OPINION OF THE COURT
At issue in this case is the constitutionality of a zoning ordinance that permits private, nonprofit clubs but not commercial enterprises to operate tennis courts in a residential district.
Defendant Park Shore Country Day Camp owns 15 acres in an area zoned for one-acre residential lots. In 1959, the Town of Huntington’s Zoning Board of Appeals granted Park Shore’s application for a special exception permit to operate a day camp and nursery school on its property. Without obtaining a building permit or any further exception, in 1968 two tennis courts were constructed for the use of the camp. With no more leave, by 1974 12 more courts had been built and at that time, in addition to their availability to the camp, all 14 were put to commercial use for adults generally. In furtherance of its new venture, Park Shore commenced an advertising and promotional campaign designed to attract the general public to its tennis facilities.
The town then instituted this action to enjoin Park Shore from operating the tennis courts for commercial purposes. By way of counterclaim, Park Shore sought a declaration that the zoning ordinance was unconstitutionally discriminatory, essentially because a special exception provision did permit similar courts owned and maintained by nonprofit entities to be situated in residential districts.
Under subdivision 9 of section 62-11.3 of the Huntington Zoning Ordinance, tennis courts, provided they are not operated as a business, may be located in residential districts as special exceptions if approved by the board.
Preliminarily, we must recognize that zoning ordinances, like all legislative enactments, are invested with an exceedingly strong presumption of constitutionality (Marcus Assoc. v Town of Huntington,
Furthermore, it is a point too obvious to belabor that the separation of business from nonbusiness uses is an appropriate line of demarcation in delimiting permitted uses for zoning purposes. On that basis, business uses most certainly may be excluded from residential districts, whose primary purpose, almost by definition, is to provide an environment for "safe, healthful and comfortable family life rather than the development of commercial instincts and the pursuit of pecuniary profits” (Matter of Wulfson v Burden,
This device operates by the "inclusion into the zoning pattern * * * of uses considered by the legislative body to be essentially desirable (or essential) to the community, its citizenry or to substantial segments thereof’, while protecting "against its location * * * without restrictions or conditions tailored to fit the special problems which the use presents” (3 Rathkopf, Law of Zoning and Planning [4th ed], p 54-1). It is designed to make clubs, recreational facilities, schools and hospitals, for example, eligible for special exception treatment, subject to the zoning board’s consideration of the particular needs of a neighborhood (see 2 Anderson, New York Zoning Law and Practice [2d ed], §§ 19.01-19.04). In effect, the town’s position is that the exception embodied in subdivision 9 of section 62-11.3 represents no more than the exercise of this well-established method of regulation, while, for its part, Park Shore, concentrating on the fact that two nonprofit private tennis clubs situated in the residential district are at present physically and functionally akin to its own commercial enterprise, argues that it is arbitrary, capricious and contrary to
Park Shore’s assertion, which assumes that the impact of a particular use is a matter independent of the nature of the ownership, has too easy a ring. It is beyond dispute, for instance, that, even if all incidents of the use at this time are the same, there are characteristics of defendant’s venture that may render it, at least potentially, more burdensome to the residential neighborhood in which it is carried on than the same activity conducted by a nonprofit club (cf. 1 Anderson, New York Zoning Law and Practice [2d ed], §§ 8.20, 9.36). Illustrations come readily to mind. Regardless of the desirability of the activity conducted, it may be expected that an entity motivated by profit will, almost of necessity, be concerned with the securing, if not the aggrandizement, of those profits. In this pursuit, it may advertise and promote its availability in an effort to attract greater numbers of people, precisely what was done here. A commercial venture’s understandable goal of maximizing earnings by seeking peak utilization of its facilities, no matter how efficiently engineered, poses the threat of more crowds, more noise, more traffic, more transients and more of other forces disruptive of the serenity of the neighborhood (see Town of Los Altos Hills v Adobe Creek Props., 32 Cal App 3d 488, 516-517). And, in times of economic adversity, the owners of an unprofitable business are certainly much less likely to pump good money after bad in order to prevent a white elephant from becoming an eyesore than are members of a private club, who, moved by social rather than merely economic interest, may more readily consider adopting measures, even at some cost to themselves, to maintain the appearance of the property.
It is also reasonable to foresee that a private club conducted on a nonprofit basis, while providing a desirable recreational area, may in other ways avoid at least some of the drawbacks of commercial ownership. Because its members are more apt to think of long-term benefits rather than the immediate ones
In any event, it is by no means irrational for a legislative body to hold, and to act, on such apprehensions. In that connection, the constraints imposed by the separation of powers compel us to remember that "[i]t would not matter whether the [law] courts thought the legislation unwise, or that its purpose could better be achieved in another way”. (Matter of Albert Simon, Inc. v Myerson,
It should not be surprising then that other tribunals, in and out of New York, have not been loath to uphold zoning practices that permit special exception uses in residential zones on condition that the activity not be conducted as a commercial or profit-making venture (see Matter of Tarolli v Howe,
Seen in this context, the Huntington ordinance is neither unusual nor unreasonable in distinguishing between tennis
The order of the Appellate Division should therefore be affirmed, with costs.
Chief Judge Cooke and Judges Jasen, Gabrielli, Jones and Wachtler concur with Judge Fuchsberg.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Defendant, which continues to operate its private nursery school and day camp, did not claim that the zoning ordinance is confiscatory or otherwise precludes the use
. As uses specially permitted by the Zoning Board of Appeals, this subdivision authorized the location of a "[p]rivate club * * * private playground, park or similar outdoor recreational facility, or lodge in a Residence District or Business District provided: (a) the chief activity is not a service customarily carried on as a business”.
. At argument of this appeal we learned that pursuant to amendments to section 62-11.3 enacted in July, 1977 and May, 1978, the Huntington Zoning Ordinance now disables the board from exercising its previous power to grant special exceptions to private clubs or similar outdoor recreational facilities in a residentially zoned district. Our decision in this case, however, makes it unnecessary for us to consider either the effect or any possible retroactive application of these amendments.
