179 Misc. 554 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1943
This is an application under article 78 of th'e Civil Practice Act for an order directing the Board of Higher Education of the City of New York to reinstate the petitioner to her former position of instructor in the department of philosophy of Brooklyn College with tenure upon the permanent instructional staff.
The facts are undisputed. The petitioner entered the employ of the respondent in 1932 as a tutor in the evening sessions of that college. Her appointment was for a period of one school term and her compensation was two dollars and fifty cents per hour. She continued there as a tutor on that basis until the end of the fall term of 1935. In 1936 she became an instructor in the evening sessions at a compensation of two dollars and seventy-five cents per hour (later increased to three dollars per hour) and continued as such until the end of the spring term of 1938. On September 1, 1938, she was appointed an instructor in the day sessions of the college at a compensation of $2,000 per anmim and was continued there from year to year on an annual-
It is the petitioner’s contention upon this application that, on the basis of those facts, she acquired tenure pursuant to the provisions of section 1143-c of the Education Law, and that the Board was without right to discontinue her services in advance of the discontinuance of the services of other instructors who had no such tenure. She bases her claim of tenure upon the grounds: (1) that she had actually completed four full years of continuous service in the day sessions of the college under the provisions of subdivision 3, paragraph (a), of the section, and (2) that, after serving in the day sessions of the college on an annual-salary basis for three full years, she had been appointed for a fourth full year under the provisions of subdivision 3, paragraph (b), of the section. The petitioner’s claim cannot be sustained on either ground.
A careful reading of those subdivisions indicates that the petitioner does not fit into the status of instructor described in either of them. The four years’ service specified in subdivision 3, paragraph (a), is a service in the day sessions that had been completed on September 1,1938, and not one that only legem on that date. On the other hand, while the petitioner may have completed the three years’ service specified in subdivision 3, paragraph (b), she failed of appointment for a fourth full year or at an annual salary, as therein provided, and cannot avail herself of its benefits. This conclusion must logically follow from the court’s holding that the two successive appointments for school terms of seven months and five months at monthly salaries are not, for the purpose of establishing tenure, the equivalent of one appointment for a fourth full year on an annual-salary basis.