Petitioner, a retired employee of the State Department of Transportation, has instituted this article 78 proceeding for an order reversing and modifying the decision of the respondent Grievance Appeals Board (hereinafter referred to as the “Board”) which, on October 30, 1972, denied as untimely his application for cash payment for overtime credits accumulated during his employment.
The controversy is one of long standing. In August of 1957, at a time when he had accumulated 1,014 hours of overtime credit, the petitioner was informed that in accordance with new attendance rules he would be unable to carry more than 240 hours of overtime credits on his leave records after January 1, 1958, On September 5, 1957, he wrote to his superior officer requesting permission “to take the next three months and seven days off” to liquidate his 774 hours of excess overtime. Not until November 22, 1957, did his superior respond, granting him permission to 11 take off short periods of time at spaced intervals, provided it does not interfere with the normal operation of your section.” Since 774 hours amounts to approximately three months and seven days, it was impossible to liquidate the accumulated overtime in the few weeks then remaining in the year 1957.
Although earlier grievance rules provided no express time limits for the filing of grievances, Executive Order No. 42, which became effective on October 14, 1970, required such a filing within 45 days after the act which gave rise to it. It provided for a four-step procedure. Petitioner proceeded through each step but it was not until the final one that the respondent Board raised the issue of timeliness. The adverse determinations at the lower steps were predicated on the purported lack of power in 1958 to extend petitioner’s time for liquidation. At step four the Board denied the appeal as untimely because the grievance was filed on June 14, 1971, eight months after the effective date of Executive Order No. 42 which limited such time to 45 days, and on the further ground that the 14-year delay was “ too long ”.
It is petitioner’s contention that the failure to raise the issue of timeliness until step four estops the respondents from asserting it now, and that failure plus two documents, dated May 25 and June 2, 1971, by which the District Engineer and the Office of Legal Affairs recommended that he file a grievance, waive the time bar.
OPLR 217 limits the time within which a proceeding may be commenced against a body or officer to four months after the determination to be reviewed becomes a final or binding, or within four months after refusal of a demand to perform a duty enjoined by law. The latter limitation on the right to bring on a mandamus proceeding becomes a bar when a petitioner unreasonably delayed to make a demand so as to postpone indefinitely the time within which to institute such a proceeding (Matter of Central School Dist. No. 2 of Towns of Coeymans, New Scotland and Bethlehem v. New York State Teachers’ Retirement System, 27 A D 2d 265). Mandamus requires action without delay — “ an alert attention to an
A review of various proceedings barred as untimely reveals none as lengthy as the instant one (see Matter of Williams v. Pyrke,
Nevertheless, the time barrier will not apply where the claim is a failure by the respondent to obey a continuing constitutional (Matter of Cash v. Bates,
Petitioner, however, asserts respondents are estopped from now raising the time issue. Although earlier doctrine held that no loches, waiver or estoppel could be imputed to the State (Matter of Moss,
Did then the letters of May and June, 1971, recommending that a grievance procedure be commenced, or the fact that the time bar was not raised by the State until step four of that procedure, amount to either a waiver or estoppel of the defense of untimeliness by the State?
The mere expression of an erroneous opinion on a matter of law raises no estoppel (Shapley v. Abbott,
To overcome this authority, petitioner cites two cases in support of his theory of waiver and estoppel. In Matter of Lake Placid Club v. Abrams (6 A D 2d 469, affd. 6 N Y 2d 857), the Commission against Discrimination established its own rules of practice which provided that any application for reconsideration of its action should be filed within 15 days from the date of mailing of the commission’s disposition. No disposition was mailed to B’nai B’rith, an organization which had represented
In Matter of Molinari v. Quayle (
Lake Placid and Molinari deal with administrative rules and not with a Statute of Limitations or the equitable doctrine of loches. Neither case is in point, except to the extent that they constitute authority for the respondents to accept the filing of a grievance proceeding afer the expiration of the 45-day period established by administrative rule.
Although it is apparent that petitioner suffered an injustice 16 years ago, the petition is dismissed on the ground that it is barred by both the Statute of Limitations and the equitable doctrine of loches. Parenthetically, it appears that in the absence of statutory or other authority it is improper for the State to award a cash payment in lieu of vacation or overtime credits to an employee no longer in service (see Seif v. City of Long Beach,
