Gould v. State of New York

2025 NY Slip Op 25283
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 11, 2025
DocketClaim No. 135530
StatusPublished
AuthorZainab A. Chaudhry

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 25283 (Gould v. State of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. State of New York, 2025 NY Slip Op 25283 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

Gould v State of New York (2025 NY Slip Op 25283) [*1]
Gould v State of New York
2025 NY Slip Op 25283
Decided on July 11, 2025
Court Of Claims
Chaudhry, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on July 11, 2025
Court of Claims


Gregory R. Gould, Claimant,

against

The State of New York, Defendant.

BROOK ROWLEY, Claimant,

against

THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Defendant.

BRIAN GIRARD, Claimant,

against

THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Defendant.

ADAM LECKONBY, Claimant,

against

THE STATE OF NEW YORK, Defendant.




Claim No. 135530

For Claimants:
HARDING MAZZOTTI, LLP
By: Melanie J. Lazarus, Esq. and Kelly A. Magnuson, Esq.

For Defendant:
LETITIA JAMES, New York State Attorney General
By: C. Harris Dague, Assistant Attorney General

Zainab A. Chaudhry, J.

The ultimate issue in these four actions is whether the New York State Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Services (DHSES) violated the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) by failing to pay its K-9 handlers overtime pay for time the employees spent outside of work hours caring for their assigned dogs. Claimants Brian Girard, Gregory Gould, Adam Leckonby, and Brook Rowley are K-9 handlers employed by DHSES who commenced these actions against defendant the State of New York seeking damages for such alleged FLSA violations.[FN1] Each claimant separately moves for partial summary judgment as to liability pursuant to CPLR 3212, and defendant cross-moves to dismiss each of the claims under CPLR 3211 (a) (2) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.

As discussed in more detail below, all but one of the claims survives the threshold jurisdictional challenge. And although this Court agrees with other courts that have considered the issue and concluded that the significant off-duty time spent by K-9 handlers caring for and training their partners is compensable as work under the FLSA, material questions of fact preclude judgment as a matter of law regarding the State's liability here. Thus, for the reasons that follow, the Court (1) denies claimants' motions for partial summary judgment, (2) grants defendant's cross-motion to dismiss Rowley's claim as jurisdictionally defective, and (3) denies defendant's cross-motions to dismiss the claims of Girard, Gould, and Leckonby.

THE FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT

The FLSA is a remedial statute designed to "protect all covered workers from substandard wages and oppressive working hours" (Barrentine v Arkansas-Best Freight System, Inc., 450 US 728, 739 [1981]; see 29 USC § 202 [a]; Tennessee Coal, Iron & R. Co. v Muscoda Local No. 123, 321 US 590, 597 [1944]). As relevant here, under the FLSA, an employer [*2]generally must pay employees time and a half for any hours worked beyond 40 hours per week (see 29 USC § 207 [a] [1]; Reich v State of New York, 3 F3d 581, 587 [2d Cir 1993], cert denied 510 US 1163 [1994]). The statute applies to individuals employed by the State (see 29 USC § 203 [e] [2] [C]; Brock v City of Cincinnati, 236 F3d 793, 796 [6th Cir 2001], citing Garcia v San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority, 469 US 528 [1985]).

The FLSA defines "[e]mploy" to "include[ ] to suffer or permit to work" (29 USC § 203 [g]). The statute does not, however, expound further on what constitutes compensable work (see Reich v New York City Tr. Auth., 45 F3d 646, 649 [2d Cir 1995]). The Supreme Court has clarified that "work or employment" means "physical or mental exertion (whether burdensome or not) controlled or required by the employer and pursued necessarily and primarily for the benefit of the employer and [their] business" (Tennessee Coal, 321 US at 598; see Holzapfel v Town of Newburgh, NY, 145 F3d 516, 522 [2d Cir 1998], cert denied 525 US 1055 [1998]). Compensable work is not bounded by the strictures of a predetermined workday. Instead, "employees must be compensated for 'activities performed either before or after the regular work shift . . . if those activities are an integral and indispensable part of the principal activities for which covered [employees] are employed' " (Holzapfel, 145 F3d at 522, quoting Steiner v Mitchell, 350 US 247, 256 [1956]; see Reich, 45 F3d at 651). Still, if work is to be compensable, the employer must actually or constructively know that the employee is engaging in such work (see Holzapfel, 145 F3d at 524). Once the employer "knows or has reason to know that an employee is working overtime, it cannot deny compensation even where the employee fails to claim overtime hours" (id.). "In short, what qualifies as compensable work under the FLSA is determined by whether the employee's activity is controlled or required by the employer, is necessarily and primarily for the benefit of the employer, and is an integral and indispensable part of the job" (id. at 528).

There are exceptions to the FLSA's general rules, however. Under the "de minimis work doctrine," work beyond an employee's regularly scheduled hours that is "negligible"—for example, a few additional seconds or minutes—need not be compensated (Brock, 236 F3d at 804, citing Anderson v Mt. Clemens Pottery Co., 328 US 680, 692 [1946]; see Reich, 45 F3d at 652). Only when employees are " 'required to give up a substantial measure of [their] time and effort' " is compensable working time involved (Brock, 236 F3d at 804, quoting Anderson, 328 US at 692).



FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In approximately 2004, DHSES started an Urban Search and Rescue program (the USAR program). Through the USAR program, DHSES's Office of Fire Prevention and Control (OFPC) engages in "live victim searches or disaster searches through the use of highly trained" dogs known as "K-9s" (Behrens Affirm [4-17-24], ¶ 8). The dogs used in the program are trained primarily to "search wreckage after events such as natural disasters or building collapses of other origins and either locate any live people in the rubble and alert for them to be rescued or to determine that no living people remain inside" (Girard Affid [3-24-23], ¶ 26). They may also conduct "wide-area searches for missing persons" (Behrens Affirm, ¶ 9; see Girard Affid, ¶ 36). After being selected for the voluntary and highly competitive USAR program, DHSES employees must "undertake rigorous training before and after they are paired with a K-9 partner" (Behrens Affirm, ¶ 11). The dogs are state assets, but DHSES expects their handlers to care for them 24 hours per day, every day of the year, for as long as the dog lives (see Girard Affid, ¶ 44). Indeed, DHSES does not have kennels for the dogs and, thus, when the handler is not [*3]working, the dogs live with the handlers in their homes.

Claimants are current DHSES employees who were selected to be K-9 handlers in the USAR program. They allege that defendant violated the FLSA by failing to pay them overtime for their off-duty work caring for their dogs, which included, among other tasks, feeding, training, grooming, exercising, and picking up after the dogs.

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Related

Gould v. State of New York
2025 NY Slip Op 25283 (New York State Court of Claims, 2025)

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2025 NY Slip Op 25283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-state-of-new-york-nyclaimsct-2025.