Case Name: City of Albany, Respondent, v. Donna Lee, Appellant
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1980-06-12
Citations: 76 A.D.2d 978
Docket Number: 
Parties: City of Albany, Respondent, v Donna Lee, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 76
Pages: 978–980

Head Matter:
City of Albany, Respondent, v Donna Lee, Appellant.

Opinion:
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of plaintiff, entered January 25, 1980 in Albany County, upon a decision of the court at a Trial Term, without a jury. Defendant breeds and raises St. Bernard dogs at her home in a residential district within the City of Albany. The number of dogs which she maintains at any given time has varied between 6 and 12, with approximately one half of the dogs being housed indoors while the others are kept in dog runs constructed of chain-link fence in the rear yard. Following complaints by various residents in the neighborhood, the City of Albany brought this action to enjoin defendant from using her premises for the purpose of raising and keeping an excessive number of St. Bernard dogs. The trial court, while dismissing four causes of action set forth in the co.mplaint, sustained so much of a fifth cause of action as alleged a violation of the city's zoning ordinance and enjoined defendant from housing more than three domestic animals on her property. This appeal by the defendant ensued. In its decision below, the trial court found that defendant had violated the following provisions of the zoning ordinance: "5.720 Animal Hospitals, Kennels and Pounds No such use shall be located closer than three hundred (300) feet to any R-district, unless all animals are kept indoors. Adequate measures and controls shall be taken to prevent offensive noise and odor. 6.470 Odors No odors may be emitted which are easily detectable and offensive at the property line. 6.490 Noise Noise which constitutes a nuisance such as a high pitched squeal, buzz or hum or any similar sound on a continuous or sustained basis shall not be permitted beyond the property line." The city's complaint, however, does not specify which provisions of the zoning ordinance defendant is alleged to have violated. Instead, it merely accuses defendant of violating the ordinance by maintaining a kennel in her backyard. Since the pleadings in this action did not adequately apprise defendant that her conduct was allegedly violative of sections 6.470 and 6.490 of the zoning ordinance (see CPLR 3013), the trial court should not have considered those provisions. Having concluded that it was improper to rely on sections 6.470 and 6.490 to sustain plaintiff's cause of action, the judgment below can be upheld only if defendant violated section 5.720 as it pertains to kennels. Defendant argues that this provision is unconstitutionally void due to vagueness since the prohibited activity, i.e., operating a kennel, is not defined anywhere in the ordinance. We reject this argument. It seems plain to us that the ordinance is directed at more than the preservation of aesthetic qualities. Animal hospitals, kennels and pounds are organized businesses. Whether conducted for profit or on a charitable basis, it would be a valid exercise of the zoning power to exclude all such activity from residential areas. The present ordinance allows these uses under certain conditions, but it seems obvious that it is primarily intended to impose reasonable limitations on specific ventures in residential surroundings. An individual might own or possess any number of animals without offending its terms so long as he or she did not engage in the activity of running a hospital, kennel or pound. Since the term "kennel" is commonly understood and defined to include the breeding and raising of dogs (Webster's Third New International Distionary), the ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague and the only difficulty which might be encountered lies in ascertaining whether, in a particular case, animals were kept for that purpose (Nick-O-Lok Co. v Carey, 52 AD2d 375, affd 40 NY2d 1089). Defendant's conduct was adequately established and there can be little factual question that she operated a kennel in a fashion which did not comply with the limitations of the ordinance. However, the number of dogs possessed at her residence is irrelevant to this conclusion and the injunction should be modified accordingly. We find no merit in defendant's remaining arguments. Judgment modified, on the law and the facts, without costs, by striking the decretal paragraphs thereof and substituting a provision enjoining the defendant from operating or maintaining a kennel at her premises at 89 Benson Street, Albany, New York, in violation of section 5.720 of the Zoning Ordinance of the City of Albany. Greenblott, Kane and Staley, Jr., JJ., concur.