51 A.D.2d 697 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1976
Order and judgment (one paper), Supreme Court, New York County, entered July 14, 1975, denying plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment and granting defendants’ cross motion for like relief dismissing the complaint and declaring that plaintiff is not eligible for a pension, that his alleged lack of knowledge of a change in pension eligibility rule in 1966 had no effect on the validity of the new eligibility rules, and that the trustees of the pension fund had not acted arbitrarily or capriciously in denying plaintiff’s application for a pension, unanimously modified, on the law, without costs and disbursements, so as to deny defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment and to vacate the declaratory provisions, and the matter is remanded for trial. Plaintiff worked in the plumbing industry as a union member in good standing from 1924 to 1954, when general unemployment apparently required him to seek out-of-town work from employers that were not contributors to the defendants’ pension fund. He remained a member in good standing, however, in the union. By 1960, plaintiff returned to employment in New York City, where he resumed work in the bargaining unit covered by the pension plan for the ensuing 11 years. In 1971, at the age of 66 years, plaintiff retired on doctor’s order for chronic rheumatism. He thereupon applied for pension benefits allegedly under the belief that the eligibility requirements were the same as those enacted in 1952, which provided that an employee could retire upon attaining 65 years of age who had been a union member in good standing for 15 years, including the five years immediately preceding the application for retirement and had been employed for two years prior to such application. Defendants denied his application on the grounds of the pension fund’s trustees’ 1966 amendment to the eligibility requirements, of which plaintiff allegedly had had no prior notice, which increased the requirement of employment prior to retirement