78 A.D.2d 50 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1980
OPINION OF THE COURT
This is an original proceeding pursuant to section 298 of the Executive Law in which the State Division of Human Rights seeks an order enforcing a prior determination of the Commissioner of Human Rights that the respondent village unlawfully discriminated against complainant Susan Howarth by discharging her from employment because of her marital status. In responding, the village has addressed the merits of the prior proceeding and the division contends that since the village failed to appeal the commissioner’s order we are now foreclosed from reviewing it. That contention has been urged before and rejected by the
In 1973 complainant was hired as a part-time secretary by the former Mayor of Spencerport. She continued her employment through two different village administrations until she was discharged on February 16, 1977. At the hearing, the village advanced a number of reasons for her discharge, but the commissioner found that she was fired because she was married to James Howarth and that, but for the controversy in the village over real property tax assessments and her husband’s role in increasing them, she would have been continued in her employment.
Mr. Howarth was the Director of the Department of Taxation and Assessment of the Town of Ogden, the agency that established tax assessments for the town and also for the Village of Spencerport which was within the geographic boundaries of the town. In 1976 through 1977, he increased the assessments of several real properties in Ogden because of improvements made by the owners. Considerable public resentment followed and in January, 1977 Mr. Howarth was required to appear before the village board to explain the increases. He later appeared at a “heated” public hearing in February. Shortly after this hearing the Mayor discharged complainant and ultimately the village decided not to adopt the changes in assessment for village tax purposes. The evidence in the record discloses that at the time all this occurred, the Mayor was campaigning for re-election. He stated at the hearing that he found the employment of complainant “somewhat of an embarrassment” and that he had been urged by others to discharge her.
On this evidence, fully supported by the record and not seriously challenged by the village, the commissioner found that Susan Howarth was unlawfully discharged from her employment because of her marital status.
The underlying purpose of the Human Rights Law is to insure that decisions involving employment, housing and similar advantage rest upon individual qualifications and not be the product of prejudice or unlawful bias. The statute originally forbade discrimination based upon race, creed and national origin, but it soon became clear that there also existed widespread discriminatory practices based on sex, age, disability and marital status. Bias with respect to marital status was particularly evident in financial matters where women, because they were single, divorced or separated, or conversely because they were dependent on their husbands, frequently encountered difficulties in obtaining credit not similarly experienced by men. The Human Rights Law was amended to eliminate that discrimination in 1974 (L 1974, ch 173; Executive Law, § 296-a) and in 1975 the act was further amended to prohibit discrimination based upon marital status in employment and housing matters (L 1975, ch 803). Senator Smith, the sponsor of the amendment, stated that the amendment was intended to extend the jurisdiction of the Division of Human Rights to complaints of discrimination resulting “from sex, or from the status of divorced, separated, widowed or single persons, or from other status related to marriage” (NY Legis Ann, 1975, p 65).
The amendment has apparently not been interpreted by the courts, but typically it should be construed to prevent such practices as the refusal to employ married women or
These illustrations of unlawful discriminatory practices fit easily within the provisions of the new statute and permit distillation of a general working premise for use in deciding this case which is consistent with the expressed legislative purpose. Before the Division of Human Rights may exercise jurisdiction over a claim of unlawful discrimination based upon marital status, that status must do more than furnish a link to the person whose conduct motivates the party charged. The complainant’s status must be the cause of the unlawful act, either because of the condition of marriage, singleness or whatever, or because the party charged is motivated by some proscribed bias toward the spouse.
Neither of these considerations motivated the village.
The application should be denied and the petition dismissed.
Cardamone, J. P., Hancock, Jr., Callahan and Moule, JJ., concur.
Application unanimously denied, with costs, and petition dismissed.
An interesting construction of the amendment is suggested in a letter from counsel of the State Racing and Wagering Board to the Governor’s counsel, contained in the bill jacket, it was noted that board rules provided that suspension or exclusion of a licensee automatically results in suspension or exclusion of the spouse. The reason, obvious enough, was that licensees with criminal records, particularly gambling records, often own horses in their spouse’s name and participate fully in racing despite their criminal record. Counsel noted that despite the reasonableness of such rules, the amendment could be construed to prohibit them.