New York Post

DOGGING THE DEAD

Cemetery sues junkyard for ‘harass’

- By DEAN BALSAMINI

Managers of a historic city cemetery say it’s being overrun by the junkyard dogs next door.

Establishe­d in 1852, St. Michael’s Cemetery in Queens is one of the oldest cemeteries in the city and the final resting place of composer Scott Joplin and boxing great Emile Griffith.

The East Elmhurst graveyard is also the setting for a vicious legal battle with adjacent junkyard owner Tom Tiseo, who allegedly allows his Rottweiler­s to roam the 88 acres of sacred ground and menace mourners.

For years, the unidentifi­ed junk yard, designated only as “ABC Corporatio­n” in court papers, “engaged in a pattern of systematic harassment, encroachme­nt and trespass upon the personnel, property … and visitors of St. Michael’s,” the Queens Supreme Court filing says.

In the late 1990s, the junkyard “permitted a hole” to languish in a partition between the “24-37 [49th Street] and St. Michael’s properties,” the complaint says.

The scrap yard’s dogs would enter St. Michael’s through the broken fence, “terrorizin­g patrons and staff at the cemetery and disrupting funerary services,” the complaint says.

St. Michael’s requested Tiseo repair the broken fence or restrain the dogs, but Tiseo did neither, the suit says. St. Michael’s “had no choice” but to build a buffer fence on its own property, the suit says.

“Thereafter, Tiseo began aggressive­ly encroachin­g upon the St. Michael’s property. Tiseo began storing and piling debris, bulldozing and building makeshift structures on St. Michael’s property.”

“Despite complaints, which Tiseo ignored, Tiseo systematic­ally began usurping greater swaths of St. Michael’s property, ignoring complaints and taunting St. Michael’s representa­tives to ‘sue’ him,” court papers say.

Tiseo got his wish when St. Michael’s filed suit Sept. 30.

The complaint charges that Tiseo is attempting an illegal land grab between his broken fence and the St. Michael’s buffer fence. Attorneys for the cemetery got a court order this week to halt any activity pending a court hearing next month.

St. Michael’s — a still-active cemetery owned by St. Michael’s Episcopal Church in Manhattan — is asking the court to determine the correct boundary line between the two properties and has submitted land surveys. The church wants a judge to order the junk yard to clear the land it’s encroachin­g on and have Tiseo cover the costs. The suit also seeks unspecifie­d damages.

“The buffer fence our clients installed was meant to keep the dogs [away] … It wasn’t a concession of property, or the functional equivalent of a demilitari­zed zone,” cemetery lawyer Greg Nahas told The Post.

Tiseo could not be reached for comment.

 ?? ?? TROUBLESOM­E NEIGHBOR: The cemetery’s suit accuses the junkyard owner of “systematic harassment and encroachme­nt.”
TROUBLESOM­E NEIGHBOR: The cemetery’s suit accuses the junkyard owner of “systematic harassment and encroachme­nt.”
 ?? ?? TOO CLOSE: St. Michael’s Cemetery put up a fence to keep its junkyard neighbor’s dogs out, to no avail.
TOO CLOSE: St. Michael’s Cemetery put up a fence to keep its junkyard neighbor’s dogs out, to no avail.

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