Gloria WOLKENSTEIN, Kathryn Silkes, Philip Rumore and
Vincent Nola, individually and on behalf of all
others similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Eugene T. REVILLE, individually and as Superintendent of
Schools; Claude D. Clapp, individually and as Chief Fiscal
Officer of the City of Buffalo Public School System;
Florence E. Baugh; David Kelly; Joseph E. Murphy; Louis
C. Benton; Joseph D. Hillery; Mozella Richardson; Dennis
Bulera; Oscar Smuckler; John C. Fiorella; as members of
the Board of Education of the City School District of the
City of Buffalo, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 51, Docket 82-7173.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Sept. 16, 1982.
Decided Nov. 18, 1982.
Bruce Fenwick, Buffalo, N.Y. (Robert D. Clearfield, Gen. Counsel, New York Educators Ass'n, Buffalo, N.Y.), for plaintiffs-appellants.
William E. Carey, Asst. Corp. Counsel, Buffalo, N.Y. (Joseph P. McNamara, Corp. Counsel of the City of Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y.), for defendants-appellees.
Robert Abrams, Atty. Gen. of the State of N.Y., Albany, N.Y. (Jeremiah Jochnowitz, Asst. Sol. Gen., and John Q. Driscoll, Asst. Atty. Gen., Albany, N.Y., of counsel), for the Atty. Gen. of the State of N.Y., amicus curiae.
Before FEINBERG, Chief Judge, and FRIENDLY and KAUFMAN, Circuit Judges.
FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge:
This is the latest in a long series of challenges in the state and federal courts over the last decade to the constitutionality of Sec. 210 of New York's Civil Service Law (the Taylor Law), which prohibits strikes by public employees. See Cheeseman v. Carey,
The procedures for determining violations of the Taylor Law and imposing penalties therefor are prescribed by Sec. 210.2, the relevant paragraphs of which we have set out in full in the margin.1 The "chief executive officer" of the governmental unit involved is empowered to determine, "on the basis of such investigation and affidavits as he may deem appropriate", whеther an illegal strike has occurred and which employees have participated. Sec. 210.2(d). In making the latter determination he may employ the presumption, established by Sec. 210.2(b), that an "employee who is absent from work without permission, or who abstains wholly or in part from the full performance of his duties in his normal manner without permission", has participated in the strike. An employee who has been notified that the chief executive officer has found him to have participated in an illegal strike may object to this initial determination by filing a "sworn affidavit, supported by available documentary proof, containing a short and plain statement of the facts upоn which he relies ...." Sec. 210.2(h). The chief executive officer evaluates the objections and is obliged to refer those raising material questions of fact to a hearing officer. Id. Between 30 and 90 days after the chief executive officer's initial determination, the "chief fiscal officer" begins payroll deductions of amounts equal to twice the daily rate of pay for each day on strike. These deductions are not stayed until the employee's objection has been sustained, at which time all deductions previously made are refunded. Secs. 210.2(g), (h). The determinations made under Sec. 210.2(h), including the chief executive officer's determination whether an objection raises a material question of fact, are judicially reviewable pursuant to Article 78 of the New York CPLR.
The stipulation upon which summary judgment was entered below was, in relevant part, as follows. On September 7, 1976, approximately 3000 of the 3300 school teachers employed by the Buffalo School District commenced a strike which continued through September 24, 1976. By notice dated October 14, 1976, Superintendent of Schools Reville, the district's "chief executive officer", see Sec. 201.10, informed these 3000 teachers that he had found them to have participated in an illegal strike. Approximately 400 teachers, including the four named plaintiffs,2 filed objections. Some 325 of these, agаin including the named plaintiffs, received notices, signed by Reville, dismissing their objections and denying a hearing on the ground that they had failed to establish that they had not participated or to raise a question of fact as to their participation. Several of those who were thus denied a hearing availed themselves of the opportunity provided by Sec. 210.2(h) to challenge Reville's determination in an Article 78 proceeding; the Supreme Court of New York directed that hearings be held in three such cases. The payroll deductions made by Deputy Superintendent Clapp, the district's "chief fiscal officer", totalled some $6 million, all of which was applied to the schoоl district's operating budget. Finally, it was stipulated that Reville and Clapp were "involved in the formation of the budget and the planning with regard to the utilization" of the $6 million.
On the basis of this stipulation plaintiffs sought below a declaration that the procedures in Sec. 210.2 deprived them of their property without due process of law. They made two claims. The first was that Reville, given his various executive responsibilities for the school system's operation and budget, has a disqualifying interest in the determinations he makes under Sec. 210.2(h). The second was that the procedures are infirm on their face for failure to provide hearings prior to the commencement of payroll deductions. The first сlaim was rejected by the district court, not without evident misgivings, on the basis of a prior decision of this court.3 The second claim was found to be settled authoritatively against plaintiffs by the Supreme Court's dismissal of the appeal from Sanford v. Rockefeller,
Since plaintiffs have not renewed their second claim, the sole question for review is whether in authorizing Superintendent Reville to pass on the legal sufficiency of objections, Sec. 210.2(h) transgresses the command, rooted in common law practice, see Bonham's Case, 8 Co. 107a, 77 Eng.Rep. 638 (K.B.1608); 2 Cooley, Constitutional Limitations 870-75 (8th ed. 1927), and considered to be inherent in the due process clause of the 14th amendment, see In re Murchison,
Tumey, Dugan and Ward were criminal cases involving Ohio "Mayors' Courts". In Tumey the defendant had been convicted of violating the state's prohibition act after a trial before the mayor of North College Hill in the Village's "Liquor Court". Pursuant to state statute, half of the fines assessed in this court were retained by the Village. These funds were used partly to compensate the deputy marshals and detectives who secured evidence and the prosecutors who secured convictions,
A limitation on the second ground of Tumey was shortly set in Dugan v. Ohio, supra,
Ward v. Village of Monroeville, supra,
Hortonville, supra,
The Court's most recent еxtended discussion of the impartiality requirement is Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc., supra,
We are thus left with a case not so strong for unconstitutionality as Tumey and Ward, and not so strong for constitutionality as Hortonville or Jerrico. Although Dugan v. Ohio, supra,
We begin with the proposition that "[t]he very nature of due process negates any concept of inflexible procedures universally applicable to every imaginable situation", Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy,
In the instant case the decisions which Superintendent Reville made under Sec. 210.2(h) were neither "prosecutorial", compare Jerrico, nor "governmental", compare Hortonville, but adjudicative, and adjudicative in a very special sense. In evaluating the objections filed by the teachers Reville was deciding the purely legal question whether the excuse alleged for absence was sufficient as a matter of law. As our review of the authorities has shown, due process demands strict impartiality on the part of those who function in a judicial or quasi-judicial capacity. Nevertheless, the Court has made clear on several occasions that administrators serving as adjudicators are presumed to be unbiased. See, e.g., United States v. Morgan,
Fairly read, neither the facts stipulated to below nor the generalized assertions made here about Reville's "inconsistent" responsibilities, prove an interest on his part in the outcome of the determinations made under Sec. 210.2(h) sufficient, under the Supreme Court's standards, to overcome thе "presumption of honesty and integrity," Withrow v. Larkin, supra,
Plaintiffs do not contend that Reville has a "direct, personal, pecuniary interest" in the determinations he makes under Sec. 210.2(h) of the sort found in Tumey.7 Plaintiffs' сontention is rather that because Reville has a strong "official motive", Tumey, supra,
Unlike the mayors in Tumey and Ward, Reville is not responsible for seeing to it that the money needed to run Buffalo's schools is provided; that responsibility rests with the Mayor and Common Council. Plaintiffs refer vaguely to Reville's participation in the budgetary process, but they nowhere furnish details as to the precise part he takes. Common sense, confirmed by contemporaneous newspaper accounts of the school strikе, attached as exhibits to defendants' motion to dismiss, see n. 9, infra, and by the district court's researches, see
In both Tumey and Ward the Court put great emphasis on the fact that the revenues generated by the Mayor's Court were very substantial and vitally important to the village's fiscal well being. See Tumey, supra,
An added reason for our conclusion is the nature of the determination made by Reville and the remedy provided for any error. In each of the 325 cases in which Reville dismissed objections without a hearing, he made a determination of law, namely, that taking the objector's affidavit and supporting proof to be true, the excuse proffered was insufficient. An objector dissatisfied with such a ruling had immediate recourse to an Article 78 proceeding, where the standard of review would be precisely the same as that applied by Reville in the first instance. See CPLR 7803(3) and Sanford v. Rockefeller,
In sum, while New York, if only to avoid litigation on facts more persuasive than those here, might be well advised to commit the initial evaluation of the legal sufficiency of objections to some other administrator lower in the administrative hiеrarchy than the chief executive officer, these plaintiffs have demonstrated no violation of their federal constitutional rights, and summary judgment for defendants was properly entered.
Affirmed.
Notes
(d) Determination. In the event that it appears that a violation of this subdivision may have occurred, the chief executive officer of the government involved shall, on the basis of such investigation and affidavits as he may deem appropriate, determine whether or not such violation has occurred and the date or dates of such violation. If the chief executive officer determines that such violation has occurred, he shall further determine, on the basis of such further investigation and affidavits as he may deem appropriate, the names of employees who committed such violation and the date or dates thereof. Such determination shall not be deemed to be final until the completion of the procedures provided for in this subdivision
(e) Notice. The chief executive officer shall forthwith notify each employee that he has been found to have committed such violation the date or dates thereof and of his right to object to such determination pursuant to paragraph (h) of this subdivision; he shall also notify the chief fiscal officer of the names of all such employees and of the total number of days, or part thereof, on which it has been determined that such violation occurred. Notice to each employee shall be by personal service or by certified mail to his last address filed by him with his employer.
(g) Payroll Deductions. Not earlier than thirty nor later than ninety days following the date of such determination, the chief fiscal officer of the government involved shall deduct from the compensation of each such public employee an amount equal to twice his daily rate of pay for each day or part thereof that it was determined that he had violated this subdivision; such rate of pay to be computed as of the time of such violation. In computing such deductiоn, credit shall be allowed for amounts already withheld from such employee's compensation on account of his absence from work or other withholding of services on such day or days. In computing the aforesaid thirty to ninety day period of time following the determination of a violation pursuant to subdivision (d) of paragraph two of this section and where the employee's annual compensation is paid over a period of time which is less than fifty-two weeks, that period of time between the last day of the last payroll period of the employment term in which the violation occurred and the first day of the first payroll period of the next succeeding еmployment term shall be disregarded and not counted.
(h) Objections and restoration. Any employee determined to have violated this subdivision may object to such determination by filing with the chief executive officer, (within twenty days of the date on which notice was served or mailed to him pursuant to paragraph (e) of this subdivision) his sworn affidavit, supported by available documentary proof, containing a short and plain statement of the facts upon which he relies to show that such determination was incorrect. Such affidavit shall be subject to the penalties of perjury. If the chief executive officer shall determine that the affidavit and supporting proof establishes that the employee did not violate this subdivision, he shall sustain the objection. If the chief executive officer shall determine that the affidavit and supporting proof fails to establish that the employee did not violate this subdivision, he shall dismiss the objection and so notify the employee. If the chief executive officer shall determine that the affidavit and supporting proof raises a question of fact which, if resolved in favor of the employee, would establish that the employee did not violate this subdivision, he shall appoint a hearing officer to determine whether in fact the employee did violate this subdivision after a hearing at which such employee shall bear the burdеn of proof. If the hearing officer shall determine that the employee failed to establish that he did not violate this subdivision, the chief executive officer shall so notify the employee. If the chief executive officer sustains an objection or the hearing officer determines on a preponderance of the evidence that such employee did not violate this subdivision, the chief executive officer shall forthwith restore to the employee the tenure suspended pursuant to paragraph (f) of this subdivision, and notify the chief fiscal officer who shall thereupon cease all further deductions and refund any deductions previously made pursuant to this subdivisiоn. The determinations provided in this paragraph shall be reviewable pursuant to article seventy-eight of the civil practice law and rules.
Each of the objections filed by named plaintiffs Wolkenstein, Silkes, and Rumore consists in good part of what appears to be a form affidavit, alleging, inter alia, that the employee's absence was caused by the provocative actions of the Board of Education. The record on appeal contains none of the other 400 or so objections filed
The district judge considered himself bound by our decision in Kornit v. Board of Education,
Since the dismissed teachers conceded their participation in the strike, "there was no possibility of an erroneous factual determination on this critical threshold issue," id.
Hortonville also rejected a claim of bias with respect to the policy decision based on the Board members' participation in the negotiations prior to the strike, which allegedly made it impossible for them to deal fairly with the question of remedy. This portion of the decision is not relevаnt here since the Taylor Law mandates the deduction for any public employee who was on strike
An employer against whom a penalty is assessed has the statutory right to a de novo hearing before an ALJ. It is the latter, not the assistant regional administrator, the Court found, who performs the function of "adjudicating" child labor violations
Plaintiffs were well advised not to claim this. Superintendent Reville, like the mayor in Dugan, is a salaried official who in no way participates in the penalties collected under the Taylor Law. We cannot divine any indirect pecuniary interest Reville had or could be thought to have had in maximizing the penalties imposed. There is no allegatiоn or proof that his compensation as superintendent varied inversely with the amounts paid to the teachers or that he would be likely to be rewarded for zeal in imposing penalties by a salary raise. One can, of course, suppose that Reville might fare better in an easy rather than a tight budgetary situation, but in that respect he seems not very different from the mayor in Dugan
The school superintendent in a district like Buffalo can afford to take the long view. He holds his position for a term of six years during which he cannot be removed save for cause. N.Y. Education Law Sec. 2565
We do not mean to suggest that $600,000 is a trifling sum even for a city of Buffalo's size. We are well aware that in timеs of severe fiscal stress a loss of $600,000 may force painful cutbacks in one school program or another. But the plaintiffs provide no information with which to assess the precise marginal utility of the $600,000 collected here. The stipulation says only that all of it "was applied by defendants with regard to the operating budget and expenses of the District." However, newspaper accounts of the strike, attached as exhibits to defendants' motion to dismiss the complaint, seem to indicate that the moneys were used to restore kindergarten and bus transportation programs--programs which had been sharply cut by the Board in an austerity budget which Reville, two months before the strikе, had characterized as "totally inadequate". Further, Judge Elfvin's independent investigations revealed that the Board's supplemental budget request for 1976-77, the year of the strike, was a good deal smaller than in either the preceding or subsequent year,
