63 Misc. 2d 971 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1970
In this article 78 CPLR proceeding petitioner seeks reversal of a decision of the respondent Board of Zoning Appeals which revoked a building permit for a restau
At basic issue in this proceeding is the question whether the use for which the permit was granted is a “ restaurant ”, which is a permitted use in the Business District within which petitioner ’s property is located, or a “ drive-in restaurant ’ ’ which is permitted only as a special exception use after application to the board. The board ruled, after a hearing, that the appeal was timely, that the Association was aggrieved, and that the use was a drive-in restaurant, and revoked the permit. In this proceeding petitioner argues that it has expended or committed some $75,000 to the building and, therefore, has a vested right to complete it, that the use is a restaurant rather than a drive-in restaurant, that the Association is not aggrieved and the appeal not timely. A further point that one of the board members who voted for the decision now in question was not present at the hearing was not briefed or argued and is deemed abandoned. The Association pleads three defenses: (1) the decision on the application for a writ of prohibition is res judicata of its standing, (-2) petitioner has not exhausted her administrative remedies since she has made no application for a special use permit, (3) petitioner misrepresented the nature of the operation to the Building Department. The decision of the board is reversed and building permit No. 6902841 is reinstated, but insofar as the petition requests that the court direct the issuance of a certificate of occupancy it is denied as premature, the building being as yet unfinished1.
Concluding as it does that the decision of the board is erroneous as a matter of law on the questions of standing and of use, the court does not find it necessary to consider whether the Association’s appeal was timely taken. The Association’s defenses are overruled; the first, on the ground that absence of standing goes to the capacity of a party rather than the jurisdiction of the board over the parties or the subject matter and,
On the remaining two points in issue the board’s decision is contrary to decisional law binding upon it and, on the question of use, is not supported by substantial evidence and is contrary to the board’s own earlier decision as well.
Standing to appeal is governed by subdivision 2 of section 267 of the Town Law which provides that appeal to the board from a determination made by an administrative official ‘ ‘ may be taken by any person aggrieved ”. No case construing the words “ person aggrieved ” as used in that subdivision has been found, but neither the Association nor the board has suggested any reason, and none occurs to the court, why they should be construed any differently in that subdivision than they are in subdivision 7, which gives to ‘ ‘ Any person * * * aggrieved by any decision of the board of appeals ” the right of review in an article 78 proceeding. That a civic association which does not own property (and the hearing minutes at page 2118 establish that Carman Community Association does not) is not a person aggrieved entitled to review under subdivision 7 is the flat holding of Matter of Manor Woods Assn. v. Randol (29 A D 2d 778); Matter of Moore v. Burchell (14 A D 2d 572, mot. for lv. to app. den. 10 N Y 2d 709); Matter of Lido Beach Civic Assn. v. Board of Zoning Appeals (13 A D 2d 1030); Point Lookout Civic Assn. v. Town of Hempstead (22 Misc 2d 757, affd. 12 A D 2d 505, affd. 9 N Y 2d 961); Matter of Mueller v. Anderson (60 Misc 2d 568); Matter of Miller v. Village of East Hills (41 Misc 2d 525); Matter of Property Owners Assn. v. Board of Appeals (2 Misc 2d 309); see Bayport Civic Assn. v. Koehler (138 N. Y. S. 2d 524). Without mention of any of those authorities, the board predicated its holding “ that the appeal herein was brought by a person aggrieved1 ’ ’ on its finding that the Association “ is a membership corporation, which was merely a vehicle, acting on behalf of its resident property owner members. The Board heard the testimony of both Mr. Stein and Mr. Mummery, who are members and officers of the corporation, as well as nearby property owners. It is clear that they are aggrieved persons * * *. The Board finds that the persons
The egregiousness of the error is evident when one reflects that (1) it must have occurred to the courts that decided the cases cited in the preceding paragraph that each of the civic associations involved was also ‘ ‘ acting on behalf of its resident property owner members ”, yet each was held without standing, (2) Mr. Stein testified that he lived “ five or six blocks ” away and Mr. Mummery testified that he lived ‘ ‘ As the crow flies * * * about six blocks ” and that the record contains no evidence of any special damage to either of their properties, or to the property of Mr. Newill, a member of the association who testified he lived within 300 feet (see Marcus v. Village of Mamaroneck, 283 N. Y. 325, 333; Matter of Haber v. Board of Estimate, 33 A D 2d 571; Matter of Moore v. Burchell, 14 AD 2d 572, supra). Moreover, in light of the subtle distinction, in relation to p’roperty values, between a restaurant as a permitted use and a drive-in restaurant as a special exception use, the court cannot presume, and the board should not have presumed, that there was such damage.
The foregoing is not to say that as a matter of policy the definition of persons aggrieved should not be broadened. That, however, is a matter for the Legislature rather than the board or this court,, neither of which has the power to correct the Association’s failure to have one or more of its members, who qualified as an aggrieved person and who had not already lost his right to appeal, join with it in taking the appeal.
If, however, it be assumed that the Association was a proper appellant, the board’s decision must nonetheless be reversed. Article 7 (§ X-1.0 and § X-1.8) of the Building Zone Ordinance allows, in a Business District, a ‘‘ Restaurant other than a diner, lunch wagon, drive-in restaurant, drive-in luncheonette, drive-in lunch counter or drive-in refreshment stand”; article 12, section Z-5.0 (c) (10) authorizes as a special use when approved by the Board of Appeals a ‘ ‘ Store or shop for the sale of food, refreshments or other edibles or drinks, which provides or makes available any facility (including but not limited to parking or standing space on premises for vehicles) for, or permits the consumption of such food, refreshments or other edibles or drink on the premises outside the building or structure occupied by such store and section Z-5.0 (c) (14) authorizes as a special use a 1 ‘ drive-in restaurant ’ ’. The ordinance contains no definition of a “ restaurant ”, a “ store or shop ” or a “ drive-in
That the board’s decision in this proceeding so construes the ordinance as to create rather than avoid ambiguity is evident from the dictionary definitions of the operative words. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary defines a “ restaurant ” (p. 1936) as: “an establishment where refreshments or meals may be procured by the public: a public eating house ”, a “ shop ” (p. 2101) as: “a building or room stocked with merchandise for sale ”, a “ store ” (p. 2252) as: “a business establishment where goods are kept for retail sale ” and: “a commercial establishment (as a bank, restaurant, or dry-cleaning shop) ”, and a “drive-in” (p. 692) as: “a place of business (as a motion-picture theater, bank or refreshment stand) laid out and equipped so as to allow its patrons to be served or accommodated while remaining in their automobiles.” If one uses the ordinary meaning of the words (and overlooks the possible legislative significance of the use of the word ‘ ‘ restaurant ” in sections X-1.8 and Z-5.0 [c] [14] and the use of the words “ store ” and “ shop ” in section Z-5.0 [c] [10]), then section Z-5.0 (c) (10) mandates a special use permit for any public eating house that provides parking space, for by definition of the section parking is a facility for consumption of food on the premises outside the building. If so, then section X-1.8 must be limited in its application to restaurants which do not provide parking space. That such cannot be the correct construction is, however, evident from article 14, section 0-19.0 (a) (11), which mandates parking space for every restaurant. Moreover, if one applies the ordinary meaning of “ drive-in ”, it is evident that a ! ‘ drive-in restaurant ” is a public eating house laid out and equipped so as to allow patrons to be served or accommodated in their cars, and that a public eating house which provides a reasonable number of parking spaces in relation to its inside table accommodations cannot be classified as a “ drive-in restaurant ”, as the board has done here, simply because trash cans are provided in the parking areas, paper plates are used and a quick service menu is provided. To paraphrase the holding of the Court of Appeals in the Thomson Inds. case (27 N Y 2d 537, supra), a strict construction of the term “ drive-in restaurant ”
The construction thus arrived at is sustained by Matter of Dengeles v. Young (1 Misc 2d 692, revd. on other grounds 3 A D 2d 758); Matter of Burke v. O’Connor (53 Misc 2d 669); and State ex rel. Spiccia v. Abate (2 Ohio St. 2d 129, overruled on other grounds by State ex rel. Sebarco Corp. v. Berea, 7 Ohio St. 2d 85; see, also, Ann. 82 ALB 2d 989); and by the respondent board’s own decision in Matter of McCurdy (Case No. 769, decided Jan. 16, 1970). Matter of Dengeles (supra) concerned whether a “ diner ” was to be considered a “ restaurant ” and thus a permitted use, or simply of the same general character as a restaurant and thus a special exception use, under an ordinance which did not define the term “ restaurant ”. Mr. Justice Samuel Babin’s conclusion that it was a permitted use was indorsed by the Appellate Division, which noted, however, that amendment of the ordinance after the decision below necessitated reversal. In Matter of Burke v. O’Connor (supra), on facts less favorable to the property owner (only '28 seats but 50 parking spaces in that case, as against 64 seats and 24 parking-spaces in this case) and under an ordinance distinguishing by definition between a “ Full-service Bestaurant ” and a “ Drive-in Bestaurant ”, Mr. Justice Jasen (as he then was) held that since there was no indication that the proposed restaurant would provide service to patrons while they remained in their automobiles, the operation was a full-service restaurant and the property owner was entitled to a building permit. In the Abate case (supra, p. 130) the Supreme Court of Ohio held that a Dairy Queen 1 ‘ where all services to the purchasers are to take place inside the building, and where it is contemplated that much of the food will be eaten at tables provided for that purpose ” was properly classified as a “ restaurant ” rather than a “ drive-in restaurant ” notwithstanding that “much of the food may be carried to the parked cars and there eaten or carried out and eaten entirely off the premises.”
Moreover, considered on the facts rather than solely on the law, the board’s finding that the “Drummer Boy ” to be operated on petitioner’s property is a “drive-in restaurant” is not sustained by substantial evidence. That finding is based on the facts that “ Drummer Boy ” is a fast food operation and part of a franchised business in which at other units patrons ate both in the structure and in the car and many trash cans were
Grounds for dismissal of the Association’s third defense of misrepresentation are evident from the foregoing. Though perhaps unnecessary, the court notes further that the board made no. finding of misrepresentation, though the point was urged before them, and that the Association has come forward with no evidence to suggest that there was a misrepresentation, as indeed they would be hard put to do in the face of the lease covenant recited above.