Plaintiff Carmel Reddington appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Glasser, J.) dismissing her claims against her former employer, defendants Staten Island University Hospital and North Shore Long Island Jewish Health System, Inc. (the “Hospital”), for termi
The district court determined that, by instituting an action under section 740 of the New York Labor Law, Reddington triggered the claim-waiver provision of section 740(7) and thereby waived the claim under section 741 that she asserted in her amended complaint. Observing that section 741 contemplates enforcement through the private right of action established in section 740(4), the Court of Appeals determined that “no election of remedies is implicated when sections 741 and 740 are pleaded together, or section 741 is pleaded after a plaintiff has instituted a section 740 claim, because section 741 provides no independent remedy.”
Id.
at 89,
Nonetheless, we must affirm the dismissal of her section 741 claim because section 741 applies only to “a[ ] person who performs health care services.” N.Y. Lab. Law § 741(l)(a). As
Reddington TV
makes clear, “section 741 ... is meant to safeguard only those employees who are qualified by virtue of training and/or experience to make knowledgeable judgments as to the quality of patient care, and whose jobs require them to make these judgments.”
Finally, we consider the Hospital’s cross-appeal, in which it argues that it is entitled to attorneys’ fees under section 740(6). The district court declined to award attorneys’ fees because Reddington withdrew her section 740 claim at an early stage of the litigation.
See Reddington I,
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of Reddington’s claims under section 741, and we also affirm the district court’s refusal to award attorneys’ fees to the Hospital. We thank the New York Court of Appeals for its assistance in construing these provisions of New York law.
