3 Misc. 3d 830 | New York Court of Claims | 2004
OPINION OF THE COURT
The defendant seeks dismissal of the claim as being untimely-served and filed. The claim sounds in bailment relating to the alleged loss of personal property by an inmate in a correctional facility and is governed by Court of Claims Act § 10 (9).
A brief chronology is helpful. The claim alleges that claimant became aware of the alleged loss of his personal property and filed an inmate claim form dated October 6, 2002, and then amended his administrative claim on October 16, 2002 (exhibit A appended to the claim). A notice of intention to file a claim was served upon the defendant on January 6, 2003. On January 21, 2003, claimant’s institutional claim was denied (exhibit C appended to the claim). Claimant appealed, and, by memorandum dated March 14, 2003 (exhibit N appended to the claim), his appeal was denied, thus exhausting his administrative remedies.
Pursuant to section 10 (9), a claim based upon an alleged loss of personal property by an inmate must be served and filed within 120 days after exhaustion of the administrative remedy. Section 10 (9) makes no provision for serving a notice of intention and thus may not be relied upon to extend the time within which a claim must be filed and served (Gloster v State of New York, Ct Cl, June 5, 2002, McNamara, J., No. 2002-011-550, Claim No. 103662, Motion No. M-64877).
The defendant argues that the claim accrued on March 14, 2003, the date of the denial of claimant’s last administrative remedy (issuance date), and since it was served and filed on July 23, 2003, more than 120 days after exhaustion of the administrative remedy, it is untimely. Claimant urges a different accrual date, March 25, 2003, the date he received notice of the appeal determination (notification date), and if measured from that date, the claim is timely.
Claimant does present that very argument, and, of course, it matters. If measured from the notification date, the claim is timely, and defendant’s motion to dismiss would be denied. Consequently, a determination of which date constitutes exhaustion is dispositive.
The discordant opinions regarding which date starts the 120-day clock needs harmony. There does ¡not appear to be any discernible legislative guidance on this question. One may speculate that the Court of Claims Act’s 120-day period is analogous to proceedings under CPLR article 78 since, unlike any other provision in the Court of Claims Act, it is triggered by the exhaustion of administrative remedies. In article 78 proceedings, time is measured “within four months after the . . . determination to be reviewed becomes ‘final and binding upon the petitioner’ (CPLR 217 [1]; New York State Assn. of Counties v Axelrod, 78 NY2d 158, 165) . . . when the petitioner seeking review has been aggrieved by it” (Matter of Yarbough v Franco, 95 NY2d 342, 346 [2000]). Before one embraces this analogy, in enacting section 10 (9), the Legislature did not select the four-month period familiar to practitioners in article 78 proceedings, but specified a more distinctive 120-day period. Since the Legislature intentionally selected a unique time period to apply section 10 (9), I am disinclined to analogize judicial interpretations of timeliness in article 78 proceedings.
One might infer that, because the service and filing periods for all other torts under the Court of Claims Act are measured by the shorter 90-day period from accrual of the causes of action (§ 10 [2], [3], [3-a], [3-b]; also see § 11), the Legislature provided inmates with an extra 30 days to allow for any delay between the issue date of the superintendent’s denial and the notification date.
The Legislature’s utilization of the specific measurement of 120 days, rather than the more vague four-month period, and
For the sake of clarity, and for the specificity that the date of issuance provides, I find that the 120-day period should be measured from the date of the denial of the administrative appeal, not from the date of notification or the date of mailing. Section 10 (9) already provides an inmate a greater period in which to act than any other tort, and, in the absence of legislative guidance to the contrary, I can divine no reason to extend it even further.
Inasmuch as the claim was untimely served and filed, the motion is granted and the claim is dismissed.
In response to the motion, claimant makes a cross motion for permission to file a late claim pursuant to Court of Claims Act § 10 (6).
Claimant correctly notes that this action is not barred under the provisions of CPLR article 2, and properly appends a proposed claim. In reviewing the merits of the motion, claimant’s excuse for failing to timely serve and file this claim in essence disputes the actual date of the exhaustion of his
Accordingly, after balancing the statutory factors and reviewing the proposed claim, the cross motion is granted and claimant may serve and file his proposed late claim, as required by the Court of Claims Act and Rules, within 45 days of service of a file-stamped copy of this order.
. Decisions and selected orders of the Court of Claims are available on the Internet at www.nyscourtofclaims.state.ny.us.
. The defendant notes another variant, using the date of mailing of the adverse ruling (Matter of Carter v State of New York, 95 NY2d 267), but this measurement of time merely murkifies the issue and is not considered further. Regardless, even if this methodology were applied here, the claim is untimely.
. To the extent that claimant suggests that his notice of intention be treated as a claim, that relief is denied because, as noted above, this cause of action is governed by Court of Claims Act § 10 (9), which, as has been noted above, makes no provision for utilization of a notice of intention (see Gloster v State of New York, Ct Cl, June 5, 2002, McNamara, J., No. 2002-011-550, Claim No. 103662, Motion No. M-64877, supra). Accordingly, that relief is unavailable to claimant here, even though he did indeed serve one. It of course can be, and has been, utilized for the purpose of demonstrating notice of the underlying facts in the late claim application.