ definition should be considered irrational. Each of these provisions requires separate consideration.
(a) Other New York Laws: Initially, it should be noted that the Court is unaware of any caselaw supporting the proposition that for purposes of equal protection, the rationality of a classification in one statute is to be measured by a similar classification contained in another statute.
25
Even if such a comparison were justified, in the Court’s view the statutes cited by plaintiff would not compel the result they seek. Plaintiffs rely particularly on New York’s Rent Control Law of 1946, N.Y.Unconsol. Laws § 8581 (McKinney 1987), and New York City’s Rent Stabilization Law, N.Y. Unconsol.Laws
following
§ 8597, §§ 26-501
et seq.
(McKinney 1987); and while they correctly point out that these statutes, like the Mitchell-Lama Law, seek to address the serious public emergency caused by inadequate housing, they ignore the fact that those laws are intended to regulate the private housing market, not to administer publicly funded subsidies. The Court cannot accept the notion that the Equal Protection Clause compels New York City to apply standards designed for housing
The New York Court of Appeals’ decision in
Braschi v. Stahl Associates Co.,
(b) DHCR’s regulations: Plaintiffs note that DHCR, which regulates state-subsidized Mitchell-Lama apartments, includes grandchildren in their definition of “family”; they argue that it is irrational for HPD to choose a different definition. In support of their argument, plaintiffs cite a State Supreme Court case, In the Matter of Concourse Village, Index No. 16516/88 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Dec. 22, 1988). In that case, petitioner Concourse Village brought an Article 78 proceeding challenging a determination by DHCR that a grandson was entitled to succeed to his grandparents’ apartments. The court found that DHCR’s decision was “rationally based”, noting that the Mitchell-Lama Law did not provide specific regulations governing succession and that “no compelling reason has been presented as to why a grandson should be entitled to a lesser right under the [Mitchell-Lama Law] than under the Rent Stabilization Code”.
(c) Federal Law: Although the issue was never raised in the pleadings, plaintiffs point out that the Mitchell-Lama Law requires housing corporations to accept federally funded Section 8 reimbursement in lieu of rent payments, and that under the Section 8 program, a grandchild is entitled to succeed to a grandparent’s apartment. They conclude that “the HPD exclusion of grandchildren is contrary to the federal statutory program which it is bound to accommodate.” In support of this argument, they point to Sunrise Park Housing Development Fund Co. v. Matthews, N.Y. L.J. Oct. 10, 1989, at 27. It would appear from that opinion that the housing project in question was subsidized under Section 236 of the National Housing Act, not Mitchell-Lama; further, the case made it clear that not all family members are entitled to succeed to a Section 8 tenancy: “[a] family member who assumes occupancy just before a tenant’s death solely for the purpose of succeeding to the tenancy is not afforded protection.” So far as the Court is aware, plaintiffs do not participate in the Section 8 program; while in a properly presented case there might be grounds to hold that with regard to Section 8 tenants, federal law pre-empts HPD’s regulations, on this record the Court cannot conclude that any such preemption would or should extend to tenants not participating in the Section 8 program.
In summary, the Court concludes that the Mitchell-Lama Law and the Regulations have multiple purposes, including encouraging municipal entities to stimulate the development of affordable housing, providing such housing to low income families and individuals, and giving preference to certain classes of people; that these purposes are fully legitimate; that the means chosen by HPD to fulfill these purposes include the creation of a comprehensive regulatory scheme setting multifaceted admission criteria, income limitations, waiting lists, and limits on the ability to succeed to an apartment; and that these regulations are rationally related to the purposes of the statute. Nothing in any other provision of law or regulation leads the Court to question the rationality of the Regulations. As a result, plaintiffs’ equal protection claims must fail.
3.
Takings:
Plaintiffs’ takings claims cannot be sustained. In view of this Court’s holding that the Regulations do not violate the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, it is clear that no fundamental rights are at issue, and that Stephen does not have a constitutional right to remain in the apartment independent of David’s and Fanny’s occupancy. And, while David and Fanny clearly have a property interest in their shares and the apartment, any asser
4. Section 1983: For reasons similar to those stated above, Plaintiffs’ § 1983 claims cannot be sustained. Since the Regulations do not infringe any of plaintiffs’ fundamental rights, and since it is not yet determinable whether the HPD hearing will lead to an uncompensated taking, plaintiffs cannot make out a cause of action under § 1983. 28
5. State Law Claims: In their complaint, plaintiffs allege causes of action grounded in Article 78 of the New York Civil Practice Law & Rules, N.Y.Civ. Prac.Law § 7801 et seq. (McKinney 1981). In addition, although the issue was not raised in the pleadings, plaintiffs argue in their reply memorandum that the Regulations violate the equal protection provisions of the New York State Constitution. The only basis of jurisdiction alleged by plaintiffs for these claims is pendent jurisdiction.
Under
United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Whether a federal court has the power to hear a state claim turns on whether “the relationship between [the federal] claim and the state claim permits the conclusion that the entire action before the court comprises but one constitutional ‘case’ ”.
Id.
at 725,
In addition,
Gibbs
makes it clear that “pendent jurisdiction is a doctrine of discretion”; “its justification lies in considerations of judicial economy, convenience and fairness to litigants”.
Id.
at 726,
In this instance, while plaintiffs’ federal claims are substantial and there exists a common nucleus of operative fact between state and federal claims, it is not clear that the state claims need be or would ordinarily be tried together. If plaintiffs chose to bring their action in state court, they would normally have done so by initiating an Article 78 proceeding after the HPD hearing had taken place, not before. Further, plaintiffs’ state-law claims are by no means precluded by today's determination with regard to the federal constitutional law issues, since the Court has merely assumed, but not decided, that the Regulations do not violate the Mitchell-Lama Law. In addition, the Court’s holding does not amount to a determination of the scope of the equal protection provisions of the New York State Constitution.
Even if there were no question regarding the Court’s power to hear plaintiffs’ state law claims, there are substantial reasons why it would be inappropriate to do so. First, New York State has a well-established procedure for judicial review of administrative action; comity alone would counsel the Court not to interfere with that process. Second, New York follows customary principles of exhaustion of remedies; plaintiffs could not bring an Article 78 proceeding in state court unless and until they had gone through the HPD hearing they ask the Court to enjoin.
See, e.g. Kostick v. Del Castillo,
On the basis of the foregoing, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is granted as to all claims.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. This is the date given in an affidavit by Fanny. In the Complaint, the date given was March of 1988.
. As used herein, the term “tenant/cooperator" includes any person who is a leaseholder or owner of co-op shares, and the term "occupant” includes any other person who occupies an apartment with a tenant/cooperator, regardless
. Article II, Section 16(a) defines “immediate family” to mean "parents, spouses and children, including adopted children, of the tenant/cooperator."
. Article II, Section 14 of the Regulations requires that a tenant/cooperator continue to maintain an apartment as his or her primary place of residence. In determining whether this is the case, the facts to be considered include but are not limited to whether the cooperator (i) specifies another address on official documents such as tax returns, driver’s licenses, motor vehicle registration and the like, (ii) uses a different address as a voting address, (iii) sublets the apartment without written permission, or attempts to assign the apartment, and (iv) spent less than 183 days at the apartment in the preceding year.
.Article XVII, Section 1 of the Regulations provides that a housing company may not initiate eviction proceedings without first obtaining a certificate of eviction from HPD following an administrative hearing by an HPD hearing officer. The Regulations require the housing company to serve the tenant/cooperator with a notice for grounds of eviction informing the tenant/cooperator, among other things, of his or her opportunity to challenge the grounds for eviction at the HPD hearing. In the event the HPD hearing officer issues a certificate of eviction, there is no further internal review, but HPD’s action may be challenged through an Article 78 proceeding. Once having obtained a certificate of eviction, the housing project must then commence a summary proceeding pursuant to N.Y. Real Prop. Acts. § 701 (McKinney 1979); the tenant/cooperator may appeal an adverse decision to the New York Appellate Term.
. This protection extends to a wide range of activities, including the freedom to marry,
Loving v. Virginia,
. Defendants have attempted to distinguish this case from
Moore
on the ground that the ordinance in that case imposed criminal penalties, whereas the Regulations at issue here do not. A principle as fundamental as that expressed in
Moore
cannot be so easily limited. The Supreme Court in
Moore,
when faced with a similar attempt to distinguish it from cases based on
Meyer
and
Pierce,
noted that “unless we close our eyes to the basic reasons why certain rights associated with the family have been accorded shelter under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, we cannot avoid applying the force and rationale of these precedents to the family choice involved in this case.”
Moore,
. In their Reply Memorandum, plaintiffs argue that "while a heightened level of review is called for here under the substantive due process analysis set forth in Moore ... the less rigorous rationality test ... will be sufficient [for equal protection purposes]”. See Plaintiffs’ Reply Memorandum at 10.
.
.
.
.See City of Mesquite v. Alladin’s Castle, Inc.,
.
See, e.g., Plyler v. Doe,
. A critical assumption informing equal protection jurisprudence is that while legislatures may at times act unwisely, perhaps basing their decisions on an erroneous understanding of underlying social conditions or designing programs which are less than successful at implementing the policies the legislature seeks to promote, the task of remedying such errors should properly remain with the legislature; “even improvident decisions will eventually be rectified by the democratic process”.
City of Cleburne,
.
Lyng v. International Union, UAW,
.
Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.,
. Compare Note,
Impermbsible Purposes and the Equal Protection Clause,
86 Colum.L.Rev.
. In this discussion the Court assumes without deciding that under New York State administrative law, the Regulations are a permissible exercise of authority delegated by the Mitchell-Lama Law.
. The Court recognizes the danger in inferring purpose from text; if not done carefully, the question of whether the means chosen are rationally related to the purpose may become a tautology.
See United States R.R. Retirement Bd. v. Fritz,
. Although the Regulations do require that tenant/cooperators and occupants of Mitchell-Lama housing be New York residents, they are in no way comparable to cases such as
Zobel,
.See, e.g., McGowan v. Maryland,
. If the lease or occupancy agreement is terminated for cause, no family member may succeed; if terminated for any other reason, (i) a spouse may succeed if the apartment was his or her primary residence at the time the agreement is terminated, and (ii) a parent or child who has attained his or her majority may succeed if they (a) have resided in the apartment for two years, (b) have filed income statements during that time, and (c) obtain written approval of the housing company and HPD (on the basis of the same criteria as are applied to new applicants).
. The Regulations require that the family member have maintained the apartment as his or her primary residence for two years and have filed the required income statements during that time; in addition, both the shareholder and the family member must intend to continue to remain in joint occupancy. A housing company may limit the number of individuals who are co-owners of shares.
. Article II, Section 16(b)(2)(i) provides that a housing company and HPD may reject an application to succeed submitted by a family member (other than a spouse) "for the same reasons that [they] would reject the application of a person who applies to become a new tenant/cooperator, or when the acceptance of a proposed family member would violate the income eligibility ... of any other federal, state or city program applicable to such apartment." Article III provides that applicants whose income falls above a ceiling calculated in accordance with a certain formula are ineligible for apartments. Thus the regulations would appear to preclude immediate family members (other than spouses) from succeeding to an apartment if their income is greater than the allowable ceiling. By contrast, Article VI, Section 3 does not require such an individualized test. It does provide that in considering an application to become a joint owner, "the financial status of the proposed party shall not be a factor as long as the prime tenant/cooperator meets the minimum eligibility requirements at the time of the request;” it would appear, however, that this provision relates to
minimum
income standards, not
maximum
standards. In the absence
. Plaintiffs suggest that In the Matter of Concourse Village, Index No. 16516/88 (N.Y.Sup.Ct. Dec. 22, 1988) supports such a result. This case is discussed in text below; for present purposes, it should be noted that the court's decision was based on New York administrative law, not the Equal Protection Clause.
. Nor does the recent decision in
East 10th Street Associates v. Estate of Stuart Goldstein,
App.Div.,
.
See Williamson Co. Regional Planning v. Hamilton Bank,
. Defendants also argue that because plaintiffs have the option of challenging the HPD hearing results in an Article 78 proceeding, there is no deprivation of property “without due process”, citing as support
Parratt v. Taylor,
. Certain of the factors listed in Gibbs, such as whether all federal claims are dismissed prior to trial, have no application to this action for injunctive relief.
. The cases cited by plaintiffs cannot be said to resolve this issue. In
McMinn v. Town of Oyster Bay,
