Opinion
July 2, 1953.
Appeal from Supreme Court, Warren County.
Plaintiffs are the owners of unimproved land in the town of Caldwell having a fifty-foot frontage on a street. A town zoning ordinance enacted after plaintiffs' acquisition of title prohibits the erection of any structure in this area having a frontage of less than seventy-five feet. In an action for declaratory judgment the complaint alleges the ordinance is unconstitutional as to this land acquired before its enactment since it prohibits any use of it. The court at Special Term has dismissed the complaint. The town on appeal concedes that plaintiffs should be permitted to construct a dwelling on their premises but argues their remedy is to apply to the board to grant a variance. On the motion addressed to the complaint its factual averments must be accepted and affidavits cannot be read. The complaint on its face alleges interference with plaintiffs' rights on constitutional grounds. It states on its face a cause of action for declaratory judgment. It may well be that when the record is fully developed it will be seen that the plaintiffs have other remedies to protect their rights by application to the board and direct review of its determination; that the constitutional question will not be decisive, and that the declaratory judgment will be unnecessary. All this will depend on the pleading of the defendant and on the course of the trial. On its face we think the complaint is good. Order reversed, on the law and facts, and motion denied, with $10 costs and disbursements. Foster, P.J., Bergan, Coon, Halpern and Imrie, JJ., concur.