ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IS NOT USED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, IN THE SUMMARIES OF JUDICIAL AND QUASI-JUDICIAL DECISIONS PREPARED BY NYPPL

July 12, 2010

Sustaining an injury driving to work in agency vehicle not a performance of duties injury for the purposes of eligibility for GML §207-c benefits

Sustaining an injury driving to work in agency vehicle not a performance of duties injury for the purposes of eligibility for GML §207-c benefits
Matter of Cady v County of Oneida, Supreme Court, Oneida County, 14 Misc3d 1234(A), Affirmed 38 AD3d 1320

David Cady, a Deputy/Investigator for the Oneida County's Sheriff's Department, was assigned an unmarked Sheriff's vehicle. He was authorized to keep the vehicle at his residence and use it to transport himself to and from his work site. Cady was involved in an automobile accident while he was driving to work.* The accident occurred about 10 minutes before Cady was scheduled to be at work.

Cady was injured in the accident and applied for and received worker's compensation benefits. He also applied for disability benefits pursuant to §207-c of the General Municipal Law. His application for §207-c benefits was denied by the County.

The reason advanced by the County: GML §207-c provides benefits for injuries to a deputy sheriff who has been injured in the performance of his duties and that at the time of the accident Cady had not commenced his work duty shift and therefore was not in the performance of his duties.

Cady appealed. The hearing officer concluded that Cady was not entitled to GML §207-c benefits because he was not injured in the performance of his duties. The hearing officer’s determination was adopted by the County. Cady sued, seeking a court order overturning the County’s determination.

Cady argued that he was in the performance of his duties because he is "on call" twenty-four hours a day and could be dispatched to emergencies or to investigate criminal acts. In addition, he claimed, he was directed to be observant for accidents and criminal activity while en route to work using the assigned car. Cady also contended the he was assigned a "take-home" vehicle for the Department's benefit.

The County claimed its conclusion that “Cady was not in the performance of his duties at the time the accident occurred” was neither irrational nor an abuse of discretion. It said that Cady conceded that during his drive to work on the day of the accident he was not dispatched to conduct any investigation nor did he observe any criminal activity.

Supreme Court Judge Grow ruled that the County’s determination that Cady does not qualify for GML §207-c benefits is not irrational, not based on an error of law, not arbitrary, capricious, nor an abuse of discretion, and confirmed the Hearing Officer's determination.

* According to the decision, Cady was not at fault.

The decision is posted on the Internet at: http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/3dseries/2006/2006_52585.htm

Expanding exemptions from FOIL to protect "technology assets used to maintain public information"

Expanding exemptions from FOIL to protect "technology assets used to maintain public information"
Chapter 154 of the Law of 2010

The Governor has signed into law a bill amending the State’s Freedom of Information Law [Public Officers Law §87]. The bill, which amends Paragraph (i) of subdivision 2 of Section 87* is intended to providing agencies with authority to withhold disclosing of certain records when responding to FOIL requests.

Subdivision 2.1. now reads: (i) if disclosed, would jeopardize [an agency's] the capacity of an agency or an entity that has shared information with an agency to guarantee the security of its information technology assets, such assets encompassing both electronic information systems and infrastructures”

The amendment was proposed by the State’s Office of Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructure and takes effect immediately.

* Deleted language in [brackets]; new language in italics.

July 09, 2010

Appeal to the Commissioner of Education dismissed for failure to name a necessary party

Appeal to the Commissioner of Education dismissed for failure to name a necessary party
Appeal of J.S. from action of the Board of Education of the Jordan-Elbridge Central School District and Superintendent Marilyn Dominick regarding a transfer.
Decision No. 16,077

J.S. served as the district’s elementary school principal of the Jordan-Elbridge Central School District and was granted tenure in the tenure area of “administrator.”

On June 8, 2009, the board authorized an investigation of complaints concerning the district’s elementary school and on the following day J.S. was transferred to the position of Special Project Administrator.

Contending that the transfer was made for disciplinary reasons in violation of the due process rights afforded her under Education Law §3020-a, J.S. asked the Commissioner to direct that the district to reinstate her as Elementary School Principal and that all references to the transfer be expunged from district records.

The Commissioner dismissed the appeal “for failure to join a necessary party.” Commenting that “A party whose rights would be adversely affected by a determination of an appeal in favor of a petitioner is a necessary party and must be joined as such.

The Commissioner explained that the remedy sought by J.S. is “reinstatement to her previous position as Elementary School Principal and that position is currently held by Elizabeth Primo, the interim Elementary School Principal, Primo’s rights would be adversely affected by a determination in [J.S.’s] favor.” Thus Primo is a necessary party and the appeal must be dismissed because of the failure of J.S. to name, and serve her, in the appeal.

In addition, the Commissioner stated that the appeal “must also be dismissed as untimely.” An appeal to the Commissioner must be commenced within 30 days from the making of the decision or the performance of the act complained of, "unless any delay is excused by the Commissioner for good cause shown." The record indicated that J.S was reassigned to the Special Project Administrator position on June 9, 2009 but her petition was not served until October 13, 2009.

Finally, the Commissioner said that J.S.’s appeal, absent the above noted procedural defects, would have been dismissed on the merits.

In an appeal to the Commissioner, the petitioner has the burden of demonstrating a clear legal right to the relief requested and the burden of establishing the facts upon which he or she seeks relief.

The Commissioner said that a board of education has "broad discretion in assigning members of its professional staff, so long as the employee’s tenure rights are not infringed upon." In this instance, said the Commissioner, notwithstanding J.S.’s claim that she was reassigned for disciplinary reasons and she was not accorded the due process protections of Education Law §3020-a, he did not find that J.S. had adequately demonstrate that her transfer was for disciplinary reasons and J.S. did not offered any evidence that disciplinary action was being contemplated prior to the reassignment.

The decision is posted on the Internet at: http://www.counsel.nysed.gov/Decisions/volume49/d16077.htm

Supplements to an official’s salary

Supplements to an official’s salary
Informal Opinions of the Attorney General, 98-16

A county Industrial Development Agency is authorized to issue bonds and grant tax exemptions as a means of providing financial assistance to business projects approved by the Agency. The employment contract between the Niagara County Industrial Development Agency [NCIDA] and its executive director provided that the director was to be paid an annual salary of $69,000 and, in addition, “would receive 1.5% of the agency fees” collected by NCIDA for “bond projects.”

There may have been some question concerning paying the director additional compensation based on a percentage of the fees received by NCIDA as the contract also provided that “in the event the additional payment was held unenforceable or in conflict with State Legislation, a minimum additional payment of $3,000 per year would be paid ... in place of the percentage payment.”

When asked if either of these provisions violated State Law, the Attorney General advised the Niagara County Attorney’s office that in his view, both provisions constituted violations of Section 858-a(1) of the General Municipal Law. The Attorney General first noted that the granting of the percentage of the agency fee collected by the Agency was “contingent upon the granting of financial assistance,” and thus violated the statute. He then observed that the alternative formula for supplementing the director’s salary -- the additional payment of $3,000 per year -- was unlawful for the same reason. The Attorney General viewed the supplement as being contingent on NCIDA’s collecting fees for its financial assistance, commenting that “[p]resumably, if [such payment] was unrelated to financial assistance to clients of [NCIDA], it would be a fixed amount that is part of the base salary of the executive director.”

The County Attorney’s office also wanted to know what NCIDA should consider doing if the Attorney General decided that its arrangement with its executive director violated the General Municipal Law. The Attorney General said that “contract provisions that are contrary to statutory requirements intended to protect the public and prevent fraud are void and unenforceable [and] [t]herefore the unlawful payments may be recoverable.”

Workers’ compensation leave pursuant to Civil Service Law Section 71

Workers’ compensation leave pursuant to Civil Service Law Section 71
Bryant v City of New York, App. Div., 3rd Dept, 252 A.D.2d 777, Motion for leave to appeal denied, 92 N.Y.2d 813

Section 71 of the Civil Service Law, commonly referred to as “workers’ compensation leave,” requires a public employer to give an employee who is injured on the job and as a result is unable to perform his or her duties a leave of absence for at least one year unless he or she is permanently disabled. The standard applied: the employee’s disability must result from an occupational injury or disease as defined in the Workers’ Compensation Law [WCL].

Many Taylor Law agreements provided for workers’ compensation leave, incorporating by reference the provisions of Section 71 of the Civil Service Law. However, not every injury or disease suffered at work that prevents an individual from performing the duties of the position is an “occupational injury or disease” within the meaning of WCL. As the Court of Appeals held in Mack v Rockland County, 71 NY2d 1008, for the purposes of determining eligibility for workers’ compensation benefits, “an occupational disease derives from the very nature of the employment, not a specific condition peculiar to the employee’s place of work.”

The Bryant case illustrates the fact that not every disease or injury arising in the work place is an occupational injury or disease for the purposes of receiving workers’ compensation benefits and thus such a claim does not automatically trigger eligibility for workers’ compensation leave.

Meridie Bryant, a word processor employed by the City of New York, applied for workers’ compensation benefits claiming that neck, shoulder and back ailments she suffered were caused by the physical layout of her work site and the chair in which she sat while at work. The Workers’ Compensation Board rejected her application on the grounds that she had not suffered an occupational injury or disease within the meaning of the Workers’ Compensation Law.

Byrant’s appeal from the Board’s ruling was rejected by the Appellate Division.

The court, citing the Court of Appeals’ decision in Mack, said that in order to be eligible for workers’ compensation benefits, the applicant “was required to demonstrate a recognizable link between the disease from which [he or] she allegedly suffers and some distinctive feature of [his or] her employment.”

The Appellate Division decided that Byrant’s condition related to her particular work area and not the “very nature of her employment.” Accordingly, the court upheld the Board’s determination rejecting Byrant’s workers’ compensation claim and dismissed her appeal.

The practical effect of this for the purposes of Section 71, however, is not as drastic as it might appear. Section 71 leave is provided as a leave without pay, although the employee may be continued on the payroll using his or her leave credits in order to continue to be paid.

If the individual viewed as being on workers’ compensation leave by the employer is later found not to have suffered an occupational injury or disease as was the situation in Bryant’s case, all that need be done is to amend the employee’s personnel record to show that he or she is on Section 72, rather than Section 71 leave.

Section 72 leave is available to an employee who is unable to perform his or her duties because of a disability other than a disability resulting from an occupational injury or disease as defined in WCL. Again employees are entitled to such a leave of absence without pay as a matter of law. As is the case in a Section 71 situation, “an employee on such leave of absence shall be entitled to draw all accumulated, unused sick leave, vacation, overtime and other time allowances standing to his [or her] credit” while on such leave.

There is, however, one significant difference between Section 71 leave and Section 72 leave. The one-year leave period allowed under Section 71 is determined on the basis of the individual’s cumulative absence while the minimum leave period under Section 72 is based on the employee’s consecutive absence for one year.

In other words, under Section 72, the employee may be terminated pursuant to Section 73 of the Civil Service Law if he or she has been absent from work for an uninterrupted period of at least one year. On the other hand, an employee absent on Section 71 leave may be terminate after he or she has been absent for a cumulative total of at least one year, even if such absences are intermittent whereby the employee returns to work and then goes on Section 71 leave again because of the same injury or disease.

It should be remembered that under both Section 71 and Section 72, separating an employee from service after the employee has been absent for the minimum period mandated for such leave is discretionary and the appointing authority is not required to terminate the employee.

July 08, 2010

In an administrative disciplinary hearing, conflicting testimony merely "raised issues of credibility" for the hearing officer to resolve

In an administrative disciplinary hearing, conflicting testimony merely "raised issues of credibility" for the hearing officer to resolve
Matter of Weymer v New York State Div. of State Police, 2010 NY Slip Op 05779, Appellate Division, Second Department

Harry J. Corbitt, the Superintendent of the New York State Division of State Police, adopting the findings of a hearing board made that Craig J. Weymer “improperly impounded a motor vehicle and failed to act in a courteous, dignified, and businesslike manner in violation of New York State Police Rules and Regulations.”

The Superintendent also adopted the hearing boards finding that Weymer “acted in a manner tending to bring discredit upon the New York State Division of State Police in violation of the New York State Police Rules and Regulations.”

The penalty imposed: Weymer was formally censured and suspended for one day without pay.

The Appellate Division rejected Weymer’s appeal, holding that the determination was supported by substantial evidence.” Further, said the court, although there were a few instances of conflicting testimony, this merely "raised issues of credibility for the Hearing [Board] to resolve," citing Leong v Safir, 259 AD2d 751.

As to Weymer’s challenge to the penalty imposed, the Appellate Division concluded that the penalty imposed was not "so disproportionate to the offenses as to be shocking to one's sense of fairness." Accordingly, it did not constitute an abuse of discretion as a matter of law.

The decision is posted on the Internet at: http://www.courts.state.ny.us/reporter/3dseries/2010/2010_05779.htm

A “conclusory affidavit” by the custodian of the records that are the target of a FOIL request insufficient to trigger a FOIL “statutory exception”

A “conclusory affidavit” by the custodian of the records that are the target of a FOIL request insufficient to trigger a FOIL “statutory exception”
Matter of Capital Newspapers Div. of the Hearst Corp. v City of Albany, 2010 NY Slip Op 05704, Decided on July 1, 2010, Court of Appeals

The Court of Appeals held that the City of Albany failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that the records sought by Capital Newspapers pursuant to a FOIL request were "personnel records "or police officers within the meaning of Civil Rights Law §50-a.

The court found that the police chief’s “conclusory affidavit” did not establish that the documents were "used to evaluate performance toward continued employment or promotion," as required by that statute.

Accordingly, said the court, the unredacted gun tags do not fall squarely within a statutory exemption and are subject to disclosure under the Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) (see Public Officers Law § 87 [2]).

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.courts.state.ny.us/reporter/3dseries/2010/2010_05704.htm

Nonmembers of an employee organization required to pay agency shop fees are entitled to a refund of such fees used for union organizing activities

Nonmembers of an employee organization required to pay agency shop fees are entitled to a refund of such fees used for union organizing activities
David H. Scheffer, et al, v The Civil Service Employees Association, Local 828; Civil Service Employees Association; AFSCME, Local 1000, USCA, 2nd Circuit, Docket No. 07-3683-cv, Decided: June 28, 2010

In considering an appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York dismissing claims brought by public-sector employees who, as nonmembers of CSEA,* the union that represents them for collective-bargaining purposes, challenging the organizing fees assessed by the union, the Circuit Court of Appeals concluded that “although the union’s fee disclosure procedures met the relevant constitutional standards, charging these nonmembers “their proportionate share of the costs associated with some of the union’s organizing activities,” violates their First Amendment rights.

The Circuit Court of Appeals also noted that Civil Service Law §208(3)(a) provides that the union must “refund to any employee demanding the return any part of an agency shop fee deduction which represents the employee’s pro rata share of expenditures by the organization in aid of activities or causes of a political or ideological nature only incidentally related to terms and conditions of employment.”

*
The decision notes that approximately nine percent of the employees represented by CSEA [approximately 18,700 employees statewide] are not members of the union but who nonetheless are obligated to pay agency shop fees to CSEA.

The decision is posted on the Internet at:
http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/542c6566-bb30-452f-9aec-d6b9856a5341/11/doc/07-3683-cv_opn.pdf#xml=http://www.ca2.uscourts.gov/decisions/isysquery/542c6566-bb30-452f-9aec-d6b9856a5341/11/hilite/

Employment Law Daily recaps of the labor and employment decisions handed down by the US Supreme Court

Employment Law Daily recaps of the labor and employment decisions handed down by the US Supreme Court during its October 2009 term, as well as the non-employment rulings that promise to have a significant impact on labor and employment law
Source: CCH Workday at http://cch-workday.blogspot.com/ Reproduced with permission. Copyright© CCH 2010, All rights reserved. [Click on citation to access the opinion.]


Skilling v United States (Dkt No 08-1394). The High Court narrowed the scope of the federal criminal statute for “honest services” fraud, vacating the conviction of former Enron CEO Jeff Skilling and instructing that such indictments must be supported by evidence that the defendant had solicited or accepted bribes or kickbacks. The Court rejected the government’s construction of the statute, which would broadly proscribe the “taking of official action by the employee that furthers his own undisclosed financial interests while purporting to act in the interests of those to whom he owes a fiduciary duty.” Skilling is a welcome ruling for attorneys representing high-level corporate executives in criminal matters (June 24, 2010).


Granite Rock v Int’l B’hood of Teamsters (Dkt No 08-1214). In a 7-2 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that a dispute between Granite Rock and the Teamsters union over the ratification date of a bargaining agreement was a matter for a federal court, not an arbitrator, to decide. A court may apply the presumption of arbitrability only where a validly formed and enforceable arbitration agreement is ambiguous as to whether it covers the dispute at hand, and then may order arbitration only where the presumption of arbitrability is not rebutted, reasoned the Court. Here, whether or not the agreement was validly ratified went to the very existence of the agreement to arbitrate. However, the unanimous Court concluded that the employer’s tortious interference claim against the Teamsters was not cognizable under Section 301 of the LMRA (June 24, 2010).


Rent-A-Center, West, Inc v Jackson (Dkt No 09-497). The Supreme Court held in a 5-4 decision that under the Federal Arbitration Act, where parties to an arbitration agreement include a provision that delegates to the arbitrator the gateway question of enforceability of the agreement, if a party specifically challenges the enforceability of the particular agreement, a district court will consider the challenge, but if a party challenges the enforceability of the agreement as a whole, the arbitrator will consider the challenge (June 21, 2010).


City of Ontario v Quon (Dkt No 08-1332). Even assuming that a SWAT officer had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the text messages he sent from his work pager, the city of Ontario, California, and its police department and chief did not violate the officer’s Fourth Amendment rights by obtaining and reviewing transcripts of his text messages because the search was reasonable, the US Supreme Court held in a unanimous judgment. The Court did not resolve the officer’s privacy expectation question, however (June 17, 2010).


New Process Steel, LP v NLRB (Dkt No 08-1457). The National Labor Relations Board lacked the statutory authority to delegate its full powers to a two-member quorum, the Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 decision, because under Section 3(b) of the National Labor Relations Act, a delegee group must have three members in order to exercise the delegated authority of the Board. The Court’s decision could potentially invalidate almost 600 cases decided by the two-member panel from December 31, 2007 until March 27, 2010 (June 17, 2010). In response to the Court’s decision, the NLRB announced July 1 that it will review 96 cases pending in the courts (six at the Supreme Court and 90 in various Courts of Appeals) that had been issued by the two-member Board; the Board decided nearly 600 decisions while operating with only two members. Each of the remanded cases will be considered by a three-member panel of the Board that will include Chairman Wilma Liebman and Board Member Peter Schaumber (who made up the two-member panel that initially ruled on each case). Consistent with Board practice, the two members not selected to preside over a particular case may nonetheless elect to participate in the case. It is unclear at this time how many of the two-member Board rulings not already challenged in the appellate courts can or will be contested and how many may now be moot.


Hardt v Reliance Standard Life Ins Co (Dkt No 09-448). An employee need not be a “prevailing party” to be eligible for an attorney’s fees award under ERISA’s fee-shifting provision (§1132(g)(1)), held the Supreme Court in a unanimous decision, finding that courts may award fees and costs to a fee claimant so long as he or she has achieved “some degree of success on the merits” (May 24, 2010).


Lewis v City of Chicago (Dkt No 08-974). An employee who does not file a timely EEOC charge challenging the adoption of a practice still may assert a Title VII disparate impact claim in a timely EEOC charge challenging the employer’s later application of that practice as long as the employee alleges each of the elements of a disparate impact claim, the Supreme Court ruled in a unanimous opinion (May 24, 2010).


Stolt-Nielsen S.A. v AnimalFeeds Int’l Corp (Dkt No 08-1198). In a commercial arbitration case that has implications for class-wide arbitration of employment disputes, the US Supreme Court ruled in a 5-3 decision that imposing class arbitration on parties that have not agreed to authorize class arbitration is inconsistent with the Federal Arbitration Act (April 27, 2010).


Perdue v Kenny A (Dkt No 08-970). An attorney’s superior performance can result in enhanced attorney’s fees but only in extraordinary circumstances, held the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision; the Court affirmed its position that attorney’s fees based on a lodestar calculation, under federal fee-shifting statutes, can be enhanced in certain situations. The lodestar calculation is used to award attorney’s fees and is based on reasonable hours worked and a reasonable hourly rate. The Court’s decision has broad implications for the award of fee enhancements under more than 100 federal laws, including fees in employment discrimination and wage-hour cases (April 21, 2010).


Conkright v Frommert (Dkt No 08-810). In a 5-3 decision, the Supreme Court held that where Xerox’s pension plan provisions gave the plan administrator the power to construe disputed terms, a federal district court should have deferred to the administrator’s reasonable interpretation of the disputed provisions (April 21, 2010).


Graham County Soil and Water Conservation Dist v US ex rel Wilson (Dkt No 08-304). An internal audit and a state agency report were “public disclosures” of wrongdoing under the False Claims Act’s public disclosure bar, which prohibits individual qui tam actions if the alleged fraud has already been disclosed by certain administrative reports, audits or investigations, the Supreme Court held, overruling the Fourth Circuit’s holding that only federal administrative reports may trigger the FCA’s public disclosure bar. The ruling ultimately will have little traction: the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act included whistleblower provisions that beefed up the FCA clause at issue. Because the amendment was not retroactive, however, it could not save the employee whistleblower here (March 30, 2010).


Hertz Corp v Friend (Dkt No 08-1107). A corporation’s principal place of business is the place where its officers direct, control, and coordinate its activities, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled, adopting a “nerve center” test for determining corporate citizenship and rejecting a “plurality of business activities” approach for analyzing whether diversity jurisdiction exists (February 23, 2010).


Citizens United v Federal Election Comm’n (Dkt No 08-205). The Supreme Court struck down a federal campaign finance reform law that restricted corporate spending on election campaigns. The constitutionally impermissible provision had applied to labor unions as well, although union spending was not directly at issue in this case. While the decision did not expressly lift the campaign spending curb for unions, Court observers have suggested that it did so by implication (January 21, 2010).


Mohawk Industries, Inc v Carpenter (Dkt No 08-678) Resolving a circuit split, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled that a discovery order requiring Mohawk Industries to compel information related to a shift supervisor’s interview with its outside counsel during an internal investigation into a separate RICO class action, as well as information related to the company’s later decision to fire him, did not qualify for immediate appeal by the company until a final judgment had been entered in the underlying action. Mohawk was the first opinion issued in the High Court’s new term and it was also the first opinion written by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor (December 8, 2010).


Union Pacific RR. Co v Locomotive Eng’rs and Trainmen Gen Comm of Adjustment, Central Region (Dkt No 08-604). The National Railroad Adjustment Board erred when it dismissed five employee grievances for lack of jurisdiction because the union did not submit evidence of prearbitration union-employer “conferencing” as required by the Railway Labor Act, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled; the conference requirement was not jurisdictional but merely a “procedural rule,” and the Board erred in presuming it had the authority to declare such a rule to be a jurisdictional requirement. Neither the RLA nor its procedural rules “could plausibly be read to require, as a prerequisite to the NRAB’s exercise of jurisdiction, submission of proof of conferencing,” wrote the Court. Thus, the NRAB erred in refusing to hear the grievances “on the false premise that it lacked power to hear them.” (December 8, 2010).

Failing to report to work or to provide medical documents as requested supports the conclusion that the employee has abandonment the position

Failing to report to work or to provide medical documents as requested supports the conclusion that the employee has abandonment the position
McKnight v NYS Dormitory Auth., App. Div., 267 A.D.2d 708, Motion for leave to appeal denied, 94 N.Y.2d 762

Lucille M. McKnight, a New York State Dormitory Authority [SDA] employee, stopped coming to work. From time to time “she presented belated, back-dated, sketchy notes and letters from health care providers that consistently evaded SDA’s request for information” concerning her ability to work.

SDA told McKnight that either she return to work or present medical documentation that she was totally unable to perform her duties. SDA also offered to provide a “reasonable accommodation” that would allow her to resume work. Ultimately SDA wrote McKnight that if she did not return to work by January 13, 1997, or provide satisfactory medical evidence of her inability to do so, it would deem her to have abandoned her position. When McKnight failed to report as directed, SDA terminated her.

McKnight sued, complaining that SDA terminated her in bad faith and that it had denied her sick leave at half-pay after she had exhausted all of her leave credits on December 2, 1996. She also claimed that she was entitled to 12 weeks of leave under the Family Medical Leave Act [FMLA] before she could be lawfully terminated and that she had not received proper notice concerning her eligibility for FMLA leave.

Justice Harold J. Hughes ruled that, under the circumstances, SDA’s ultimatum was appropriate. He decided that McKnight had abandoned her position by failing to either report to work or provide satisfactory medical documents supporting her continued absence.

According to the ruling, McKnight’s failure complies with this directive “could serve as a legitimate basis” for SDA’s conclusion that McKnight had abandoned her position “notwithstanding [McKnight’s] continued interest in her job.”

The Appellate Division agreed and dismissed McKnight’s appeal.

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New York Public Personnel Law Blog Editor 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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