[Amended 5-13-1975 by L.L. No. 1-1975]
The Village Manager shall notify the owner of record of property on
which fences, trees, plantings, shrubbery or other screening facilities are
hereafter required to be maintained, by any provision of this chapter or the
Code of the Village of Scarsdale, or by direction of the Board of Appeals
or the Planning Board of any failure to comply with any such requirements.
Said notice, which shall be mailed to the owner of record by registered mail
addressed at the address shown on the last preceding assessment roll of the
village, shall order the erection, replacement, repair or maintenance within
30 days of any such fences, trees, plantings, shrubbery or other screening
facilities which do not comply with any such requirements.
If the person so notified shall fail to comply with the requirements
of such a notice, the Village Manager shall report the failure to the Board
of Trustees, which may direct the appropriate officials of the village to
do all or any part of the work required by said notice.
All costs or expenses incurred by the village in connection with any
such work so directed by the Board of Trustees shall be assessed against the
property on which the work is required to be done and shall be a lien against
such property until paid, the same as any other tax which the village is authorized
by law to impose on properties within the village.
[Added 3-14-1989 by L.L. No. 6-1989]
Any person committing an offense against any provision of this Article
shall, upon conviction thereof, be guilty of a violation pursuant to the Penal
Law of the State of New York, punishable by a fine not exceeding $250 or by
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 15 days, or by both such fine and imprisonment.
The continuation of an offense against the provisions of this Article shall
constitute, for each day the offense is continued, a separate and distinct
offense hereunder.
[Adopted 1-24-1984 as L.L. No. 1-1984]
Words used in this Article shall have the meanings indicated in Chapter
310, Zoning, §
310-2, and, in addition thereto, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
FENCE
A structure of wood, metal or plastic, or any combination thereof,
erected to enclose, separate, divide or define a lot or a portion thereof.
WALL
A structure of wood, stone, brick, concrete or other masonry materials,
or any combination thereof, more than two feet high, erected to enclose, separate,
divide or define a lot or a portion thereof.
WALL, RETAINING
A wall designed to retain or resist the lateral displacement of earth
or other materials, whether or not it serves to enclose or subdivide any part
of the lot on which it is located.
[Amended 3-14-1989 by L.L. No. 6-1989; 9-22-1992
by L.L. No. 8-1992]
In all residence districts, no fence or wall within the limits of a
front yard, other than a retaining wall, shall be more than five feet high,
and no fence or wall with more than one-fourth (1/4) solid material when viewed
from a position which is at a right angle to the fence or wall shall be more
than four feet high. Height is to be measured from the base of the fence,
wall or grade, whichever base yields the greatest height measurement.
[Amended 3-14-1989 by L.L. No. 6-1989; 9-22-1992
by L.L. No. 8-1992; 7-16-1996 by L.L.
No. 7-1996]
Except as provided in §
158-9, in all residence districts, no fence or wall within the limits of a side yard shall be more than four feet high unless all portions exceeding that height are not more than one-fourth (1/4) solid material when viewed from a position which is at a right angle to the face of the fence or wall, and no retaining wall shall be erected in a side yard unless the portion of the retaining wall which is more than one foot above the portion of the lot retained has not more than one-fourth (1/4) solid material when viewed from a position which is at a right angle to the face of the wall. Height is to be measured from the base of the fence, wall, retaining wall or grade, whichever base yields the greatest height measurement.
[Amended 3-14-1989 by L.L. No. 6-1989; 9-22-1992
by L.L. No. 8-1992; 7-16-1996 by L.L.
No. 7-1996]
Except as provided in §
158-9, in all residence districts, no fence or wall within the limits of a rear yard shall be more than four feet high, or seven feet high if not nearer than 50 feet to any street line, and, in the case of a corner lot, if not adjacent to the side yard or front yard of any adjoining lot unless the part above such height has not more than one-fourth (1/4) solid materials when viewed from a position which is at a right angle to the face of the fence or wall; and no retaining wall shall be erected in a rear yard unless the portion of the retaining wall which is more than one foot above the portion of the lot retained has not more than one-fourth (1/4) solid material when viewed from a position which is at a right angle to the face of the wall. Height is to be measured from the base of the fence, wall, retaining wall or grade, whichever base yields the greatest height measurement.
[Added 7-16-1996 by L.L. No. 7-1996]
As an exception to §§
158-7 and
158-8 above, in all residence districts and at the discretion of the Board of Appeals, when a fence or wall is utilized as swimming pool perimeter protection as required by §
265-1A of Chapter
265, Swimming Pools, of this Code, fences or walls in the side and rear yard, when not on a corner lot as described below, shall not be more than five feet high, or seven feet high in a rear yard if not nearer than 50 feet to any street line, unless the part above such height has not more than one-fourth (1/4) solid materials when viewed from a position which is at a right angle to the face of the fence. This exception to §§
158-7 and
158-8 shall not be applicable to swimming pool fences on corner lots.