Spaid v. Liverpool Central School District

169 Misc. 2d 41, 642 N.Y.S.2d 783, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 132
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 169 Misc. 2d 41 (Spaid v. Liverpool Central School District) 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
Spaid v. Liverpool Central School District, 169 Misc. 2d 41, 642 N.Y.S.2d 783, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 132 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Robert G. Hurlbutt, J.

In this CPLR article 78 proceeding, petitioner seeks to vacate the determination of the respondent Liverpool School District denying her application for retroactive membership in the New York State Teachers’ Retirement System pursuant to section 803 (b) (3) of the Retirement and Social Security Law. Petitioner was employed by respondent School District as a [43]*43part-time teaching assistant from September 1969 to June 1976. In 1969, her position was not eligible for participation in the New York State Teachers’ Retirement System (retirement system). Petitioner became eligible in February 1971, but did not begin to participate in the retirement system until October 1975.

In November 1994 petitioner sought retroactive membership in the retirement system pursuant to section 803 of the Retirement and Social Security Law, a statute enacted in 1993 which provides, in part, for retroactive membership in a public retirement system for individuals who "were eligible to join a public retirement system but did not because they were unaware of their rights.” (Executive Mem, McKinney’s Session Laws of NY, at 2896 [L 1993, ch 437].) The procedure for retroactive membership in the retirement system is set forth in section 803, which provides that the employer who employed a member at the time he or she was first eligible to join must "file[ ] with the retirement system an affidavit stating that the relief sought is appropriate because the member did not (i) expressly decline membership in a form filed with the employer; (ii) participate in a procedure explaining the option to join the system in which a form, booklet or other written material is read from, explained or distributed, such form, booklet or written material can be produced and documentation or a notation to the effect that he or she so participated exists; or (iii) participate in a procedure that a reasonable person would recognize as an explanation or request requiring a formal decision by him or her to join a public retirement system.” (Retirement and Social Security Law § 803 [b] [3].)

The statute further provides that "[a] member seeking to prove that he or she did not participate in a procedure described in clause (ii) or (iii) hereof must do so by substantial evidence” and "[a]n employer shall establish a review process which shall afford a member an opportunity to appear in person or in writing.” (Id.)

In response to petitioner’s request for retroactive membership, the respondent School District determined that petitioner did participate in a procedure that a reasonable person would recognize as an explanation or request requiring a formal decision by him or her to join the retirement system. The School District’s conclusion that petitioner was not eligible for retroactive membership under section 803 was conveyed to petitioner by affidavit of Peter J. Martuscello dated February 1, 1995.

[44]*44Petitioner requested review, which was held on April 7, 1995 at the Liverpool Central School District administrative office before F. Robert Kolch, Assistant to the Superintendent. Petitioner, who was represented by counsel, made oral statements and the District responded with statements by Mr. Martuscello. There is no indication that testimony was taken under oath, and there is no stenographic or other recording of the proceeding. The statute requires only that a review process be afforded and does not require the formality of a hearing.

Upon review of petitioner’s application, the Assistant to the Superintendent of the Liverpool Central School District, F. Robert Kolch, determined that petitioner was not entitled to retroactive participation in the retirement system. This determination, dated April 7, 1995, is challenged in this article 78 proceeding.

Petitioner contends that although teaching assistants became eligible to join the retirement system in 1971, she was not informed by her employer, the respondent School District, that participation was an option for her. She asserts, as she did in the review proceeding before the assistant to the superintendent, that prior to September 1975 she did not participate in a procedure explaining her right to join the retirement system and she did not participate in any process that a reasonable person would recognize as an explanation or request requiring a formal decision by her to join a public retirement system. She further asserts that she first became aware of her right to join the retirement system in the 1974-1975 school year when she received a copy of an employee handbook and she promptly enrolled in the retirement system.

In the review proceeding, the respondent stated that a formal personnel department was established by the District in 1968, that since that time it has been the practice of the District to advise and counsel every employee in employment-related options, including enrollment in a retirement system, and that membership information had been disseminated broadly and was readily accessible to similarly situated employees in 1971, as is confirmed by the fact that a number of similarly situated part-time teaching assistants joined the system at the time. The District was unable to produce copies of the materials allegedly broadly disseminated in 1972 as, due to the passage of time, those materials no longer exist. Likewise, no present employee of the District was able to offer testimony based upon direct knowledge of what occurred in 1970, 1971 or 1972.

The answer to the petition asserts that the decision under review was not arbitrary and capricious, and was rationally [45]*45based on evidence in the record. The answer also claims that section 803 violates the State and Federal Constitutions, citing article VIII, §§ 1 and 2 of the New York Constitution and the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the United States Constitution. Notice óf these claims was given to the State Office of the Attorney-General, who responded raising issues involving the standing of the respondents to challenge the constitutionality of Retirement and Social Security Law § 803.

In the April 7, 1995 determination, Kolch declared that he was persuaded by the District’s showing that appropriate retirement system membership information was available to petitioner, as confirmed by the number of similarly situated employees who did join the system at that time. Kolch found that petitioner had not demonstrated by substantial evidence that retirement information had not been made available to her. He concluded that petitioner’s application for retroactive membership was properly denied.

The statutory requirement that petitioner prove that she did not participate in a procedure described in clause (ii) or (iii) of section 803 (b) (3) by substantial evidence has generated confusion, and the burden of proof thus imposed upon the petitioner was treated differently in the only two published cases found after exhaustive search. In Matter of Catalano v Western Suffolk BOCES (NYLJ, Feb.

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Related

People v. Cutten
182 Misc. 2d 531 (New York County Courts, 1999)
Van Antwerp v. Board of Education for the Liverpool Central School District
247 A.D.2d 676 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1998)

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Bluebook (online)
169 Misc. 2d 41, 642 N.Y.S.2d 783, 1996 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spaid-v-liverpool-central-school-district-nysupct-1996.