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September 01, 2017

A stipulation waiving rights to a disciplinary hearing and agreement to resign from the position may not disqualify the individual for Unemployment Insurance benefits


A stipulation waiving rights to a disciplinary hearing and agreement to resign from the position may not disqualify the individual for Unemployment Insurance benefits
2017 NY Slip Op 05885, Appellate Division, Third Department

As a general rule, a claimant for unemployment insurance benefits who voluntarily leaves his or her employment without good cause or who engages in disqualifying misconduct is ineligible to receive such benefits.

In contrast, courts have held that "[a] claimant who voluntarily leaves his or her position in the face of disciplinary charges may qualify for unemployment benefits if the actions did not amount to misconduct."* Further, as the court ruled in Matter of Oberman [New York City Dept. of Citywide Admin. Servs.—Commissioner of Labor], 143 AD3d 1022, whether a claimant for unemployment insurance benefits has engaged in disqualifying misconduct "is a factual question for the Board to resolve and its determination will not be disturbed if supported by substantial evidence."

In this case the employee [Claimant], who was in the public service, was confronted with various disciplinary charges over a period of time. Ulimately Claimant and the public employer entered into a "stipulation of settlement" resolving the most recent round of alleged disciplinary infractions.** The stipulation provided that Claimant would waive her right to a Civil Service Law §75 disciplinary hearing and would resign from the position by a specified date. In addition, it was stipulated that Claimant "would be allowed to collect her accrued annual leave and, going forward, would receive a 'neutral reference' from the employer."***

Claimant then filed an application for unemployment insurance benefits. The Department of Labor issued initial administrative determinations disqualifying claimant from receiving benefits upon the grounds that she had voluntarily left her employment without good cause or, in the alternative, lost her employment due to misconduct. Claimant appealed the administrative rulings.

An Unemployment Insurance Administrative Law Judge [ALJ] overruled the initial determinations, finding that Claimant "had good cause to separate from her employment and had not otherwise committed disqualifying misconduct." The ALJ also determined that Claimant "had been subject to a hostile work environment."

Ultimately the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board adopted the ALJ's findings and affirmed the ALJ's decision, rejecting the employer's challenge to the ALJ's ruling granting Claimant unemployment insurance benefits.

The Appellate Division sustained the Board's decision, noting that the stipulation of settlement entered into between Claimant and the employer contained no finding or admission of wrongdoing with respect to the Claimant, holding that the Board credited Claimant's testimony as to the nature of her work environment and her reasons for resigning.

Further, said the court, the Board agreed with the ALJ's findings that Claimant's actions did not rise to the level of disqualifying misconduct but, rather, were undertaken in direct response to her "hostile" and "untenable" work environment — an environment that, in turn, provided her with "a compelling reason for her to resign."

The Appellate Division said that as there was substantial evidence to support the Board's decision regarding Claimant's application for unemployment insurance benefits, "it will not be disturbed notwithstanding the presence of other evidence in the record that could support a contrary conclusion."


** The stipulation of settlement contained no admission of misconduct, and no finding of wrongdoing on the part of Claimant was made.

*** The decision notes that provided that Claimant would be given a "neutral reference" should a prospective employer contact the agency for such a purpose. In contrast, Education Law §1133.1 provides that “[a] school administrator or superintendent shall not make any agreement to withhold from law enforcement authorities, the superintendent or the commissioner, where appropriate, the fact that an allegation of child abuse in an educational setting on the part of any employee or volunteer as required by Article 23-B of the Education Law in return for the resignation or voluntary suspension from his or her position of such person, against whom the allegation is made.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

August 31, 2017

Filing disciplinary charges against an employee where the absence is due to an injury or disease


Filing disciplinary charges against an employee where the absence is due to an injury or disease
OATH Index No. 648/17

An appointing authority may serve an employee of the State* as the employer  with disciplinary charges alleging he or she is guilty of "excessive absence." It is typically inappropriate to do so, however, when the employee is eligible for Workers' Compensation Leave pursuant to §71 of the Civil Service Law or Leave for Ordinary Disability pursuant to §72 of the Civil Service Law.

Civil Service Law §71 provides for leaves of absence in the event an employee’s injury or disease is “work connected” and is typically referred to as “workers’ compensation leave. §72 of the Civil Service Law provides for leaves in situations where the employee’s injury or disease is not job related and is usually designated “leave for ordinary disability.” §73 of the Civil Service Law provides for the termination of an employee absent on §72 leave while termination of leave in §71 situations is authorized by §71 itself.**

Significantly neither termination pursuant to §71 nor §73 is pejorative in nature and the individual is eligible for reinstatement to his or her former position, or a similar position, upon timely application once the underlying cause of his or her absence abates.

a. Workers’ Compensation Leave, §71 of the Civil Service Law, “stands alone” with respect to placement on such leave and termination from, and subsequent reinstatement following such termination from §71;

b. Civil Service Law §72, Leave for Ordinary Disability, provides for such leave and reinstatement from such leave while §73 of the Civil Service Law provides for termination from a §72 leave and subsequent reinstatement after such termination; and

c. Termination from §71 or §72 leave once the minimum periods of such leaves are satisfied is at the discretion of the appointing authority.

It should be noted that although the employee must be absent on leave pursuant to §72 continuously for period of one year to trigger the appointing authority’s ability to elect to terminate the individual pursuant to §73, the appointing authority may, as an exercise of discretion, terminate an employee absent on §71 Worker’s Compensation Leave after he or she has been absent on such leave due to the same injury or disease for an “accumulative period” of one year or longer.

Further, where an employee is placed on §71 Workers’ Compensation Leave because of a disability resulting from an assault sustained in the course of his or her employment, he or she is entitled to a leave of absence for an “accumulative period” of at least two years.

In any event, neither §71 nor §72 requires the termination of the employee after he or she has been absent for the requisite minimum period of such a leave. Such termination effected as the result of an appointing authority's exercising a right of discretion to do so.

This issue was recently addressed by New York City Office of Administrative Tribunals and Hearings [OATH] Administrative Law Judge Kara J. Miller as the result of a New York City construction worker being charged with incompetence pursuant to §75 of the Civil Service Law due to "excessive absence."

The record, however, established that the employee's absence was due to an occupational injury which resulted in his being "out on worker’s compensation" for more than one year. ALJ Miller recommended that the worker be separated from employment pursuant to Civil Service Law §71 because his extended absence resulted exclusively from an occupational injury.

Indeed, in Gooshaw v Village of Massena, 216 AD2d 819, the Appellate Division said that it is inappropriate to file disciplinary charges against an individual who is unable to report for work because of his or her conceded disability.

* Although not all employees of the State are State officers, all officers of the State are employees of the State.

** See 4 NYCRR 21.3(e) and 4 NYCRR 21.8, both of which apply to employees of the State as an employer. Many local civil service commissions and personnel officers have adopted similar rules or regulations.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://archive.citylaw.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/17/oath/17_cases/17-648.pdf

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August 30, 2017

Applying the doctrine of primary jurisdiction


Applying the Doctrine of Primary Jurisdiction
2017 NY Slip Op 02192, Appellate Division, Fourth Department

In 2003 the petitioner-plaintiff [Petitioner] was notified by her employer,  Erie 2-Chautauqua-Cattaraugus Board of Cooperative Educational Services [BOCES], that her position as a tenured teacher of gifted and talented elementary school students had been abolished. Petitioner's name was then placed on a preferred eligible list for reappointment to the same or a similar position in accordance with Education Law §3013(3)(a).

Petitioner subsequently learned that BOCES had created a teacher position in a universal prekindergarten [UPK] program in one of the BOCES' component school districts. Despite declining offers of that position in December 2007 and June 2008, Petitioner brought this "hybrid plenary action and CPLR Article 78 proceeding"

In her petition-complaint, Petitioner advanced various theories alledging that BOCES violated her "recall from the preferred list" rights under the Education Law and sought "reappointment to the UPK teacher position, with back pay and benefits and restored pension credit, retroactive to 2005," at which time BOCES had allegedly established the UPK position. Supreme Court, after granting Petitioner's motions to reargue, dismissed her petition in its entirety based on the Doctrine of Primary Jurisdiction.* The court had concluded that the issue of whether the former and new positions are similar for the purposes of §3013(3)(a) is for the Commissioner of Education to resolve in the first instance. Petitioner appealed Supreme Court's decision to the Appellate Division.

The Appellate Division sustained the lower court's rulings with respect to Petitioner's motions to reargue, which had been granted, holding that Supreme Court, in the person of the newly assigned Individual Assignment System (IAS) Judge, properly entertained and granted Petitioner's motion for leave to reargue. The Appellate Division then said the Supreme Court, after granting Petitioner motions to reargue, properly dismissed her petition relying on the Doctrine of Primary Jurisdiction.

The Appellate Division explained that in this instance the Commissioner of Education "has the specialized knowledge and expertise" to resolve the factual issue of whether Petitioner's former position with BOCES  as a teacher of gifted and talented elementary school students and the new UPK teacher position are similar within the meaning of §3013(3)(a) of the Education Law.

Citing Hessney v Board of Education of Public Schools of Tarrytowns, 228 AD2d 954, the Appellate Division held that Supreme Court properly dismissed Petitioner's action as she had failed to timely appeal the matter to the Commissioner of Education.

* Applying the Doctrine of Primary Jurisdiction permits a court to refer an issue to an administrative agency for its determination when the issue is within the agency's purview and expertise. Should a party challenge the administrative determination, the administrative agency's decision may be, if timely appealed, addressed by the court.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

August 29, 2017

Selected reports posted in Employment Law News by WK Workday


Selected reports posted in Employment Law News by WK Workday
Source: Wolters Kulwer

Selected reports posted by WK Workday August 29, 2017

Click on text highlighted in color  to access the full report


Is firing an at-will employee at the urging of an employee’s spouse due to sexual jealousy sex discrimination? It could be, said a New York state appellate court, reversing the dismissal of a sex discrimination complaint under state and city law filed by the fired employee of a chiropractic and wellness clinic who alleged that she was fired by the clinic’s husband and wife co-owners after the wife texted her to “stay the [expletive] away from my husband and family!!!!!!! And remember I warned you” (Edwards v. Nicolai).



As proprietor of Los Angeles International Airport (LAX), the City of Los Angeles could require businesses at the airport to accept a contractual condition imposing a “labor peace agreement” in licensing agreements for service providers, ruled a divided Ninth Circuit panel. A trade association representing service providers at LAX had standing to challenge the city’s actions, the appeals court determined. Nevertheless, because the city was acting as a market participant, and there was no indication that Congress intended to preempt actions taken by state and local governments in this capacity, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s dismissal of the complaint. Judge Tallman filed a separate opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part (Airline Service Providers Association v. Los Angeles World Airports).



A federal district court correctly held that a city ordinance ostensibly designed to regulate solicitation of work by day laborers was an unconstitutional restriction of commercial speech in violation of First Amendment, ruled a divided Second Circuit in a 2-1 decision. The appeals court held that an advocacy group that counseled day laborers at “shape-up sites” within the town demonstrated a sufficient injury-in-fact to confer standing to challenge the ordinance. On the merits, it agreed with the lower court that the ordinance restricted speech based on its content and was therefore subject to the First Amendment; the ordinance failed the Central Hudson test because it is an overbroad commercial speech prohibition. Judge Jacobs filed a separate dissenting opinion (Centro de la Comunidad Hispana de Locust Valley v. Town of Oyster Bay, [New York]).



Affirming the denial of preliminary injunctive relief for a football coach seeking reinstatement and to be allowed to pray on the 50-yard line immediately after games, the Ninth Circuit held that he spoke as a public employee, not as a private citizen, when he kneeled and prayed in school logoed-attire while in view of students and parents. The panel also expressed that he used his position to press his particular views on impressionable and captive minds. Because his demonstrative speech fell within his typical job duties, he spoke as a public employee, and the district was allowed to order him not to speak in this manner, he could not show a likelihood of success on the merits of his First Amendment retaliation claim and was not entitled to a preliminary injunction (Kennedy v. Bremerton School District).


Reducing or discontinuing a NYSHIP participating employer's contributions towards a retired employee's health insurance premium


Reducing or discontinuing a NYSHIP participating employer's contributions towards a retired employee's health insurance premium
Weaver, et al, v Town of N. Castle, 2017 NY Slip Op 05960, Appellate Division, Second Department

On June 27, 2012 the Town Board of the Town of North Castle adopted a resolution establishing a "Compensation and Benefits Manual" [Manual]. The Manual provided that, effective July 1, 2012, the Town would not contribute towards the cost of health insurance benefits on behalf of current or former Board members enrolled in the Town's health insurance plan, the New York State Health Insurance Program [NYSHIP],* although such elected officials could continue their coverage in the NYSHIP by paying 100% of the total cost of the premium for their participation in NYSHIP.

Following the Town's informing the affected individuals of the increased premium rates they would be required to pay in order to continue their participation in NYSHIP, a number of such persons [Petitioners] initiated an Article 78 action challenging the Board's action, seeking a court order declaring the Board's resolution "null and void."

Supreme Court dismissed the Petitioners' complaint, affirmatively declaring that the Town Board's resolution "was not null and void," and, in effect, held that the Petitioners [1] did not have a vested contractual interest in retirement health insurance benefits, [2] that the doctrine of promissory estoppel did not bar the reduction of Town's contribution to the Petitioners' health insurance premiums and [3] the Board's resolution, "insofar as it provides that the Town of New Castle will not contribute toward retirement health insurance benefits of former members of the Town Board of the Town of New Castle who retired prior to July 1, 2012, does not violate Civil Service Law §167(2)."

The Petitioners appealed and the Appellate Division modified the Supreme Court's judgment "on the law," declaring that the resolution, insofar as it provided that the Town of New Castle "will not contribute toward retirement health insurance benefits for former members of the Town Board of the Town of New Castle who retired prior to July 1, 2012, violates Civil Service Law §167(2)."

The Appellate Division said that although Supreme Court properly determined that [1] the Board was entitled to reduce the Petitioner's retirement health insurance benefits granted by its October 13, 1983 resolution,* as "A municipal resolution is, in general, a unilateral action that is temporary in nature and, thus, does not create any vested contractual rights" and [2] the Town was not barred by the doctrine of promissory estoppel from reducing the appellants' retirement health insurance benefits,** Supreme Court erred in determining that the Town was not required to contribute any amount for the retirement health insurance benefits of former Board members who retired prior to July 1, 2012."

The court noted that Civil Service Law §167(2) provides, in relevant part, that participating employers, such as the Town, are required to contribute 50% of the cost of premiums for retired employees, and 35% of the cost of coverage for their dependents. The Appellate Division then ruled as Petitioners were individuals who has become enrolled in [NYSHIP] as an employee and whose coverage is being continued after his or her withdrawal from the active service within the meaning of 4 NYCRR 73.1[e], the Town may not reduce its contribution rates "below the legally mandated minimums set out in §167(2) of the Civil Service Law."

The matter was then remitted to Supreme Court for a determination as to damages for the amounts paid by the retired appellants "which were part of the legally mandated minimums and for the entry of an appropriate amended judgment thereafter."

* Civil Service Law §167(2), in pertinent part, provides that "Each participating employer shall be required to pay not less than fifty percentum of the cost of premium or subscription charges for the coverage of its employees and retired employees who are enrolled in the statewide only or the statewide and comparable supplementary health benefit plans established pursuant to this article. Such employer shall be required to pay not less than thirty-five percentum of the cost of premium or subscription charges for the coverage of dependents of such employees and retired employees. Such employer shall contribute toward the premium or subscription charges for the coverage of each employee or retired employee who is enrolled in an optional benefit plan and for the dependents of such employee or retired employee the same dollar amount which would be paid by such employer for the premium or subscription charges for the coverage of such employee or retired employee and his or her dependents if he or she were enrolled in the statewide health benefit plan, but not in excess of the premium or subscription charges for the coverage of such employee or retired employee and his or her dependents under such optional benefit plan. Such employer shall not be required to pay the cost of premium or subscription charges for the coverage of unpaid elected officials, or unpaid board members of a public authority, or their dependents, provided, however that no unpaid board member of a public authority shall be eligible to participate in such benefit plan until he or she has served in such position for at least six months. Subject to such regulations as the president may prescribe, any participating employer may elect to pay higher rates of contribution for the coverage of employees, retired employees and their dependents ...."

** The Town's 1983 resolution proved that it would pay "either 100% or 85% of the NYSHIP premium for health insurance depending on the amount of years of service set forth in current collective bargaining agreements for retirees."

*** The Appellate Division noted that to establish promissory estoppel, a party must prove a clear and unambiguous promise, reasonable and foreseeable reliance by the party to whom the promise is made, and an injury sustained in reliance on that promise.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:

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Subsequent court and administrative rulings, or changes to laws, rules and regulations may have modified or clarified or vacated or reversed the information and, or, decisions summarized in NYPPL. For example, New York State Department of Civil Service's Advisory Memorandum 24-08 reflects changes required as the result of certain amendments to §72 of the New York State Civil Service Law to take effect January 1, 2025 [See Chapter 306 of the Laws of 2024]. Advisory Memorandum 24-08 in PDF format is posted on the Internet at https://www.cs.ny.gov/ssd/pdf/AM24-08Combined.pdf. Accordingly, the information and case summaries should be Shepardized® or otherwise checked to make certain that the most recent information is being considered by the reader.
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NYPPL Blogger Harvey Randall served as Principal Attorney, New York State Department of Civil Service; Director of Personnel, SUNY Central Administration; Director of Research, Governor’s Office of Employee Relations; and Staff Judge Advocate General, New York Guard. Consistent with the Declaration of Principles jointly adopted by a Committee of the American Bar Association and a Committee of Publishers and Associations, the material posted to this blog is presented with the understanding that neither the publisher nor NYPPL and, or, its staff and contributors are providing legal advice to the reader and in the event legal or other expert assistance is needed, the reader is urged to seek such advice from a knowledgeable professional.
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