Newark Fire Officers Union, Local 1860, Iaff, Afl-Cio v. City of Newark, Etc.

CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 3, 2024
DocketA-0015-21
StatusUnpublished

This text of Newark Fire Officers Union, Local 1860, Iaff, Afl-Cio v. City of Newark, Etc. (Newark Fire Officers Union, Local 1860, Iaff, Afl-Cio v. City of Newark, Etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newark Fire Officers Union, Local 1860, Iaff, Afl-Cio v. City of Newark, Etc., (N.J. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-0015-21

NEWARK FIRE OFFICERS UNION, LOCAL 1860, IAFF, AFL-CIO,

Plaintiff-Respondent,

v.

CITY OF NEWARK, a municipal corporation of the STATE OF NEW JERSEY,

Defendant-Appellant. _______________________________

Argued November 16, 2022 – Decided December 3, 2024

Before Judges Accurso and Vernoia.

On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, Essex County, Docket No. C-000066-21.

Sean P. Joyce argued the cause for appellant (Carmagnola & Ritardi, LLC, attorneys; Sean P. Joyce, of counsel and on the briefs; Stephanie Torres, on the briefs).

Paul L. Kleinbaum argued the cause for respondent (Zazzali, Fagella, Nowack, Kleinbaum & Friedman, attorneys; Paul L. Kleinbaum, of counsel and on the brief; Craig A. Long, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by

ACCURSO, P.J.A.D.

Plaintiff Newark Fire Officers Union, Local 1860, IAFF, AFL-CIO and

defendant City of Newark are parties to a 2013 collective negotiations

agreement providing two "terminal leave" options for retiring officers: the

"traditional" option allows an officer to remain on the payroll at full salary,

earning pension credits but not reporting to work during a terminal

"compensation leave period" or CLP; and the "lump sum" option, which the

parties negotiated in 1987, defined in CNA § 9.09 as "a lump sum payment of

one hundred percent (100%) of the total cost that the City would have incurred

had the retiree remained on the payroll under the current procedure in lieu of

terminal leave as provided in 9.04. Four (4) for one (1)."1

1 Arbitrator Licata explained the compensatory leave period under the CNA is calculated pursuant to a formula based on accumulated compensatory time due for holidays for the period spanning July 1, 1965 to December 31, 1970, accrued compensatory time in the amount of three calendar days for each year of service, deferred vacation, accrued vacation consisting of a maximum 48 hours or two 24-hour days, and a maximum of three personal days per year. "[A] multiplier(s) is applied to each form of accrued leave and then hourly rates comprised of base salary, longevity, holiday pay, clothing allowance, hazardous duty pay and tour commander differential, if applicable are

A-0015-21 2 The question the parties submitted to grievance arbitration was whether

the City had violated § 9.09 of the CNA by failing to include vacation and

personal days that were scheduled to accrue only after the officer had retired in

its calculation of the lump sum terminal leave option. Arbitrator Licata,

although conceding the City had not included vacation and personal days that

would accrue during a period of terminal leave in its calculation of the CLP

under either terminal leave option when the provision was newly negotiated —

nevertheless determined the language of the contract was clear and

unambiguous, and the phrase "under the current procedure" could not refer to

the way the City calculated the CLP at that time, but could only "be construed

as referring to the procedure by which the retiree elects the lump-sum option

as opposed to a substantive benefit which contradicts the substantive benefit

unambiguously established by the language which immediately follows."

The trial court confirmed the award, finding the arbitrator was free to

disregard the way the City calculated the CLP when the provision was

multiplied by the total days of accrued leave" to arrive at the "total cost of the CLP for the traditional terminal leave benefit."

§ 9.04 of the CNA provides: "Any employee covered by this Agreement shall earn three (3) calendar days for each year of service which will be accrued as compensatory time leave to be granted upon age and service retirement." A-0015-21 3 negotiated — and for the thirty years that followed — because the arbitrator's

finding that the critical "language [is] 'clear and unambiguous' . . . is

'reasonably debatable.'" We disagree and reverse.

This grievance arose in a somewhat unusual way. In August 2010, Gary

Palmerson, a firefighter in the Newark Firefighters Union, Inc., a different

bargaining unit with a different contract, advised he planned to retire on

December 1, and elected to take the lump sum option for his terminal leave.

The Chief Clerk calculated his CLP as she had been trained to do twenty-five

years before — the way it had always been done for firefighters under either

terminal leave option — resulting in a CLP of 261 calendar days, extending

from December 1, Palmerson's actual pension retirement date, to August 18,

2011.

Palmerson, having read Article XLIV § 1 of the union contract that "an

employee may elect the option of receiving wages and other benefits due them

in a lump sum equal to the cost to the City for such wages and other benefits

had the employee remained on the payroll to receive same," objected to the

calculation. He, and eventually his union, claimed the language meant that

firefighters continue to earn vacation and personal days during their

compensation leave period under both terminal leave options, although they

A-0015-21 4 were not reporting to work, and "that those earned days should be included to

extend that period." Palmerson claimed he was owed another 8 days for

vacation and 3 personal days he would have earned during his compensation

leave period after his December 1, 2010 retirement date, thereby extending

that period from August 18, 2011 to September 11, 2011, resulting in the City

owing "him a payment for 16 more calendar days. 2 The Chief Clerk explained

2 Arbitrator Zudick who presided over the 2015 Newark Firefighters arbitration explained the calculation of vacation and personal days in his opinion and award as follows:

Firefighters earn a maximum of 10 vacation days per year. Since it takes a full year to earn the 10 days those days are generally used in the following calendar year. Thus, the vacation time earned, for example, in 2009 is available for use in 2010. Since firefighters work a 24-hour day and receive 10 vacation days per year, each of their vacation days is actually worth more than the normal vacation day for a non-firefighter. To account for the difference on the Form [used to calculate the CLP], the number of vacation days a firefighter has available in any calendar year is at first doubled so that if all 10 days are available the Form will show 20 days. In converting that number to calendar days the parties have agreed to multiply by 2. Thus, a firefighter with all 10 days available for use in a calendar year will he reflected on the Form as 20 x 2 = 40 calendar days. Personal days are handled differently. Firefighters receive 3 personal days per year. Since the resolution of a grievance concerning personal days in 2011 . . .

A-0015-21 5 "that whether a firefighter chose the terminal leave or lump sum method to

receive their benefit payment, once they were no longer coming to work, they

no longer earned vacation time or personal days." The City maintained the

union was improperly arguing for firefighters to receive vacation time and

personal days "of up to two years . . .

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Newark Fire Officers Union, Local 1860, Iaff, Afl-Cio v. City of Newark, Etc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newark-fire-officers-union-local-1860-iaff-afl-cio-v-city-of-newark-njsuperctappdiv-2024.