MATTER OF THEROUX v. Reilly

803 N.E.2d 364, 1 N.Y.3d 232, 771 N.Y.S.2d 43
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 803 N.E.2d 364 (MATTER OF THEROUX v. Reilly) 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 THEROUX v. Reilly, 803 N.E.2d 364, 1 N.Y.3d 232, 771 N.Y.S.2d 43 (N.Y. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Read, J.

At issue in this appeal is whether eligibility for benefits under General Municipal Law § 207-c is contingent upon the municipal employee’s demonstrating an injury sustained in the performance of special work related to the heightened risks and duties inherent in law enforcement. We conclude that section 207-c does not require such a “heightened risk” standard.

I.

Originally enacted in 1961, General Municipal Law § 207-c provides for the payment of the full amount of regular salary or wages to a police officer or other covered municipal employee who is injured “in the performance of his duties” or is taken ill “as a result of the performance of his duties” (§ 207-c [1]). These payments continue until the disability has ceased, or the disabled employee is granted a disability retirement. The payments stop if the employee either performs, or refuses to perform, light-duty work. The municipality is also liable for all medical treatment and hospital care necessitated by the injury or illness. Payments for these medical expenses continue after the employee’s retirement, and are bestowed in addition to any retirement allowance or pension.

When interpreting a statute, we turn first to the text as the best evidence of the Legislature’s intent. “As a general rule, unambiguous language of a statute is alone determinative” (Riley v County of Broome, 95 NY2d 455, 463 [2000] [citation omitted]). Here, the text does not suggest any legislative intent to *240 create a “heightened risk” standard. Section 207-c affords eligibility to those covered municipal employees who are “injured in the performance of [their] duties,” not to those who are “injured in the performance of duties entailing the heightened risk of law enforcement,” or words to similar effect. If the Legislature had intended to restrict section 207-c eligibility to employees injured when performing specialized tasks, it easily could have and surely would have written the statute to say so. We may not create a limitation that the Legislature did not enact. Further, a statute’s plain meaning must be discerned “without resort to forced or unnatural interpretations” (Castro v United Container Mach. Group, 96 NY2d 398, 401 [2001], citing McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 232). Reading section 207-c in an unforced and natural manner, we conclude that the word “duties” encompasses the full range of a covered municipal employee’s job duties.

Our interpretation is consistent not only with the statute’s words, but also with legislative history. While repeatedly amending section 207-c to extend its benefits to additional classes of municipal employees, 1 the Legislature routinely referred to the important, often dangerous and stressful, work these employees perform day in and day out. 2 The Legislature thus pointed to “heightened risk” as the rationale for selecting additional classes of municipal employees for inclusion within section *241 207-c, not as the standard for determining eligibility for section 207-c benefits.

Finally, the Legislature enacted section 207-c to create parity between police officers and firefighters, who had been eligible for the same benefits since 1938 under General Municipal Law § 207-a and its predecessor (see L 1961, ch 920; L 1938, ch 562, § 1). While section 207-a served as the template for section 207-c, Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller approved the bill enacting section 207-c at a price of the Legislature’s fixing the “substantial problems” that had arisen in section 207-a’s administration (see Governor’s Mem approving L 1961, ch 920, 1961 McKinney’s Session Laws of NY, at 2141). Notably, these “substantial problems” did not include the standard for determining eligibility. Thus, sections 207-a and 207-c share the identical operative phrase regarding eligibility—“in the performance of his duties.”

There is every indication that municipalities have always awarded section 207-a benefits to firefighters without reference to whether the specific injury-causing activity was one entailing the “heightened risk” of firefighting (see e.g. Matter of Robida v Mirrington, 1 Misc 2d 968 [Sup Ct 1956] [firefighter injured while performing duties as master mechanic of the department]; Matter of Adam v Farbo, 16 Misc 2d 614 [Sup Ct 1959] [firefighter injured when he slipped during demonstration of new fire fighting technique]; Matter of Kirley v Department of Fire, City of Oneida, 138 AD2d 842 [3d Dept 1988] [firefighter injured when cleaning a firetruck]). Until very recently, municipalities seem to have likewise routinely awarded section 207-c benefits without regard to any “heightened risk” posed by the task that the employee was carrying out when injured (see e.g. O'Dette v Parton, 190 AD2d 1074, 1074 [4th Dept 1993] [deputy sheriff “was injured while on routine patrol in a sheriffs patrol vehicle”]); or the courts have thwarted municipalities seeking to impose this kind of limitation, regarding it as “ ‘out of harmony with the statute’ ” (Matter of Laudico v Netzel, 254 AD2d 811, 812 [4th Dept 1998] [citation omitted] [Court rejected municipality’s rule to limit section 207-c eligibility to injuries occurring “as a direct result of contact with an inmate”]). What dramatically altered this picture was our decision in Matter of Balcerak v County of Nassau (94 NY2d 253 [1999]), to which we now turn.

*242 II.

In Balcerak, a Nassau County corrections officer applied for workers’ compensation and section 207-c benefits following his injury while driving home from a special assignment. The officer received workers’ compensation benefits, but the County denied him section 207-c benefits. The officer commenced an article 78 proceeding, arguing that he was entitled to section 207-c benefits because the County was bound, under collateral estoppel principles, by the Workers’ Compensation Board’s finding that he had been injured while on duty. We rejected his argument, noting that these two statutory benefit schemes “follow paths of differential interpretation and application” (Balcerak, 94 NY2d at 258). In fact, the Legislature chose different eligibility standards—“arising out of and in the course of employment” for workers’ compensation benefits; “in the performance of his duties” for section 207-c benefits (id. at 258-259).

We compared the legislative rationale for enacting the two different benefit regimes:

“General Municipal Law § 207-c benefits were meant to fulfill a narrow and important purpose. The goal is to compensate specified municipal employees for injuries incurred in the performance of special work related to the nature of heightened risks and duties. These functions are keyed to ‘the criminal justice process, including investigations, presentencing, criminal supervision, treatment and other preventative corrective services’ ” (id.

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Bluebook (online)
803 N.E.2d 364, 1 N.Y.3d 232, 771 N.Y.S.2d 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-theroux-v-reilly-ny-2003.