Plaintiff-appellant Timothy J. Connolly, a former employee of the New York City Police Department (the “NYPD”) and a current employee of the New York State Organized Crime Task Force (the “Task Force”), challenges New York State’s statutory scheme governing the eligibility for public pensions of those employees who work in one public job, retire, and then begin work in a second public job. In particular, Connolly alleges that it violates the federal constitution for New York to require that its retired public employees, while they are employed in a subsequent public job, either forgo receipt of the pension benefits accrued from the first jоb or forgo accumulation of additional pension benefits from the second job. The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Batts, Judge ) granted defendants’ motion to dismiss, ruling that Connolly’s claims were untimely because they accrued in 1984 when he began his current job with the Task Force. Although we agree with Connolly that he has a timely clаim, we nonetheless affirm on the separate ground that his allegations fail to support the conclusion that New York’s pension system is unconstitutional.
Background
After twenty-three years of service, Connolly in 1983 retired from the NYPD. At that time he was fully vested in certain retirement benefits from the New York City Police Pension Fund, which is part of New York’s pension system for state and local employees. A few months later, Connolly began a new job as a special investigator for the Task Force, where he continues to work.
Connolly’s employment with the Task Force triggered the application of two inter-locking provisions of New York civil service and retirement law. First, sectiоn 150 of the New York Civil Service Law states a longstanding rule that
[I]f any person subsequent to his or her retirement from the civil service of the state or of any municipal corporation or political subdivision of the state, shall accept any office, position or employment in the civil service of the state [or any subdivision] ... any pension or annuity awarded or allotted to him or her upon retirement ... shall be suspended during such service or employment and while such person is receiving any salary.
Second, section 211 of the New York Retirement and Social Security Law provides an exception to this rule, permitting “a retired person [to] be еmployed and earn compensation in a position or positions in the public service, without any effect on his status as retired and without suspension or diminution of his retirement allowance,” provided that certain conditions are met, including receiving the approval of appropriate administrators. In exchаnge for receiving both pension and salary, those who invoke this exception, known as a “section 211 waiver,” are excluded from participation in the pension plan associated with their second public job. See N.Y. Retire. & Soc. Sec. Law § 213.
Taken together, these provisions require a retired state or local employee who aсcepts a subsequent state or local job to choose, during the period he receives a salary from the second job, between (1) not receiving pension benefits from the first job but accruing additional pension benefits from the second job, or (2) receiving pension benefits from the first job but not accruing further benefits from thе second job. See generally Baker v. Regan,
Since beginning his employment with the Task Force, Connolly has applied fоr and been granted section 211 waivers, thereby allowing him to receive his NYPD pension and excluding him from accrual of the pension benefits that would otherwise be associated with his Task Force job. In 1998, Connolly filed this action seeking to represent a class of similarly situated New York public employees and alleging that the pension system described above violates, inter alia, federal guarantees of due process and equal protection. Defendants, various individuals and government agencies associated with the New York public pension system (collectively “New York”), moved to dismiss, principally on the ground that the complaint failed to state a claim for which relief can be granted. Connolly cross-moved for class certification.
The district court granted defendants’ motion and denied plaintiffs as moot. The court ruled that plaintiffs claims were untimely because (1) they were subject to a three-year statute of limitations, (2) the claims accrued in 1984 when he began emрloyment and “knew or should have known that he would not be permitted to participate in a second pension plan,” and (3)the complaint was not filed until 1998. The court rejected plaintiffs claim that New York’s continuing requirement that he choose between the two pensions constituted a continuing violation, the most recent instance of which fell within the limitations period. The court then declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiffs remaining state law claim.
Discussion
We review de novo the district court’s decision and will affirm only if “ ‘it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim[s] which would entitle him to relief.’ ” Tarshis v. Riese Org.,
On appeal, the parties have, understandably enough, focused on the district court’s statute of limitatiоns reasoning, but they have also briefed the merits of plaintiffs claims. Because we think that appellant’s claim with respect to the most recent section 211 waiver is timely, we reach the merits and affirm on those grounds. See McNally Wellman Co. v. New York State Elec. & Gas Corp.,
I. Timeliness
The parties agree that Connolly’s federal constitutional claims, brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, are governed by New York’s three-year statute of limita
The district court held that plaintiffs claims were untimely. It reasoned that his only claims accrued in 1984 when he began his Task Force employment. We disagree.
The harm plaintiff complains of — his inability to accrue Task Force pension benefits — is always the result of actions taken no more than two years before, that is, when the most recent section 211 waiver was sought and granted. In this respect, this case is most analogous to those involving the repeated application of a discriminatory policy, such as Guardians Assoсiation of the New York City Police Department, Inc. v. Civil Service Commission of City of New York,
Appellees contend that construing New York’s cоnduct in this way, and therefore giving Connolly a new cause of action with each renewal of the section 211 waiver, would unfairly “save an action that the plaintiff could have brought within the limitations period had he exercised reasonable diligence.” But this objection relies on the erroneous assumption that, when a persоn knows in advance that he will be injured, his claim accrues even before he has suffered injury.
Instead, what matters is “when the plaintiff knows or has reason to know of the harm” that he seeks to redress, Eagleston,
In sum, this is not a case in which the plaintiff simply “continues to feel the effects of a time-barred [wrongful] act.” Harris v. City of New York,
II. The Merits
Connolly challenges New York’s statutory scheme principally under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the 14th Amendment. In both cases, he fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
A. Due Process
Connolly’s due process claim is not procedural in nature. He does not, for instance, attack the means by which New York has determined that his particular case falls within the class of cases governed by the section 211 waiver schеme. Instead, he challenges the substantive fairness of New York law in this area. This feature is fatal to his claim because Connolly has failed to identify a protected property interest of which he has been deprived. Indeed, what he is objecting to is the very fact that New York law confers no property interest on pеople in his circumstances. Because Connolly lacks any “legitimate claim of entitlement” under state law to Task Force pension benefits for the period of time during he which he receives NYPD pension benefits pursuant to a section 211 waiver, his due process claim is without merit. See Colson v. Sill-man,
B. Equal Protection
Connolly’s equal protection theory is рremised on the disparity of treatment between New York state and local employees who previously worked for another state or local employer, and those who previously worked for a private employer, or a non-New York public employer. Only the former class of employees is forced to choose between giving up the pension associated with their prior job and giving up accrual of additional pension benefits in their subsequent New York public employment.
Connolly concedes that the policy is to be afforded deferential “rational basis review.” Under this standard, we will uphold the statute so long as “there is a rational relationship between the disparity of treatment and some legitimate governmental purpose.” Tarbe v. Berkel, Inc.,
New York argues that its approach to pension benefits for re-employed
Connolly argues that it is irrational to apply the “double-dipping” rationale only when the employee’s first pension is a New York pension. Although it might also be rational for the state to bar public employees from participating in the pеnsion plan associated with their present public job whenever they are already drawing pension benefits from a prior job of any sort, it is plainly also rational to limit the policy to those circumstances where both pension plans at issue are New York plans. See Heller,
At root, Connolly’s theory is that pension benefits should be conceived of as deferred compensation, and not simply a form of retirement security, the entitlement to which decreases in the presence of other sources of income. But the choice between these two ways of approaсhing pension benefits is one left to New York’s legislature, not the federal courts. See Heller,
Conclusion
Connolly has offered additional arguments, but, having considered them all, we
Notes
. Because we ultimately reject these claims on their merits, we have no need to decide whether the continuing violation doctrine saves those claims arising from section 211 waivers that took place more than three years before Connolly filed this suit. That issue would affect only damages.
