Andrew J. Levitt, Esq. Informal Opinion Assistant Town Attorney No. 96-25 Town of Huntington 100 Main Street Huntington, New York 11743-6991
Dear Mr. Levitt:
You have requested our opinion regarding the appropriate procedure for abandoning a paper street on a filed map. During a telephone conference and in a subsequent letter, you further defined your inquiry. You inquire as to what standards and conditions apply to abandon a paper street under section
Section
No opened or proposed street or any portion thereof may be abandoned unless each owner of a lot or interest in the subdivision consents to the abandonment through a duly executed instrument. These instruments must be recorded along with the certificate of abandonment. However, consent is not required if (1) the opened or proposed street to be abandoned is entirely within the bounds of the property to be abandoned, or (2) the opened or proposed street terminates in a dead-end within the bounds of the property to be abandoned. Id.
Section 335(3) also permits an owner to abandon any streets or portions thereof without the consent of each person or corporation owning a lot or interest in the subdivision if: a minimum of twenty years has elapsed since the filing of the map and the streets are not opened or public highways, used by the public, or necessary for the use of owners, occupants, or any other persons having an interest in any part of the subdivision. Id.
This process must be repeated for each filed map, if more than one exists. Id.Note also that the Suffolk County Board of Supervisors is expressly exempted from the above requirements. Id.The county may abandon any subdivision or portion thereof owned or acquired through the sale of tax liens. To do so, the county board must simply execute and file a certificate of abandonment with the county clerk's office. Id.
With regard to the role of town officials, section 335(3) states, in pertinent part:
A copy of each certificate of abandonment must be filed with the assessor and/or board of assessors of each town and village wherein any portion of the property to be abandoned is situated, and the endorsement of approval by each such assessor and/or board of assessors must be endorsed on the original of each certificate presented to the county clerk for recording. An abstract of title to the property to be abandoned covering a period of at least twenty years last past, and a certificate of the county treasurer of Suffolk county to the effect that there are no unpaid tax liens against such property, must be submitted to the county clerk and be approved by him at the time the certificate of abandonment and cancellation is offered for recording. Said certificates and abstracts shall be filed in the county clerk's office, a suitable index shall be kept of the same, and notice thereof shall be endorsed by the recording officer upon the map therein referred to at the time of recording the certificate of abandonment. Where the endorsement of approval of the town or village assessor above referred to includes a recitation to the effect that the municipality has duly adopted an urban renewal plan pursuant to article fifteen of the general municipal law which plan provides for adequate street access to all properties within and adjacent to the planning area, and further that the property to be abandoned is subject to said plan, and its abandonment is required thereunder, the clerk shall accept and record the certificate of abandonment tendered therefor regardless of the area thereof, and notwithstanding that the property to be abandoned is a portion of an opened or proposed street for which the consent to the abandonment thereof required in this subdivision has not been obtained. Id., § 335(3). Emphasis added.
Under section 335(3), the certificate of abandonment must reflect the endorsement of approval of each town and village assessor or board of assessors in any town and village where any portion of the property to be abandoned is located. In our view, the endorsement of approval is not a mere ministerial act. "Approval" implies knowledge and exercise of discretion based upon that knowledge. Sesto v. Mielke,
In Sesto, supra,
Regarding your question about fees, section 335 states that "[t]he fee of the county clerk for such filing and indexing each certificate and abstract therewith shall be ten dollars and shall be paid by the party presenting them for filing". Therefore, the fee for abandonment is set by State law and is payable to the county clerk. No fee is authorized for town officials.
With regard to your question concerning the applicability of Highway Law §
We conclude that under section
The Attorney General renders formal opinions only to officers and departments of State government. This perforce is an informal and unofficial expression of the views of this office.
Sincerely,
JOSEPH CONWAY, Assistant Attorney General
