MATTER OF ROISTACHER v. McCoy

299 N.E.2d 668, 32 N.Y.2d 479, 346 N.Y.S.2d 250, 1973 N.Y. LEXIS 1159
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 299 N.E.2d 668 (MATTER OF ROISTACHER v. McCoy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MATTER OF ROISTACHER v. McCoy, 299 N.E.2d 668, 32 N.Y.2d 479, 346 N.Y.S.2d 250, 1973 N.Y. LEXIS 1159 (N.Y. 1973).

Opinion

*480 G-abbielli, J.

Petitioners, successful at Special Term upon a Referee’s finding that they should be classified Court Clerk III rather than Court Clerk II, were turned back in the Appellate Division where a unanimous court found that the classification of Court Clerk II assigned by respondent, Administrator of the State Judicial Conference, was not arbitrary or capricious. Petitioners’ contention here is that the standard of number of people supervised, assertedly used by respondent and approved by the Appellate Division, is nowhere made a criterion for classification in the Court Clerk III category.

The history of the court reorganization and classification plan is detailed in Judge Bbeitel’s opinion in Matter of Ainsberg v. McCoy (26 N Y 2d 56). The classification provisions became *481 effective July 1, 1966. Non judicial employees were continued in the employment which at that point became classified. Four levels of Court Cleric were described, levels I and II being competitive positions, and levels III and IV being noncompetitive. A rash of article 78 proceedings, of which this is one, broke out as a result of respondent’s decisions concerning who belonged in what classification. The hearing Referees have uniformly determined the employees entitled to the higher classification they claimed, rather than to the lower classification to which respondent assigned them. Results in the Appellate Division have varied (e.g., Referees’ determinations reversed in Matter of Daye v. McCoy, 39 A D 2d 610, affd. 31 N Y 2d 770; Matter of Hershfield v. McCoy, 37 A D 2d 660, affd. 31 N Y 2d 770; Referees’ determinations affirmed in Matter of Grilihas v. McCoy, 35 A D 2d 1060; Matter of Shapiro v. McCoy, 35 A D 2d 1060). In one case that reached this court we reversed the Appellate Division’s affirmance of Special Term’s annulment of respondent’s classification decision and reinstated respondent’s determination (Matter of Byrne v. McCoy, 29 N Y 2d 440). In another case we reversed the Appellate Division’s reversal of Special Term’s annulment, holding that respondent was wrong and that Special Term’s reclassification was correct (Matter of Ainsberg v. McCoy, supra).

In the instant cases petitioners were, in fact, reclassified by respondent to Court Clerk III as of July 21, 1971. They claim that they should have been so classified as of July 1, 1966 when the classification provisions became effective, and contend that they are eligible for the higher salary for the period July 1, 1966 through July 21, 1971. It is urged, and logically so, that respondent’s reclassification of the petitioners to Court Clerk III in 1971 is an admission that they should have been so classified in 1966 since their duties had not varied in the interim.

Roistacher became Clerk in Charge of Parts 30 and 31 of Criminal Term, Supreme Court, New York County, under the reorganization of 1962 and has supervised clerical work of these parts including pretrial matters, grand jury selection, habeas corpus proceedings, bail matters, etc. In 1966 he supervised three other clerks also classified as Court Clerk II, and his immediate supervisor was a Deputy Clerk. Nine Supreme Court Justices and the General Clerk of the Supreme Court in New York *482 County have, by letters admitted in this proceeding, certified that Eoistacher ought to he in the Court Clerk III category.

McPartland has, since 1964, been Clerk in Charge of Parts 12 and 13, Supreme Court, Bronx County. His duties include co-ordinating assignment of cases for trial in five trial parts, and he supervised one Court Clerk I, one Court Clerk II, five or six other court officers and a court reporter. He has also furnished letters from Justices in his behalf in the record. 1

The hearings in these cases were the result of previous Appellate Division decisions that there were insufficient bases upon which to determine the reasonableness of respondent’s determinations that petitioners should be Court Clerk IIs for the period in question (35 A D 2d 641, 644). At the hearings on remand the Personnel Officer of the Administrative Board of the Judicial Conference, testified at great length. He agreed that petitioners did work which could easily fall within the Court Clerk III job description and, in a somewhat equivocal passage, semed to say that the criterion used in classifying petitioners as Court Clerk IIs was the number of people they supervised. This is the sole basis for the classification, as settled upon in respondent’s brief, and the basis employed by the Appellate Division for its reinstatement of respondent’s determination.

The signal aspect of respondent’s job descriptions for Court Clerk II and III is that the number of people or other clerks supervised is nowhere specified as a criterion. 2

*483 The Referee made findings among which were that the job descriptions “ are vague, ambiguous and overlapped;” that respondent had not shown that petitioners were not performing Court Clerk III work; and that the fact that the work done also comes within the category of Court Clerk II should not relegate them to that title.”

The only differentiation insofar as supervision is concerned " in the job descriptions is that Court Clerk IIs act as supervisors of large general offices; and as clerks of large or complex trial or special term parts. Court Clerk Ills supervise very large operations. Other than this extremely vague difference in wording as to the size of the over-all task generally, there is no language which sets up numbers of people supervised as a criterion, and the classifications were admittedly made in these cases on no other basis. The inference must then be that respondent found petitioners’ duties otherwise classifiable under the Court Clerk III category.

The Hershfield case (37 A D 2d 660, affd. 31 N Y 2d 770, supra), cited below by the Appellate Division, was a case involving claims of Court Clerk Ills that they sought to be Court Clerk IVs and, in dictum, the court stated: “ The difference between Court Clerk II and Court Clerk III is largely determined by the *484 number of subordinate employees and the volume of work ” (37 A D 2d, at p. 661). Certainly differences in volume of1 work can be drawn by comparing the job descriptions, but the court’s statement as to numbers supervised is in no way supported by any objective standards found in the job descriptions or, insofar as is shown in these cases, anywhere else. The inconsistent application of the ethereal “number of people supervised” standard is typified in Matter of Daye v. McCoy (39 A D 2d 610, affd. 311 N Y 2d 770, supra) handed down with the instant cases. In Daye

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Bluebook (online)
299 N.E.2d 668, 32 N.Y.2d 479, 346 N.Y.S.2d 250, 1973 N.Y. LEXIS 1159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-roistacher-v-mccoy-ny-1973.