This chapter shall be known as the "Hazardous Unoccupied Property Law
of the Incorporated Village of Old Field ("Village") of Suffolk County, New
York."
The purpose of this law is to ensure that unoccupied property (as herein
defined) does not present a threat to the health or safety of the village
and is maintained free of debris and structures that adversely affect the
health, safety, beauty or character of the village.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the meanings
indicated:
BOARD
The Board of Trustee of the village.
CARETAKER
A person residing on a property who is retained by an owner to maintain
the residence and other structures thereon and to maintain the property free
of debris, who is provided with sufficient funds to do so and who, in fact,
does so maintain such residence, other structures and property.
DEBRIS
Rubble, waste or litter, exclusive of the products of nature, that
have not been altered by humans; personal property abandoned or dumped on
the property by the owner or other persons; all or a portion of a former structure
remaining on a property after demolition, fire, storm, the passage of time
or other cause, dirt, rock or other matter located or relocated on a property
as a result of human activity resulting from the excavation or the recontouring
of property or that has been deposited or dumped on the property; or construction
materials. Construction materials, dirt and rock shall not be considered "debris"
if on the site incident to work in progress pursuant to a valid unexpired
permit issued by the village for such work.
HAZARD
A structure or debris that is a danger to the health or safety of
residents of the village or other persons; the use of property, casual or
otherwise, by persons not authorized to do so by the owner; and debris of
minimum or no value visible at any time of year from outside the property
that causes a significant impairment of the view from adjacent properties
or of the view of a passerby on an adjacent road.
OWNER
The registered owner or owners of the title to any property as shown on the most recent assessment roll of the village. An owner may, by appropriate instrument filed with the Village Clerk and accepted by the Clerk as unambiguous, appoint one or more persons to act an the owner's behalf hereunder. The person(s) so empowered shall be treated as the owner for all purposes except §
51-13. All notices provided for hereunder shall be sent to the titleholder as well as the person or persons so empowered.
RESIDENCE
The principal structure suitable for human habitation on any property.
A structure that formerly was suitable for human habitation, but no longer
is so suitable, shall not be considered a residence.
STRUCTURE
A house, basement, cellar, barn, garage, stable or any other construction,
whether complete or incomplete, that is used, or formerly was used, or is
or was intended to be used, for residential, recreational, agricultural or
other purpose.
UNOCCUPIED RESIDENCE
A residence that is not physically occupied for at least 60 consecutive
days in the three-hundred-sixty-five-day period as of which the determination
is made by one, but not a combination, of the following persons: the owner;
a lessee pursuant to a written lease; or any other person authorized by the
owner to live in the residence. A residence shall not be considered to be
an unoccupied residence if it is under the supervision of a caretaker. A residence
once considered an unoccupied residence shall continue to be considered an
unoccupied residence until it is, for a minimum period of at least six consecutive
months, continuously occupied by one, but not a combination, of the following
persons: the owner; a lessee pursuant to a written lease; or a person authorized
by the owner to live in the residence, or is under the supervision of a caretaker.
A property on which a residence is being constructed pursuant to a valid unexpired
permit is not an unoccupied property.
An owner shall not cause or suffer any structure or debris on an unoccupied
property to constitute a hazard.
Following a preliminary determination with respect to a property, the Board shall send the owner by certified mail, return receipt requested, a preliminary hazard notice. The preliminary hazard notice shall state that the Board has made a preliminary determination that the property is an unoccupied property and that it may contain a hazard; shall specify the nature of the hazard; shall request permission of the owner to enter the property for purposes of making an inspection thereof in order to assist the Board in considering a final determination (as hereinbelow defined) of the existence of a hazard thereon, specifying the date and time of the proposed inspection; and shall state that in the event of the failure of the owner, within the time period provided below, to grant permission to enter the property for purposes of making the inspection, that the Board may seek the legal right to do so. If the owner fails, within 30 days, or such lesser period as may have been set pursuant to §
51-10 hereof, of the mailing of the preliminary hazard notice, to grant permission to the village to inspect the property, or affirmatively refuses to grant such permission, the Board shall take such further legal action that it deems appropriate to obtain the right to enter the property for purposes of inspection.
The final determination ("final determination") that a property is an
unoccupied property and that it contains a hazard will be determined by the
Board on the basis of one or more written statements, including written statements,
if any, submitted to the Board prior to the preliminary determination. A written
statement may be accompanied by photographs, maps, charts or other material.
The written statements may be made by the Chief Constable, one or more of
the other Constables, other employees or elected officials of the village
or other persons familiar with the property or other relevant circumstances.
If any person declines to provide a written statement, an employee or elected
official of the village may talk to such person, and thereafter summarize
the discussion in writing, and such writing will be considered a written statement.
The oral statement of any person may be recorded electronically, transcribed
into writing and such transcription will be considered a written statement.
The Board shall require a written statement by the Building Inspector or other
expert who may have inspected the property for purposes of determining whether
a hazard exists thereon. The final determination shall be made at an open
session of the Board, of which the owner shall receive not less than 15 days'
written notice, together with a copy of this chapter. The notice shall inform
the owner that the Board will consider making a final determination with respect
to the property at the meeting, that the owner has a right to attend, and
the date, time and place of the meeting. The final determination shall be
in writing; shall set forth the written statements and copies of other materials,
if any, relied on by the Board for determining that the property is an unoccupied
property and that it contains a hazard; shall state the time and occupancy
of the property, if any, relied on by the Board in determining that the property
is an unoccupied property; shall include a description of the hazard; shall
describe the threat to the health, safety, beauty or character of the village
presented by the hazard; shall state the steps proposed to be taken by the
village to cure the hazard if the owner fails to do so; and shall state the
estimated cost thereof.
The owner of a property with respect to which the Board has made a final determination shall receive notice thereof. The notice, (the "hazard notice") shall be sent certified mail, return receipt requested, and shall state that the property has been the subject of a final determination by the Board. A copy of the final determination, the written statements and other materials forming the basis for such final determination, and a statement of the right of the owner to appeal the final determination, referring to §
51-11 hereof, shall accompany the hazard notice. If the hazard is considered to be an emergency as described in §
51-10 below, the hazard notice shall so state and shall specify the time periods applicable to the owner's property in lieu of those set forth in Subsections
A through
D of §
51-9 below.
An owner who receives a hazard notice shall take the actions specified
below within the time periods set forth:
A. Hazard notice.
(1) Within 30 days of the date of receipt of the hazard notice
(the "notice date"), the owner shall state, in a writing addressed to the
village, the owner's intention to take the steps within the time limits
hereinbelow provided to cure the hazard. The writing may be formal or informal,
so long as it states unambiguously the owner's intention to cure the
hazard specified in the hazard notice within the time periods herein provided.
(2) In lieu of a writing stating the owner's intention to cure the hazard as described in Subsection
A(1) above, an owner may, within 30 days of the notice date, authorize the village to cure the hazard. The authorization shall be in writing, signed by the owner; shall acknowledge that the owner's property is an unoccupied property, as herein defined, and that it contains a hazard; shall authorize the village to enter the owner's property and to take all measures necessary, in the opinion of the village, to cure the hazard in the manner set forth in the final determination; and shall be accompanied by a remittance of 125% of the estimated cost thereof as set forth in the final determination. The remittance shall be used by the village to defray the costs of curing the hazard in the manner set forth in the final determination; to provide an administrative fee to the village equal to 15% of such estimated costs to reimburse it for the expense of administering the cure; and to defray the cost of any necessary permits. Any excess of the amount remitted over the actual cost of curing the hazard, the administrative fee and the costs of permits shall be returned to the owner. An owner who follows the procedure set forth in this Subsection
A(2) shall not be liable for any further expense in connection with curing the hazard, or for penalties under §
51-13, and Subsections
B,
C and
D below shall be inapplicable to the owner.
B. Within 90 days of the notice date, the owner shall file with the village a duly completed and executed application or applications for a building permit, demolition permit or other required permit or permits for work, the completion of which will, in the opinion of the Board, relying to the extent it deems appropriate on a report of the Building Inspector, cure the hazard. An application shall be considered to be duly completed only if it provides complete answers to all questions thereon and appends all documentation required by such application. If the Village Code does not require a permit for work necessary to cure the hazard, the owner shall, in lieu of the filing of an application for a permit and within the time limits herein specified in this Subsection
B, file with the Village Clerk a copy of a legally binding contract or contracts duly executed by the owner and one or more contractors, completion of the work under which will, in the opinion of the Board, cure the hazard.
C. Within 30 days of the receipt of the permit(s) so applied for or the filing of the contracts described in Subsection
B above (the "permit date"), as the case may be, work thereunder to cure the hazard shall commence.
D. Within 120 days of the permit date the work required
to remove or otherwise cure the hazard as specified in the permit(s) or contract(s)
shall be completed. The Board may extend the period for completion of the
work required to cure the hazard on such terms and conditions as it deems
appropriate, including the posting of bond or depositing of funds in an escrow
account, the terms of which are satisfactory to the Board, in an amount necessary,
in the opinion of the Board, to complete that work. If the owner fails to
complete the work in the required time, the village shall cure the hazard
itself using, if such funds exist, the bond or the escrowed amount to complete
the work provided in such permits or contracts.
The Board may, if it deems the existence of the hazard to be an emergency, shorten the periods set forth in §§
51-6 and
51-9 above, provided that all of such periods shall be at least 1/3 of those set forth therein.
An owner who receives a hazard notice may appeal the final determination as provided in §
121-47 of this Code.
If an owner fails to take an action required under any of Subsections
A through
D of §
51-9 within any of the time periods provided in §§
51-9 or
51-10, as the case may be, the village, without further notification to the owner, may take such action to cure the hazard as specified in the final determination. The cost of such curative action shall be for the account of the owner and shall be a debt owed by the owner to the village. The amount of such debt shall be paid by the owner within 10 days of a written demand by the village and, if not paid or otherwise collected by legal process deemed appropriate by the village, shall be a lien on the owner's property equivalent to a tax lien.
An owner who fails to take action required under §
51-9A through
D with respect to a hazard specified in a hazard notice within the times therein specified, or specified pursuant to §
51-10, shall be liable for a fine of $250 per day beginning with the day following the last day provided in §
51-9 or pursuant to §
51-10 for taking an action specified in §
51-9A through
D. The fine for each infraction shall be levied only with respect to the earliest subsection in §
51-9 that the owner has failed to timely comply with, but if the owner subsequently complies with that subsection, an additional fine may be levied with respect to a failure to comply with a subsequent subsection of §
51-9. Each day in which such failure occurs shall subject the owner to a separate fine, but the maximum fine with respect to any final determination shall be $5,000 or 10% of the amount required by the village to cure the hazard, whichever is greater. Such fine shall be in addition to the amount due the village, if any, provided in §
51-12 above.