70 A.D.2d 900 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1979
Lead Opinion
— In a proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 to compel the New York City Transit Authority and Harold L. Fisher, as its chairman, to (1) terminate petitioner’s suspension without pay and (2) remit to petitioner all of the back pay withheld from him since January 21, 1978, the appeal is from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, dated November 3, 1978, which directed appellants to (a) "reinstate petitioner” or, if his suspension is to be continued, restore his salary pending a final determination of the disciplinary charges against him, and (b) "pay petitioner all back pay withheld from him since January 21, 1978, less any amounts earned by petitioner from outside sources”. Judgment modified, on the law, by deleting therefrom the direction to reinstate petitioner. As so modified, judgment affirmed, without costs or disbursements. Petitioner was a supervisory employee in the transit authority’s Maintenance of Way Department at the time of his suspension without pay on December 22, 1977
Concurrence Opinion
concurs in the result, with the following memorandum: The majority holds that a civil service employee’s suspension without pay resulting from an indictment for a crime which is related to his duties cannot exceed 30 days pursuant to the language of subdivision 3 of section 75 of the Civil Service Law, which pertinently provides: "Pending the hearing and determination of charges of incompetency or misconduct, the officer or employee against whom such charges have been preferred may be suspended without pay for a period not exceeding thirty days.” This holding requires that if the criminal and disciplinary charges have not been disposed of by the end of the 30-day suspension period, the transit authority or any public agency must either reinstate the civil service employee with pay or, in lieu thereof, continue his suspension with pay until he is convicted or acquitted of the criminal charges in which latter event, he would probably be reinstated. The inevitable financial burden imposed upon the public treasury as a consequence thereof is self-evident, inasmuch as the internal disciplinary proceedings are normally deferred pending the resolution of the criminal charges and the criminal charges cannot realistically be disposed of within the 30-day suspension period. As an added consequence, the authority must either replace that employee temporarily at additional expense if its level of service is to be maintained, or reduce those services during the period of such employee’s suspension. Inasmuch as the majority’s holding accords with the prior decisions of this court which have dealt with civil servants suspended because of indictments charging them with crimes both related and unrelated to their duties (see Matter of Yeampierre v Gutman, 52 AD2d 608, mot for lv to app dsmd 40 NY2d 918; Matter of Maurer v Cappelli, 42 AD2d 758; Matter of Maurer v Stacklum, 42 AD2d 759), I am constrained to join in the result reached by the majority. Nevertheless, it is my view that the majority’s interpretation of this provision of the Civil Service Law is both unreasonable and illogical. The requirement of reinstatement or continued compensation of a civil service employee after the expiration of the initial 30-day suspension without pay was presumably designed to prevent the public agency from starving out the civil service employee by unnecessarily delaying its internal disciplinary procedures.