Skaneateles Teachers Ass'n v. New York State Public Employment Relations Board

88 Misc. 2d 816, 389 N.Y.S.2d 257, 94 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2847, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2751
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 2d 816 (Skaneateles Teachers Ass'n v. New York State Public Employment Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skaneateles Teachers Ass'n v. New York State Public Employment Relations Board, 88 Misc. 2d 816, 389 N.Y.S.2d 257, 94 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2847, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2751 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1976).

Opinion

J. Robert Lynch, J.

By CPLR article 78 proceeding, the petitioner, the bargaining unit for certain employees of the respondent board of education (Board), seeks to annul as contrary to law a determination of the respondent Public Employment Relations Board (PERB) which, in effect, permitted the Board to unilaterally alter the composition of the bargaining unit during the statutory challenge period.

The Public Employees’ Fair Employment Act, popularly known as the Taylor Law (Civil Service Law, art 14), provides that a public employer may voluntarily recognize the existence of a bargaining unit for some or all of its employees. Under this authority the Board on July 1, 1973 recognized the petitioner as the bargaining unit for all of its regularly employed certificated personnel except principals and casual employees and entered into a collective bargaining agreement that terminated on June 30, 1975. A successor agreement was entered into for the period July 1, 1975 through June 30, 1976. This gave the petitioner "unchallenged representation status until seven months prior to the expiration” of this agreement (Civil Service Law, § 208, subd 2).

[818]*818At a time when the petitioner’s status had become challengeable, on November 18, 1975, the Board passed a resolution which redefined its recognition of the bargaining unit to exclude therefrom certain categories of employees. It was the general sense of the resolution to include in the bargaining unit all regularly employed teachers under a broad definition and exclude all other employees.

The Board did not bargain with the petitioner to reach the resolution and after its passage did not accede to the petitioner’s request to reconsider or rescind this unilateral action. The petitioner then filed an improper practice charge with PERB alleging that the Board’s unilateral action was a violation of the Taylor Law, specifically section 209-a (subd 1, pars [a], [b], [d]) of the Civil Service Law.

Inter alia, the charge alleged that the Board took its action "for the purpose of depriving” the excluded "public employees in the exercise of their rights guaranteed in Section 202 of the Act for the purpose of depriving them of such rights”. It seems to us that were this motivation established by proof it would constitute animus on the part of the Board. However, PERB’s acting director of public employment practices and representation, to whom the petitioner’s charge was addressed, for some reason not made apparent in the papers, took it upon himself to limit the issues, and in limiting them excised the allegation of the Board’s motivation in passing the resolution.

The acting director stated the issues to be: "first, whether or not an employer’s unilateral alteration of a bargaining unit during the appropriate challenge period constitutes a violation of the above referred to paragraphs of the Act and, second, whether or not a refusal thereafter to negotiate such alteration constitutes a violation of those paragraphs of the act”. Having excised the allegation of animus, the acting director then stated, "the charge does not contain any allegation of animus on the respondent’s part concerning its motivation for the passage of the Resolution; rather, it challenges the resolution itself’. He also stated, "this element — animus — is necessary to establish a violation of § 209-a.l(a) or (b) of the Act”. (In its confirmatory decision PERB itself concedes that allegations of animus would have raised questions for a hearing.) The acting director then determined as a matter of law and without a hearing that the charge as limited did not constitute a violation of the statute.

[819]*819From that point on, including this proceeding, the petitioner has not raised the excision of its allegation of animus. It has been content to raise only the argument that the determination on the limited charge was contrary to law and we, therefore, limit our decision to that aspect only.

The petitioner then appealed to PERB from the decision of the acting director. It asserted "that the scope and composition of a bargaining unit is a mandatory subject of bargaining and where, as here, the respondent unilaterally alters said bargaining unit it is a violation of Sections 209-a.l(a) and (b) of the Act”. Inherent in this assertion is its argument that "the scope and composition of a recognized collective bargaining unit is a term and condition of employment within the meaning of Section 204(2) of the Act,” and, therefore, the "existing bargaining relationship should not be altered without prior bargaining in good faith”. In so arguing it attempted to analogize the prohibition of withdrawing, without bargaining, recognition of a voluntarily recognized bargaining unit in the private employment sector, and, while it conceded that the public employer’s initial recognition is and should be voluntary, it contends that the law precludes a subsequent voluntary alteration of that recognition.

PERB concluded that the acting director had "properly stated and applied the Taylor Law”. In so doing, it stamped its approval on four findings of the acting director: "that the passage of the Resolution does not, per se, constitute a refusal to negotiate in good faith”; that whether a particular job title "is or should be included in a negotiating unit is a permissive rather than a mandatory subject of negotiations”; that the "inclusion of a recognition clause in an existent contract does not enlarge the scope of mandatory negotiations or impose upon the respondent an obligation to either rescind its resolution or negotiate with the charging party concerning the changes made”; that, if an employer during the challenge period alters a bargaining unit it had voluntarily established by recognition, the remedy, if any, lies in a timely filed representation petition.

The PERB decision went on to state that the Taylor Act was expressly and significantly different from the laws governing employment in the private sector, particularly, that for an improper employer practice, other than the refusal to negotiate in good faith, animus is an essential element in both pleading and proof. In summary PERB’s decision was that [820]*820negotiations were not required, that animus was not pleaded and that the respondent’s "unilateral action raises no question under the Taylor Law”.

In its petition on this article 78 proceeding, the petitioner asserts that PERB’s decision is contrary to law because it permits the Board to unilaterally alter the composition of the bargaining unit, a term and condition of employment, and that it permits it to do so without prior good faith bargaining. The petitioner contends that this is violative of section 209-a (subd 1, pars [a], [b], [d]) of the Civil Service Law.

In answer, both respondents rest on the rationale of the PERB decision. Additionally the Board pleads various affirmative defenses.

It contends that this petition was not timely under CPLR 217 in that four months had passed since the resolution was adopted on November 18, 1975. This defense has no merit. The petition does not seek to review the decision of the Board represented by the resolution. It seeks to review the decision of PERB that the improper practice charge is not cognizable under the Taylor Act (see Civil Service Law, § 213, subd [e]). PERB’s decision was dated August 10. The affidavit attached to the petition shows -service on September 10 and 9 respectively. Service was timely.

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City of Schenectady v. New York State Public Employment Relations Board
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Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 2d 816, 389 N.Y.S.2d 257, 94 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2847, 1976 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skaneateles-teachers-assn-v-new-york-state-public-employment-relations-nysupct-1976.