ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE [AI] IS NOT USED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN PREPARING NYPPL SUMMARIES OF JUDICIAL AND QUASI-JUDICIAL DECISIONS

Sep 15, 2011

Finding of guilt based on allegations not included in the disciplinary charges vacated


Finding of guilt based on allegations not included in the disciplinary charges vacated
Eckstrom v City of Ithaca, NYS Supreme Ct., [Not selected for publication in the Official Reports]

In 1997, the City of Binghamton amended the City Code to require “notice and hearing” and proof of incompetence or misconduct before a city official appointed by the Mayor could be removed from his or her office. Prior to the amendment, such officials were “employees-at-will” and not entitled to any form of a pretermination hearing.

In the Eckstrom case, State Supreme Court Judge Walter J. Relihan, Jr. concluded that having enacted such a provision, the City was required to substantially comply with the principles followed in prosecuting disciplinary charges filed pursuant to Section 75 of the Civil Service Law.

Six disciplinary charges were filed against Richard L. Eckstrom, the city's Building Commissioner, by the Mayor. One was withdrawn by the Mayor prior to the hearing and three were dismissed by the hearing officer. Eckstrom, however, was found guilty of the two remaining charges based on building code decisions he had made. Accepting the findings and recommendations of the hearing officer, the Mayor dismissed Eckstrom. Eckstrom appealed.

In reviewing the record, Judge Relihan noted that the hearing officer had concluded that as to the first charge Eckstrom's actions were “arguably correct” and that his conduct with respect to the second charge “was neither incorrect nor unreasonable.”

How then could the hearing officer have found Eckstrom guilty? In both instances, said Judge Relihan, the hearing officer relied on “an uncharged offense in support of a finding of guilt regarding an offense which does appear in the charges.”

In the words of the court:

Obtuse to his own prior findings, the hearing officer concluded that Eckstrom should be fired for incompetence and misconduct ... These jarring inconsistencies and departures from well-settled principles compel the conclusion that the “Final Determination” is arbitrary, capricious, affected by an error of law and constitutes an abuse of discretion.

As the Court of Appeals held in Murray v Murphy, 24 NY2d 150, in order to satisfy due process, a notice of the charges must be given to the employee so that he or she may mount an adequate defense, if one is available.

Further, the disciplinary determination must be based on the charges filed against the employee and “no person may lose substantial rights because of wrongdoing shown by the evidence but not charged.”

Observing that the city “disabled” itself from dismissing its high-ranking officials on policy grounds “unless, in addition, misconduct or incompetence could be proven at a hearing,” Judge Relihan ruled that Eckstrom was to be reinstated to his former position.

Judge Relihan said that this may “complicate the business of the Building Department and cause discomfort elsewhere in City Hall” but “[p]erhaps, with good will, a rational and practical denouement can...be achieved...[which] of course, rests entirely in the hands of the parties.”

Among the lessons of the Eckstrom case: In the event a public employer unilaterally decides to provide a pretermination disciplinary hearing to individuals not otherwise entitled such administrative due process by law or contract, the procedures normally appropriate to conducting such a disciplinary hearing must be followed.

Whistle blowing – complaint of retaliation


Whistle blowing – complaint of retaliation
Dobson v Loos, 277 A.D.2d 1013

In Dobson the significant issue before the Appellate Division, Fourth Department, concerned whether or not certain personnel actions alleged taken against an employee could constitute retaliation for whistle blowing in violation of Civil Service Law Section 75-b and Labor Law Section 740.

Richard Dobson, an Erie County Sheriff's Department Sergeant, complained that the Department had retaliated against him because of his “whistle blowing activities” by taking “active and extraordinary measures to preclude his appointment as Lieutenant during the life of the preferred eligibility list until its expiration by operation of law.”

The Appellate Division ruled that such alleged conduct falls within the definition of a “retaliatory personnel action”.

The court noted that retaliatory personnel action is defined in the statutes as the “discharge, suspension or demotion of an employee, or other adverse employment action taken against an employee in the terms and conditions of employment.”

In addition, the court found that the following departmental actions Dobson alleged were taken against him could constitute unlawful retaliation as well:

1. Creating and filling new positions of senior and supervisory detectives, quasi-lieutenant positions “that rightfully should have been offered to [Dobson] but were not.”

2. Assigning Dobson to “virtually nonexistent duties.”

Challenging arbitration awards


Challenging arbitration awards
Coppa v State of New York, NYS Supreme Court, Justice A. Lebowitz, [Not selected for publication in the Official Reports]

Clearly, Article 75 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules imposes significant limitations on challenging an arbitration award. Two such limitations are:

1. The arbitrator exceed his or her authority in rendering a decision and

2. Alleged bias on the part of the arbitrator. These were among the issues considered in the Coppa case.

Coppa, a Psychiatrist II employed by the Brooklyn Development Center of the Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities [OMRDD], was suspended without pay. He was served with a Notice of Discipline, dated March 2, 1999, charging him with “endangering the welfare of a consumer, verbally abusing a consumer and verbally abusing and threatening subordinate staff members.” OMRDD's proposed penalty: termination.

Coppa filed a disciplinary grievance challenging the charges filed against him in accordance with the disciplinary procedure set out in the Taylor Law agreement between the State and his employee organization. The grievance was ultimately submitted to arbitration. The arbitrator conducted a disciplinary hearing, sustained two of the three charges, which had been preferred against Coppa by OMRDD and imposed the penalty of dismissal.

Coppa filed a petition pursuant to Article 75 petition seeking to vacate the arbitration award.

Key to resolving Coppa's appeal, said the court, were the terms of the disciplinary arbitration procedure set out in the collective bargaining agreement.

In the words of the court, the contract expressly authorizes the disciplinary arbitrator to “render determinations of guilt or innocence and the appropriateness of proposed penalties” and provides that the “arbitrator's decision with respect to guilt or innocence, penalty, probable cause for suspension, or temporary reassignment, if any ... shall be final and binding [up]on the parties.”

These explicit provisions supported OMRDD's position that the arbitrator did not exceed his jurisdiction in ruling upon the preferred charges of misconduct and imposing the penalty of dismissal.

Judge Lebowitz pointed out that:

Where a dispute has been arbitrated pursuant to a broad arbitration agreement between the parties, the resulting award may not be vacated “unless it is violative of a strong public policy, is totally irrational or clearly exceeds a specifically enumerated limitation on the arbitrator's power,” citing the Court of Appeals' ruling in Town of Callicoon v CSEA, 70 NY2d 907.

Another issue raised by Coppa: the possibility of bias on the part of the disciplinary arbitrator in view of his “prior employment by the State of New York.”

However, said the court, the arbitrator's previous employment by the State was disclosed to Coppa in the arbitrator's resume sent to the parties in advance of his selection to serve as the hearing officer. Coppa proceeded to arbitration without objecting or inquiring further into the arbitrator's possible bias.

This omission, said Judge Lebowitz, meant that Coppa waived any possible objection to the arbitrator's award based on a theory of bias resulting from the arbitrator's prior relationship with the State of New York.

Judge Lebowitz confirmed the arbitration award finding Coppa guilty of two of the charges and the penalty imposed: dismissal from his position.

Sep 14, 2011

Oath of office upon the appointment of a public officer or a public employee


Oath of office upon the appointment of a public officer or a public employee
A NYPPL review

When Lance Eggleston was appointed to the Village of Hamburg's Environmental Commission, he said that he wanted to postpone his filing his oath to support the Federal and State Constitutions until he had a chance to read the New York State Constitution. What, if any, impact could a delay in his filing his oath of office have on Eggleston's status on the commission?

First, some background concerning the filing of an oath of office by a public officer or a public employee.*

Individuals are typically required to execute an “oath of office” upon their initial appointment to a position in the public service. Section 62 of the Civil Service Law, for example, requires “every person employed by the state or any of its civil divisions” to execute a “Constitutional Oath of Office.”

If the individual refuses or willfully fails to file the “Section 62 oath”, his or her employment is to be terminated until the oath is taken and filed with the appropriate body.**

Similarly, Section 10 of the Public Officers Law mandates that “every officer” take and file “the oath of office required by law” before he or she may “enter upon the discharge” of any official duties.

What is the penalty if a public officer does not file a timely oath? Section 30.1 of the Public Officers Law provides that if an individual refuses or neglects to file his or her official oath within thirty days of the beginning of his or her term of office, the office becomes “vacant.”

In contrast to Civil Service Law Section 62's provision for the “reinstatement” of the terminated individual to employment once his or her oath is filed, nothing in Section 30.1 of the Public Officers Law provides for “automatic reinstatement” of the individual upon his or her filing of the required oath once the position becomes vacant “by operation of law.”

Presumably the individual must be reappointed to the position if he or she is to hold the office, at which time he or she would be required to file a new and timely Constitutional Oath of Office.

As to Eggleston's situation, it appears that Eggleston wanted delay his filing because he wanted to know what he would be swearing to uphold before he actually swore to support the State Constitution. In explaining his action, Eggleston said “[i]t's like signing a blank check.” In any event, Eggleston, as a public officer, will have thirty days to file his oath or the office to which he had been appointed will become vacant as mandated by Section 30.1.

It is noteworthy that Eggleston had recently retired from his position as a technology coordinator at the Hamburg Central Schools. Presumably he had executed the oath to support the Federal and State constitutions mandated of “any citizen of the United States [employed] to serve as teacher, instructor or professor in any school or institution in the public school system of the state ...” as required by Section 3002 of the Education Law upon his initial appointment by the school district.

The Constitutional oath of office required by the Civil Service Law, the Education Law, the Public Officers Law and similar provisions must be distinguished from so-called “loyalty oath” established pursuant to “anti-subversive activities” laws that were set out in former Section 105 of the Civil Service Law.

Section 105 [originally enacted as Section 12-a of the Civil Service Law of 1909] made individuals advocating the overthrow of government by force or unlawful means ineligible for employment in the public service of the State or any of its political subdivisions.

Section 105 was repealed following the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in the Keyishian case. In Keyishian, the high court held that State laws similar to Section 105, Sections 3021 and 3022 of the Education Law, were unconstitutional [Keyishian v Board of Regents, 87 SCt 675]. Sections 3021 and 3022 were enacted to provide for the “elimination of subversive persons from the public school system.”

* While not all public employees are public officers, all public officers are public employees.

** An individual affiliated with, or a member of, an Indian nation is permitted to file an alternate to the oath set out in Section 62.

Determining if the grievance is arbitrable


Determining if the grievance is arbitrable
Owen D. Young CSD v Morris, 278 AD2d 940

The significant issue in the Young Central School District case concerned determining if a grievance filed by an employee organization could be submitted to arbitration.

Susan Morris, President of the Van Hornesville Teachers Association, appealed a State Supreme Court's granting of the District's petition to stay submitting a grievance concerning prescription health insurance benefits to arbitration.

The Appellate Division, Fourth Department vacated the stay of arbitration issued by a State Supreme Court Judge. The court commented that “[t]here is a reasonable relationship between the matter in dispute, i.e., prescription health benefits, and the broad arbitration clause [in the collective bargaining agreement] that covers all grieved matters.”

In such cases, said the Appellate Division, arbitrators, rather than the courts, are to determine whether a particular grievance falls within the scope of the substantive provisions of the collective bargaining agreement, citing Board of Education v Watertown Education Association, 93 NY2d 132.

The Appellate Division ruled that the lower court “erred in determining as a matter of law that the matter is not arbitrable.”

Determining probation status when employee's service is interrupted by an absence
Johnston v Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, App. Div., First Dept., 278 A.D.2d 34

Typically, an individual serving a “disciplinary probation” may be terminated from his or her position in accordance with the terms of his or her probationary status.

The lesson of the Johnston case: it is essential to determine if the individual is actually serving as a probationer at the time he or she is dismissed for unsatisfactory service as a probationer; probationary status may not be assumed.

In 1989, Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority [TBTA] police officer Edward P. Johnston settled disciplinary charges filed against him by agreeing to be placed “on probation for a period of one year.” A few months later Johnston was injured while on duty and did not return to work until October 1996.

In June 1997, following new allegations of misconduct, TBTA dismissed Johnston from his position without a pre-termination hearing. TBTA's justification for its action:

Johnston is not entitled to a pretermination hearing since the one-year probationary period agreed to in 1989 had not yet expired.

According to TBTA, Johnston's period of probation was tolled during his Johnston's extended absence from work. Essentially TBTA argued that as it had not “waived” any portion of Johnston's disciplinary probation, he was required to actually complete one year of such service.

This view is consistent with the Rules of the New York State Civil Service Commission, which applies to employees in the classified service of the State and public authorities, public benefit corporations and other agencies for which the Civil Service Law is administered by the State Department of Civil Service, with respect to absences during a probationary period [4 NYCRR 4.5(g)].

The rules provide that an appointing authority may, in its discretion, consider certain absences “as time served in the probationary term.”

The rule further provides that “[a]ny such periods of absence not so considered by the appointing authority as time served in the probationary term, and any periods of absence in excess of periods considered by the appointing authority as time served in the probationary term pursuant to this subdivision, shall not be counted as time served in the probationary term.” A number of local civil service commissions have adopted a similar rule.

Johnston protested his termination without notice and hearing but the New York City Civil Service Commission dismissed his appeal. The Commission said that it does not have “subject matter jurisdiction to consider the appeal” since Johnston's termination had been pursuant to the 1989 settlement agreement in which he waived the protections of Civil Service Law Section 75 mandating pretermination hearings for tenured employees.

The Appellate Division, First Department, disagreed with the Commission's analysis. It said the Commission apparently “assumed that the waiver contained in the 1989 agreement was still operative” -- it never actually made a finding to that Johnston was still a probationary employee.”

If, on the other hand, said the court, the probationary period had expired, the provisions of Section 75 of the Civil Service Law would control Johnston's dismissal.

Should this be the case, the lawfulness of Johnston's termination without notice and hearing would clearly be within the Commission's jurisdiction.

The Appellate Division remanded the case to the Commission to determine Johnston's probationary status and whether or not the “1989 waiver” remained effective at the time of Johnston's termination.

Discretion to discipline staff

Discretion to discipline staff
Matter of Gaul, Decisions of the Commissioner of Education #14432
Matter of Middleton, Decisions of the Commissioner of Education #14431

The Gaul and Middleton appeals both involve the challenges to the exercise of discretion involving the filing of disciplinary charges against an employee. In Gaul, the issue concerned the board's filing disciplinary charges; in Middleton, the issue involved a decision not to file such charges.

The Gaul case

Port Jefferson Union Free School District board member Kenneth Gaul, together with “presumably parents of students” in the district challenged the district's decision to file disciplinary charges pursuant to Section 3020-a of the Education Law against a school principal, Dr. Esther Fusco, and her subsequent reassignment pending resolution of the disciplinary action.

Also challenged was the abolishment of the position encumbered by the district's former director of special education, Carole Noren.

The district's superintendent, Dr. Edward J. Reilly, had recommended a reorganization plan that would involve the abolishment of Noren's position but before the board acted Noren was offered, and accepted, a retirement incentive.

Among the issues considered by the Commissioner was the question of Gaul's “standing” to appeal a personnel determination by a school board. The Commissioner observed:

1. An individual may not maintain an appeal pursuant to Section 310 of the Education Law unless he or she “has suffered personal damage or injury to his or her civil, personal or property rights.”

2. Status as a resident of a district or as a parent of a student in the district does not operate to “automatically confer ... the capacity to seek review of personnel actions by a board of education.”

Ruling that the “unsubstantiated assertion that their children have been negatively impacted by Fusco's removal is insufficient to confer standing” to challenge the board's decision, the Commissioner dismissed this aspect of the appeal.

The Commissioner also ruled that the assertion that expenditures to replace Fusco were “wasteful” in contrast to be “unlawful” did not establish “the direct personal harm” essential to conferring “standing” to appeal.

The Commissioner further found that Gaul failed to show that the board “engaged in a willful violation or neglect of duty” by its filing disciplinary charges against Fusco.

Fusco, the district conceded, had received both the Principal of the Year Award in New York State in 1997 and the National Distinguished Principal Award in 1998. However, it filed “49 specifications ranging from relatively minor offenses ... to the more serious” against her.

This, said the Commissioner, indicated that “from the breadth and length of the disciplinary charges, as well as the remoteness of some of the allegations, the [board] pursued Fusco's removal with considerable zeal” but there is insufficient evidence that “any board member willfully violated or neglected a legal duty in approving Fusco's reassignment.”

Dismissing the appeal, the Commissioner pointed out that Section 1709(33) of the Education Law grants a board of education broad authority to manage the educational affairs of the district. “Inherent in this authority” is the power to abolish administrative positions and alter an administrator's assignment.

As to Gaul's challenging the “retirement incentive” accepted by Noren, the Commissioner rejected his claim that the incentive was “an unconstitutional gift of public funds.”

This argument, said the Commissioner, is without merit, noting that in Antonpoulou v Beame, 32 NY2d 126, the Court of Appeals ruled that providing such a benefit, if statutory or contractual, is lawful. He said the retirement incentive offered Noren was authorized by Chapter 41 of the Laws of 1997.

The Middleton appeal

After Beatrice Hudgins Middleton's son was exonerated of charges that he brought a “Category I weapon” to his first grade class, Middleton asked the school district to file disciplinary charges against school officials whom she alleged had lied during the investigation of the incident or at the disciplinary hearing that followed.

The Commissioner, after dismissing Middleton's appeal for technical reasons, addressed the merits of her complaint -- the failure of the district to initiate the requested disciplinary action against its staff members.

Commenting that it is the board of education that has authority to take disciplinary action against a school district employee, the Commissioner said that “a board of education has broad discretion to determine whether disciplinary action against an employee is warranted.”

All that is required is that the board have “a reasonable basis” for its determination not to file disciplinary charges against the individual.

* These determinations were made by then Acting Commissioner Cate.

Sep 13, 2011

Duty of fair representation


Duty of fair representation
LeBlanc v Security Services Unit, Council 82, Appellate Division, Third Department, 278 A.D.2d 732

The LeBlanc decision illustrates some of the technical hurdles confronting members of an employee organization attempting to sue their collective bargaining agent on the grounds that it violated its duty of fair representation.

The ruling also demonstrates the proposition that a collective bargaining agreement belongs to the union, rather than to the employees covered by the agreement.

State Environmental Conservation Officer Hilary J. LeBlanc, together with other current and former officers, sued Council 82 alleging that it breached its duty of fair representation when it refused to file a grievance.

LeBlanc claimed that the State failed to pay conservation officers overtime compensation under the collective bargaining agreement in place at that time and that Council 82 should have filed a grievance to vindicate their rights under the collective bargaining agreement.

As it turned out, the complaint was untimely. The Appellate Division affirmed a Supreme Court ruling dismissing LeBlanc's petition on the grounds that the statute of limitations for bringing the action had expired.

The court pointed out that a claim against an employee organization alleging it breached its duty of fair representation must be commenced within four months of the date the employee knew or should have known that the breach occurred or when the employee suffered actual harm, whichever is later.

Although LeBlanc conceded that the officers were aware of the alleged breach in 1987, they attempted to persuade the court that they did not experience actual harm until July 2, 1999 when they:

1. Were paid overtime compensation in accordance with the Fair Labor Standards Act rather than “contractual overtime compensation;” and

2. Became obligated to pay counsel fees, costs and disbursements incurred in litigating their claim of entitlement to such overtime compensation [Mulverhill v State of New York, 257 AD2d 735].

The Appellate Division rejected LeBlanc's theory, holding that Council 82, assuming that it did in fact breached its duty of fair representation by refusing to file the grievance, did so in July 1987, more than 12 years prior to LeBlanc filing this complaint.

The Appellate Division also dismissed LeBlanc's claim of “breach of contract.” The court said that LeBlanc's breach of contract claims are based on the collective bargaining agreement between the State and Council 82.

Pointing out that the conservation officers are not parties to the contract, they lack what is called privity and thus they may not assert contractual claims directly against the State based on the collective bargaining agreement. In other words, only the State or Council 82 could sue the other for any alleged breach of the contract.*

Finally the Appellate Division ruled that LeBlanc's reliance on a claim that the officers are third-party beneficiaries of the contract between the State and Council 82 “is equally misplaced,” citing Lundgren v Kaufman Astoria Studios, 261 AD2d 513.

Although courts have ruled that members of a union may be “third party beneficiaries” of a contract between the employer and the union [Helt v Britten-Fenton Co., 180 Misc 1077], the Court of Appeals has declared that the benefit “must be one that is not merely incidental, but must be immediate in such a sense and degree as to indicate the assumption of a duty to make reparation if the benefit is lost” [Associated Flour Haulers and Warehousemen v Hoffman, 282 NY 173].

While the LeBlanc case concerned an individual suing his or her union for alleged breach of contract, sometimes an employee may attempt to sue his or her public employer alleging a breach of the collective bargaining agreement.

As a general proposition, when a public employer and a union enter into a collective bargaining agreement that sets out a contract grievance procedure, an employee subject to the agreement may not sue the employer directly for breach of that agreement. He or she must attempt to cure the alleged breach through the employee organization.

This proposition was set in by the Appellate Division, Third Department, in Sinacore v State of New York, decided November 16, 2000. In this situation, the court said that:

Unless the contract provides otherwise, only when the union fails in its duty of fair representation can the employee go beyond the agreed procedure and litigate a contract issue directly against the employer.

The Appellate Division ruled that because Sinacore “failed to allege that the union breached its duty of fair representation,” he cannot sue the State for any alleged procedural defects in his 1995 disciplinary hearing.

* Contract privity is defined as the relationship or connection between the contracting parties. Privity is essential to maintaining any legal action between a plaintiff and a defendant with respect to the matter being sued on.

Electing a disciplinary penalty


Electing a disciplinary penalty
Public Employees Federation v NYS Workers' Compensation Board, NYS Supreme Court, Judge Mason, [Not selected for publication in the Official Reports]

This decision by Judge Reynold N. Mason resolves an appeal from a disciplinary arbitration. In addition to explaining substituting negotiated disciplinary procedures for statutory procedures such as those set out in Section 75 of the Civil Service Law, it provided a rather unusual remedy: the employee is given a choice of the disciplinary penalty to be imposed.

While conducting a hearing, a Workers Compensation Board Judge, Herbert L. Levy, told a claimant's attorney to “shut up.”

An investigation followed and Levy admitted to using this language, explaining that he had been “attempting to say something dramatic to break th[e] emotionalism that [the attorney] was involved in,” and to get her, the attorney, to stop talking and “get the hearing back on track.” Levy also conceded that his plan was “perhaps ill-conceived.”

Disciplinary charges were filed charges against Levy alleging “misconduct and/or incompetence.” The Board claimed that he had violated it policy “that Board employees maintain a civil, courteous, respectful and professional attitude and practice” and proposed a penalty of a ten-day suspension from work without pay.

Levy rejected the proposed penalty/settlement and his disciplinary grievance was submitted to arbitration in accordance with the terms of the collective bargaining agreement [CBA].

Arbitrator Max M. Doner found Levy guilty of misconduct and/or incompetence in the performance of his duties as law judge. The penalty imposed: a fine of $2,400.

Levy filed an Article 75 petition seeking to vacate the arbitrator's award on the grounds that the arbitrator had exceeded his powers and thus his determination is “arbitrary, capricious and irrational.”

Levy also contended that the award violates the strong policy of the State of New York and “denies petitioner his Constitutional right to due process of law....” The Board, on the other hand, filed a motion to confirm the award.

Levy major arguments: (1) The collective bargaining agreement provides for “compulsory” binding arbitration and accordingly “the award would have to be in accord with due process and supported by adequate evidence in the record in order to be sustained;” and (2) The penalty imposed, a fine of $2,400, violates public policy.

The collective bargaining agreement

Judge Mason rejected Levy's “compulsory” binding arbitration theory.

Citing Antinore v State of New York, 40 NY2d 6, the court said that “a provision in a public employee's CBA which provides for binding arbitration as the method for disposing of challenges to disciplinary action in lieu of a statutory disciplinary procedure such as Section 75 of the Civil Service Law is deemed to have been consented to by the employee (as such provision was voluntarily agreed to by the employee's representative, the union)....”

Accordingly, Levy's submission to arbitration pursuant to his CBA is deemed to be consented to, not compulsory.

The public policy issue

Judge Mason also rejected Levy's argument that the arbitrator's imposition of a $2,400 fine is in excess of his authority and is “arbitrary, capricious and irregular” in that it violates the “strong public policy” of New York State because Section 75 provides for a fine of not to exceed $100.

He said that because the CBA's disciplinary grievance procedure replaced Section 75 and provides that the arbitrator is to determine guilt and the appropriate penalty, the arbitrator is neither subject to nor limited by the penalties contained in Section 75.

As to the public policy issue, the court said that a fine to be imposed against a public employee not to exceed $100, does not constitute an expression of “public policy” such that the arbitrator's imposition of a fine greater than $100 is violative of public policy and must be set aside.

According to Judge Mason, the fine of $2,400 imposed by the arbitrator appears to be a reduction from the original penalty imposed -- a 10-day suspension without pay.

But, said the court, if Levy disagreed and “would actually prefer to suffer the 10-day suspension rather than pay $2,400,” he may elect the suspension since he “should not be worse off for having sought review of the original finding and penalty” by an arbitrator.”

Sustaining the determination of guilt, Judge Mason modified the award to allow Levy to elect the penalty he preferred.

Judge Mason applied the following standards in reaching his determination:

1. An arbitrator is free to apply his own sense of law and equity to the facts as he has found them to be in resolving a controversy, including consideration of the employee's personnel file in setting the penalty to be imposed.

2. The court's authority for overturning an arbitration award is limited to those provided under Article 75 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules.

3. Any limitation upon the remedial power of the arbitrator must be clearly contained in the arbitration clause.

4. Although an award which is violative of public policy will not be permitted to stand, courts must be careful not to decide the dispute on the merits under the guise of public policy.

Using an individual’s employment history in disciplinary action


Using an individual’s employment history in disciplinary action
A NYPPL review

Readers raise interesting questions. For example, a reader recently asked if there were any court decisions concerning the introduction of an employee's employment history into the record during a disciplinary hearing?

According to the reader, the Section 75 hearing officer admitted the accused employee's performance evaluations during the proceeding at the request of the appointing authority, indicating that the evaluations would be considered in determining the penalty the hearing officer would recommend if he found the employee guilty of one or more of the disciplinary charges.

The question raises a number of issues, including the following:

1. May such records be introduced into the record at the disciplinary hearing?

2. If the employee is found guilty of charges unrelated to adverse material in his or her personnel record, may the records be used to determine the penalty to be imposed by the hearing officer? By the appointing authority?

3. If the employee is found guilty of charges related to an adverse comment in his or her personnel records should further consideration be barred on the grounds of “double jeopardy?”

Introducing the personnel record:

In Scott v Wetzler, 195 AD2d 905, the Appellate Division, Third Department rejected Scott's argument that he was denied due process because the Section 75 hearing officer allowed evidence concerning his performance evaluations to be introduced during the disciplinary hearing.

The court said that “such evidence was relevant to the determination of an appropriate penalty,” noting that Scott was allowed an opportunity to rebut these records and to submit favorable material contained in his personnel file.

Considering the personnel record:

Having introduced the employee's personnel records, for what purpose(s) may they be used?

In Bigelow v Village of Gouverneur, 63 NY2d 470, the Court of Appeals said that such records could be used to determine the penalty to be imposed if:

1. The individual is advised that his or her prior disciplinary record would be considered in setting the penalty to be imposed, and

2. The employee is given an opportunity to submit a written response to any adverse material contained in the record or offer “mitigating circumstances.”

Is criticism discipline?

In Holt v Board of Education, 52 NY2d 625, the Court of Appeals ruled that performance evaluations and letters of criticism placed in the employee's personnel file were not “disciplinary penalties” and thus could be placed there without having to first hold a disciplinary proceeding.

In other words, the appointing authority's placing correspondence critical of the employee's conduct or performance in his or her personnel file did not constitute discipline.

The basic rule set out in Holt is that a statutory disciplinary provision such as Section 75 of the Civil Service Law does not require that an employee be given a hearing or permitted to grieve every comment or statement by his or her employer that he or she may consider a criticism.

In contrast, alleged “constructive criticism” may not be used to frustrate an employee's right to due process as set out in Section 75 of the Civil Service Law, Section 3020-a of the Education Law or a contract disciplinary procedure.

As the Commissioner of Education indicated in Fusco v Jefferson County School District, CEd, decided June 27, 2000, and Irving v Troy City School District, CEd 14,373, decided May 25, 2000:

Comments critical of employee performance do not, without more, constitute disciplinary action. On the other hand, counseling letters may not be used as a subterfuge for avoiding initiating formal disciplinary action against a tenured individual.

What distinguishes lawful “constructive criticism” of an individual's performance by a supervisor and supervisory actions addressing an individual's performance that are disciplinary in nature? This could be a difficult question to resolve.

As the Court of Appeals indicated in Holt, a “counseling memorandum” that is given to an employee and placed in his or her personnel file constitutes a lawful means of instructing the employee concerning unacceptable performance and the actions that should be taken by the individual to improve his or her work.

In the Fusco and Irving cases, the Commissioner of Education found that “critical comment” exceeded the parameters circumscribing “lawful instruction” concerning unacceptable performance.

In Fusco's case, the Commissioner said that “contents of the memorandum” did not fall within the parameters of a “permissible evaluation” despite the school board's claim that the memorandum was “intended to encourage positive change” in Fusco's performance.

The Commissioner noted that it “contains no constructive criticism or a single suggestion for improvement.” Rather, said the Commissioner, the memorandum focused on “castigating [Fusco] for prior alleged misconduct.”

In Irving's case, a school principal was given a letter critical of her performance and the next day reassigned to another school where she was to serve as an assistant principal.

The Commissioner ruled that these two actions, when considered as a single event, constituted disciplinary action within the meaning of Section 3020-a of the Education Law.

Concerning alleged "double jeopardy"

A “counseling memorandum” is placed in an individual's personnel file and later disciplinary charges involving the same event(s) are served upon the individual. Does including or incorporating the events set out in the counseling memorandum as charges constitute “double jeopardy?”

No, according to the Court of Appeal's ruling in Patterson v Smith, 53 NY2d 98. In Patterson the court said that including charges concerning performance that were addressed in a counseling memorandum was not “double jeopardy.”

The court explained that a “proper counseling memoranda” contains a warning and an admonition to comply with the expectations of the employer. It is not a form of punishment in and of itself.

Accordingly, case law indicates that giving the employee a counseling memorandum does not bar the employer from later filing disciplinary charges based on the same event.

Further, the memorandum may be introduced as evidence in the disciplinary hearing or for the purposes of determining the penalty to be imposed if the individual is found guilty.

The employer, however, may not use the counseling memorandum or a performance evaluation to avoid initiating formal disciplinary action against an individual as the Fusco and Irving decisions by the Commissioner of Education demonstrate.


Sep 12, 2011

Member's claim of malpractice by the union's attorney rejected


Member's claim of malpractice by the union's attorney rejected
Mamorella v Derkasch, App. Div., Fourth Dept., 276 AD2d 152

Lucille Mamorella asked the Appellate Division “to reject as against public policy the well-established rule that an attorney who performs services for and on behalf of a union may not be held liable in malpractice to individual union members where the services at issue constitute a part of the collective bargaining process.”

The Appellate Division declined to do so. The court said,

Sound policy reasons as well as established precedent compel the conclusion that attorneys who perform services for and on behalf of a union may not be held liable in malpractice to individual grievants where the services the attorneys perform constitute a part of the collective bargaining process.

The court cited Peterson v Kennedy, 771 F2d 1244, in support of its ruling. 


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