52 A.D.2d 345 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1976
Petitioner was a tenured employee of the New York State Thruway Authority (hereinafter Authority) holding the position of toll collector. On February 19, 1973, at the end of his shift at the Spring Valley Interchange, he was stricken by what was apparently a grand mal seizure. He was hospitalized and released therefrom on the same day, although he remained in the care of Dr. Lestch until February
An examination of section 73 clearly indicates that while the Authority may terminate the employment status of an employee who has been continuously absent for one year or more by disability, it does not authorize the imposition of an involuntary leave of absence. The obvious intent of section 73 is to provide a method of severance in order to free a job position without prejudicing the employee’s future by the institution of disciplinary proceedings under section 75 for incompetency. (Memorandum of the State Department of Civil Service, regarding L 1965, ch 508; NY Legis Ann, 1965, pp 91-92.) It was not intended to provide a State employer with tools to fashion a job severance when that employer, without a
The position of the respondent Authority is not altered by its attempt, for the first time at oral argument before us and in its brief, to justify its conduct by utilizing section 72 with section 73 of the Civil Service Law. The former section is almost exclusively employed when the cause of a disability is mental rather than physical (Matter of Brockman v Skidmore, 43 AD2d 572). Further, section 72 authorizes the appointing authority to place an employee on a leave of absence when a medical officer selected by the Civil Service Department has certified that the employee is not mentally fit to perform the duties of his position (Civil Service Law, § 72, subd 1). In this case the disability was not mental, there was no certification, and, indeed, there was no physical examination of any kind conducted by a medical officer of the respondent.
The judgment should be reversed, on the law and the facts, without costs; petitioner reinstated to his former position of toll collector and matter remitted to Special Term for the determination of back pay, if any, from March 1, 1973, the date he was certified as able to return to his duties, less any earnings petitioner may have had from other employment during the period in question.
Koreman, P. J., Main, Larkin and Herlihy, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, on the law and the facts, without costs;