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May 23, 2024

New York State's Court of Appeals clarifies the operation of the rebuttable presumption set forth in the State's Workers' Compensation Law §21(1), which provides that when an injury arises in the course of a worker's employment it is presumed to arise out of that worker's employment

 

Matter of Timperio v Bronx-Lebanon Hosp.

2024 NY Slip Op 02723

Decided on May 16, 2024

Court of Appeals

Halligan

Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.

This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.



Decided on May 16, 2024


No. 46

[*1]Justin Timperio, Respondent,

v

Bronx-Lebanon Hospital et al., Appellants. Workers' Compensation Board, Appellant.


Sarah L. Rosenbluth, for appellant New York State Workers Compensation Board.

Caryn L. Lilling, for appellants Bronx-Lebanon Hospital et al.

Arnold N. Kriss, for respondent Justin Timperio.


HALLIGAN, J.

In this appeal, we clarify the operation of the rebuttable presumption set forth in Workers' Compensation Law § 21 (1), which provides that when an injury arises in the course of a worker's employment, it is presumed to arise out of that worker's employment and therefore is compensable, absent substantial evidence to the contrary. In cases involving assaults that occur at work, a lack of evidence as to the motivation for the assault does not rebut that presumption. Thus, the presumption applied and was unrebutted here, and the Appellate Division's contrary conclusion was error.

I.

On June 30, 2017, Henry Bello, a former employee of Bronx-Lebanon Hospital (BLH), entered the hospital wearing a doctor's white medical coat, under which he hid a loaded AR-15 rifle, ammunition magazines, and a juice container filled with gasoline. He proceeded to the 16th floor of the hospital, a non-public area, where petitioner Justin Timperio was working as a first-year resident. Bello opened fire, killing one doctor and wounding five members of the medical staff—including Timperio—before killing himself. Bello and Timperio were strangers prior to the shooting; they never worked at BLH at the same time and had no other prior contact.

BLH notified the Workers' Compensation Board (WCB) of Timperio's injuries in July 2017. The hospital subsequently requested an administrative decision from the WCB to establish a claim under the Workers' Compensation Law (WCL) and enter awards. While the matter was proceeding before a Workers' Compensation Law Judge (WCLJ), Timperio filed a negligence action in federal court against BLH and the store that sold Bello the rifle he used in the shooting. After that court rejected BLH's attempt to have the case dismissed, holding that Timperio's injuries were not compensable because "there [was] no evidence suggesting that the shooting originated in work-related differences" (see Timperio v Bronx-Lebanon Hosp. Ctr., 384 F Supp 3d 425, 431-433 [SD NY 2019]), it stayed the action pending resolution of this workers' compensation claim (Timperio v Bronx-Lebanon Hosp. Ctr., 2020 WL 8996683, *1 [SD NY, Mar. 9, 2020, No. 18 Civ. 1804 (PGG)]). In September 2020, a WCLJ determined that Timperio's injuries were compensable under the WCL [FN1]. Timperio appealed to the WCB, which affirmed the decision.

The Appellate Division reversed (203 AD3d 179, 184-185 [3d Dept 2022]). The court applied the correct standard that, to be compensable under the WCL, an injury must have arisen "out of and in the course of a [worker's] employment" and that under WCL § 21 (1), an injury that arose in the course of employment is presumed to have arisen out of employment as well (id. at 184, citing WCL § 10 [1] and Matter of Rosen v First Manhattan Bank, 84 NY2d 856, 857 [1994]). The court also acknowledged our holding that "[a]n award of compensation may be sustained even though the result of an assault, so long as there is any nexus, however slender, between the motivation for the assault and the employment" (id. at 185, quoting Matter of Seymour v Rivera Appliances Corp., 28 NY2d 406, 409 [1971]). The court, however, deemed "such nexus . . . lacking." It held that the lack of record evidence establishing any employment-related animus "was sufficient to rebut the presumption" in WCL § 21 (1) and concluded that the claim was therefore not compensable (id.). We granted leave to appeal (39 NY3d 910 [2023])[FN2]. Because the Appellate Division erred in its application of WCL § 21(1)'s presumption, we now reverse.

II.

Determinations by the WCB must be upheld where they are supported by substantial evidence in the record (see Matter of Zamora v New York Neurologic Assoc., 19 NY3d 186, 192-193 [2012]). Workers' Compensation Law § 21 (1) provides that "[i]n any proceeding for the enforcement of a claim for compensation under this chapter, it shall be presumed in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary . . . [t]hat the claim comes within the provision of this chapter."

We have previously addressed the operation of this presumption in several cases involving workplace assaults. Less than a decade after enactment of WCL § 21 (1), we considered the case of a "dairyman's chauffeur" who, while driving his employer's car and delivering cheese, was randomly stabbed by an "insane man" who "stabbed any one near him" (Katz v Kadans & Co., 232 NY 420, 421 [1922]). We concluded that because the chauffeur was "sent into the street on his [employer]'s business" and then injured from "exposure to the risks of the street," the injury "necessarily [arose] out of his employment" and therefore was compensable (id.). Decades later, we affirmed a compensation award to an employee assaulted by a man "he had never previously seen," because under the WCL § 21 (1) presumption, "[w]hen an injury is sustained in the course of employment it will be presumed, as a matter of law, that it did arise out [*2]of the employment" (Slade v Perkins, 42 AD2d 667, 668 [1973], affd 33 NY2d 988 [1974]). More recently, we reiterated the same principle in Matter of Rosen v First Manhattan Bank (84 NY2d 856, 857 [1994]).

As stated in WCL § 21 (1) and recognized by this Court, the presumption is rebuttable by "substantial evidence" establishing that it was not the workplace itself that exposed the employee to harm. But where the assault occurs in the course of employment and there is no evidence as to its motivation, the presumption is triggered and is not rebutted (see McKinney's Cons Laws of NY, Book 64, Workmen's Compensation Law § 21 at 143 [1922 ed] [explaining the presumption of WCL § 21 (1) is "sufficient in a close or evenly balanced case to turn the scale in favor of the employee. And where there is no substantial evidence to overcome the presumption an award will be made"]). Once it has been established that an employee was assaulted "in the course of" employment, the presumption—unless rebutted—obviates the need for an affirmative showing that the assault arose "out of" the employment.

The Appellate Division essentially inverted Seymour's "nexus" standard by requiring the Board to come forward with evidence of a nexus to employment. Instead, as we made clear in RosenSeymour stands for the principle that "an assault which arose in the course of employment is presumed to have arisen out of the employment, absent substantial evidence that the assault was motivated by purely personal animosity" (Matter of Rosen v First Manhattan Bank, 84 NY2d 856, 857 [1994], citing Seymour, 28 NY2d at 409; see also Seymour, 28 NY2d at 409 [presumption cannot be rebutted by the inference of personal animosity "in the absence of substantial evidence to support it"]). To the extent the Appellate Division has read Matter of Seymour to require an additional affirmative showing of a "nexus" with employment when there is a workplace assault, such a showing is not required.

This reading accords with the text of WCL § 21 (1) and the purpose of the WCL, which is to " 'protect[ ] work[ers] and their dependents from want in case of injury' on the job" (Johannesen v New York City Dept. of Hous. Preserv. & Dev., 84 NY2d 129, 134 [1994], quoting Post v Burger & Gohlke, 216 NY 544, 553 [1916]). To that end, the WCL establishes a "broad scheme of compensation" intended to ensure a "swift and sure source of benefits to injured employees" (Crosby v State of N.Y., Workers' Comp. Bd., 57 NY2d 305, 313 [1982]), including in circumstances where an employee might not be able to obtain relief through a common law tort action.

Here, it is undisputed that the assault occurred in the course of Mr. Timperio's employment, thereby triggering the WCL § 21 (1) presumption. It is also undisputed that the record includes no evidence of the motivation for the assault or any indication of a prior relationship between the assailant and the claimant; Bello and Timperio never worked together, did not know each other, and had no prior communication. The Appellate Division therefore erroneously disturbed the WCB's determination that the claim is compensable.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, with costs, and the decision of the Workers' Compensation Board reinstated.

Order reversed, with costs, and decision of the Workers' Compensation Board reinstated. Opinion by Judge Halligan. Chief Judge Wilson and Judges Rivera, Garcia, Singas, Cannataro and Troutman concur.

Decided May 16, 2024

Footnotes


Footnote 1: A different WCLJ had found Timperio's injuries compensable in an initial proceeding that neither Timperio nor his counsel attended. That decision was vacated due to Timperio's absence, and the September 2020 proceeding followed.


Footnote 2: Where, as here, an employer or its carrier has filed a Workers' Compensation Law claim on behalf of an employee, requested an administrative determination on the claim, and opposed claimant's arguments that no workers' compensation award should be made, the employer and its carrier are aggrieved by an Appellate Division order reversing an award in claimant's favor and dismissing the claim. To the extent Matter of Parks v Weaver (14 NY2d 546 [1964]) provides to the contrary, it should not be followed.


New York State's Annual Industrial Development Agencies report released by State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli

New York's local Industrial Development Agencies (IDAs) reported 4,320 active projects with a record high total value of $132 billion in 2022, an increase of $5 billion (3.9%), from 2021, according to State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli’s annual report.

“IDAs were created to help grow local economies, businesses and job markets,” DiNapoli said. “The tax breaks they provide businesses can impact local tax collections, however, and New Yorkers should be mindful about weighing the benefits these projects bring to their communities against their cost. My office reports the numbers on local IDAs to help increase their transparency and make them more accountable to taxpayers.”

While the number of active projects has remained relatively stable since 2012, reported project values have risen steadily. County IDAs were responsible for 61.8% of all active IDA projects in 2022, followed by towns (17.7%), cities (12.7%), New York City (7.2%), villages (0.5%) and city-town IDAs (0.2%).

DiNapoli’s report summarizes the most recent annual data, which is self-reported by IDAs through the Public Authorities Reporting Information System. The data is not independently verified by the State Comptroller’s Office. While most IDAs operate on a calendar-year basis, several, including the New York City IDA, do not.

DiNapoli found IDAs reported the following:

  • The 4,320 active IDA projects would create an estimated 213,887 jobs during their lifespan, with a median salary of $42,000. Another 224,234 existing jobs would be retained, with a median salary of $45,430. In addition, the projects are estimated to create 36,607 temporary construction jobs.
  • The number of net jobs gained (reflecting current jobs reported by projects minus initial jobs reported) was 204,147 as of 2022, an increase of 15.2% from 2021.
  • Total tax exemptions for IDA projects in 2022 amounted to nearly $2 billion, up $63 million, or 3.3%, over 2021. Property tax exemptions represented $1.7 billion, or 87.5% of total tax exemptions.
  • Almost $854 million was collected through payment in lieu of taxes (PILOT) agreements in 2022. Net tax exemptions (total tax exemptions minus PILOTs) totaled approximately $1.1 billion, an increase of 4.3% from 2021 and nearly double the $555 million in 2012.
  • On a regional basis, net tax exemptions were much higher downstate, with IDAs in New York City, Long Island and Mid-Hudson regions together reflecting 57.6% of the total. Per capita, the New York City IDA provided the lowest net tax exemptions ($26.58 per person) in 2022. The Capital District had the highest ($99.44 per person).
  • IDAs’ total revenues of $123 million in 2022 were down $9.3 million from 2021. Charges for services accounted for 53.8% of the reported revenues.
  • Total IDA expenses in 2022 were $76 million, down $3.5 million from 2021 (4.4%). The New York City IDA reported the highest expenses ($5.97 million), followed by Genesee County ($4.07 million) and Erie County ($3.86 million). Regionally, IDAs in the Finger Lakes region collectively reported the highest expenses ($12.5 million) while those in the Mohawk Valley had the lowest ($3 million).
  • IDAs reported 336 new projects with approval dates in 2021 or 2022, led regionally by the Finger Lakes (66 new projects), Western New York (50 new projects), and Mid-Hudson (47 new projects).
  • The largest new IDA project in 2022 by project value ($1.4 billion) was Westchester County IDA’s Regeneron Phase II (aka LOOP Road) project. The project is scheduled to end in 2037 and is projected to create 700 permanent jobs.
  • The number of clean energy projects increased 52.9% between 2021 and 2022, from 85 projects to 130 projects. Projects classified as clean energy saw the greatest percentage change in net tax exemptions per project, an increase of 57.7%.

DiNapoli’s office examines IDA costs and outcomes in several ways, including performing audits of the operations of individual IDAs, providing training to IDA officials on various topics, and encouraging improvements in IDA procedures and reporting.

Annual Report
Performance of Industrial Development Agencies in New York State

IDA Data by Region
Office of the New York State Comptroller - 2022 IDA Data by Region

For additional information contact Rebecca Dangoor, 212-383-1388.

###

Regulation permitting employees appointed under the ‘‘HELP’’ Program to take promotion examinations adopted

NOTICE OF ADOPTION Promotion Examinations I.D. No. CVS-07-24-00002-A Filing No. 395 Filing Date: 2024-05-06 Effective Date: 2024-05-22.

PURSUANT TO THE PROVISIONS OF THE State Administrative Procedure Act, NOTICE is hereby given of the following action: 

Action taken: Amendment of section 4.2(f) of Title 4 NYCRR. Statutory authority: Civil Service Law, section 6(1) Subject: Promotion examinations. Purpose: To permit employees appointed under the ‘‘HELP’’ Program to take promotion examinations.

Text or summary was published in the February 14, 2024 issue of the Register, I.D. No. CVS-07-24-00002-P.

Final rule as compared with last published rule: No changes.

Text of rule and any required statements and analyses may be obtained from: Jennifer Paul, NYS Department of Civil Service, Empire State Plaza, Agency Building 1, Albany, NY 12239, (518) 473-6598, email: commops@cs.ny.gov.

Assessment of Public Comment: The agency received no public comment.


 


New York State Governor Hochul announces confirmation of administration appointees by Senate

 

On May 22, 2024, New York State Governor Kathy Hochul announced the confirmations of two administration appointees by the State Senate. Walter T. Mosley has been confirmed as Secretary of State and Robert J. Rodriguez has been confirmed as President and Chief Executive Officer of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York.

 

As we work to make New York more affordable, more livable and safer, it's critical to have a Cabinet with the skills and experience to deliver on these policies policies,” Governor Hochul said. “Walter Moseley and Robert Rodriguez are talented public servants who understand State government, and I look forward to working with them on ways to improve the lives of all New Yorkers.”

 

Walter T. Mosley served in the New York State Assembly from 2013 to 2020, representing communities in central Brooklyn including the neighborhoods of Fort Greene, Clinton Hill, Prospect Heights and parts of Bedford Stuyvesant and Crown Heights. Mr. Mosley was a member of the Black, Puerto Rican, Hispanic & Asian Legislative Caucus (BPHA), the Hispanic Task Force, and the Jewish Caucus. He also served as co-chair of BPHA’s Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Task Force on Cannabis. In his capacity as a BPHA Caucus member, Mr. Mosley served as Second Vice-chair and as the Budget Chair.

 

Mr. Mosley has had a long history of public service, serving as a Legislative Analyst and Oversight Investigator for the New York City Council, Senior Consultant to the New York State Assembly, and Senior Advisor to the Deputy Speaker of the New York State Assembly prior to becoming a member of the New York Legislature in 2013.

 

Mr. Mosley received a bachelor’s degree from Pennsylvania State University and received a law degree from Howard University. Mr. Mosley currently lives in the Capital Region.

 

Robert J. Rodriguez served as Secretary of State for more than two years, where he oversaw the Department of State and advanced initiatives to provide a better quality of life and expand opportunities for all New Yorkers. Prior to joining the administration, Mr. Rodriguez served as a member of the New York State Assembly for 11 years, representing Assembly District 68, where he focused on protecting and creating affordable housing, bringing good jobs into the community and ensuring children received a quality education. He served as Co-Chair of the Legislative Task Force on Demographic Research and Reapportionment, founding Chair of the Assembly sub-committee on Infrastructure and Member of the Committees on Ways and Means, Housing, Labor, Banking, Corporations and Authorities and Mental Health.

 

Mr. Rodriguez also held private sector roles as a Director at Public Financial Management, Vice-President at A.C. Advisory, Inc. and various management and operations roles at Bloomberg LP. In addition, he served on a number of volunteer boards including as Chairman of Manhattan Community Board 11 and as a member of the Board of Directors of the Upper Manhattan Empowerment Zone.

 

Mr. Rodriguez is a graduate of Yale University, where he received a bachelor’s degree in history and political science, and New York University Stern Business School where he received an MBA in Finance. He is also an emerging leader of the New America Alliance, and a Council for Urban Professionals (CUP) Fellow.

 

###

 

May 22, 2024

The United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, held the challenged arbitration award unambiguously granted disgorgement of certain interest and fees, but concluded that the arbitrator's award of profits is too ambiguous to enforce and must be remanded to the arbitrator for clarification

US Second Circuit Court of Appeals 

22-1783, August Term, 2023 Argued: October 25, 2023 

Decided: May 21, 2024 Docket No. 22-1783

 

THE TRUSTEES OF THE NEW YORK STATE NURSES ASSOCIATION PENSION PLAN, Petitioner-Appellee,

—v.—

WHITE OAK GLOBAL ADVISORS, LLC, Respondent-Appellant.

 

Before: LYNCH and PARK, Circuit Judges, and CLARKE, District Judge.

Respondent-Appellant White Oak Global Advisors, LLC appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Kaplan, J.), entered in favor of Petitioner-Appellee Trustees of the New York State Nurses Association Pension Plan on their petition to confirm an arbitral award between the parties.

The award, resolving several ERISA fiduciary duty claims brought by the Trustees against White Oak, was rendered pursuant to an arbitration clause contained in the investment management agreement by which White Oak assumed its ERISA fiduciary relationship to the pension plan.

The Clerk of Court is respectfully directed to amend the caption.

On appeal, White Oak argues that the district court lacked jurisdiction to confirm the award after the Supreme Court’s decision in Badgerow, which held that federal courts cannot premise jurisdiction over a Federal Arbitration Act §§ 9-11 petition based on whether jurisdiction would have existed over the underlying dispute.

White Oak further contends that, even if jurisdiction existed, the court erroneously interpreted the award when it granted the Trustees preaward interest on the disgorgement of the Plan’s assets, return of the “Day One” fees collected by White Oak, and White Oak’s “profits,” as the award did not grant or was ambiguous regarding such relief. Finally, White Oak asserts that the district court abused its discretion in ordering, under its inherent authority, payment of the Trustees’ attorneys’ fees and costs for the entirety of the confirmation proceeding.

We conclude that the Trustees’ petition is cognizable under ERISA §502(a)(3), as the Trustees are a party authorized by that provision to sue; to enforce a right – the arbitration agreement – created by a plan document or term; and to request equitable relief against a co-fiduciary to the plan. Such suits, brought by a fiduciary on behalf of the beneficiaries to enforce a plan document or term against a co-fiduciary, seek relief traditionally equitable in nature. We therefore agree with the district court that it possessed jurisdiction to confirm the arbitral award.

Turning to the merits, we find that the award unambiguously granted disgorgement of prejudgment interest and the “Day One” fees, but that the award of profits is too ambiguous to enforce and must be remanded to the arbitrator for clarification.

Finally, we agree that the district court failed to make sufficiently specific findings tailored to White Oak’s conduct so as to justify the award of attorneys’ fees and costs for the entirety of the confirmation proceeding.

Accordingly, we AFFIRM the order confirming the arbitral award insofar as it grants disgorgement of pre-award interest and the “Day One” fees; VACATE and REMAND insofar as the court confirmed the disgorgement of “profits,” with instructions to the district court to remand this item of relief to the arbitrator for a determination of the existence and extent of profits; and VACATE and REMAND the order granting the Trustees their attorneys’ fees and costs on the action to confirm the arbitral award for the district court to make more specific findings justifying its sanction.

Judge Jessica G. L. Clarke, of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation.

Click HERE to access the text of the Second Circuit 90 page opinion in this matter.


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