The Matter of John Borelli v. City of Yonkers

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 2022
Docket95
StatusPublished

This text of The Matter of John Borelli v. City of Yonkers (The Matter of John Borelli v. City of Yonkers) 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
The Matter of John Borelli v. City of Yonkers, (N.Y. 2022).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 95 In the Matter of John Borelli, et al., Appellants, v. City of Yonkers, Respondent.

Richard S. Corenthal, for appellants. Paul J. Sweeney, for respondent.

WILSON, J.:

This case arises out of a dispute between the City of Yonkers (Yonkers) and 39 of

its firefighters, who are permanently disabled and retired as a result of work-related injuries

(the Retirees). The parties dispute whether certain compensation outlined in their

collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) constitutes “regular salary or wages” for the

purposes of calculating the Retirees’ General Municipal Law § 207-a (2) supplement. We

conclude, consistent with our precedent, that “regular salary or wages” within the meaning

of section 207-a (2) includes monetary compensation to which current firefighters are

contractually entitled based on the performance of their regular job duties. It does not, -1- -2- No. 95

however, include monetary compensation based on the performance of additional

responsibilities beyond their regular job duties. We thus conclude here that holiday pay

and check-in pay should be included in the supplement, while night differential should not.

General Municipal Law § 207-a (2) provides that, for firefighters who are

permanently disabled due to work-related injuries and receiving certain benefits from the

state, a municipality must make up the difference between those benefits and the

firefighter’s “regular salary or wages” until the firefighter reaches the mandatory retirement

age. Since at least 1995, the CBAs have provided for holiday pay, check-in pay, and night

differential, which collectively the parties refer to as “special pays.”1 Until 2015, Yonkers

included all three of these payments when calculating the Retirees’ section 207-a (2)

supplements.

On December 9, 2015, Yonkers sent a letter to the Retirees stating that the prior

practice of including these payments had been a mistake and that it planned to remove such

“special pays and other compensation” from the calculation of each Retiree’s section 207-

a (2) supplement effective January 14, 2016.2 The Retirees initially challenged this

1 One CBA is with Yonkers Fire Fighters, Local 628, IAFF, AFL-CIO (Local 628) (the union representing employees holding the title of “Fire Fighter”) and the other is with Uniformed Fire Officers Association of the City of Yonkers (the union representing fire officers). This opinion collectively refers to the employees covered by both CBAs as “firefighters.” 2 The instant dispute pertains only to the Retirees, who all retired due to permanent disability before December 9, 2015. In a separate dispute concerning Local 628 members who became or will become permanently disabled on or after December 9, 2015, an arbitrator ruled that Article 31 of the Local 628 CBA did not permit Yonkers to remove the holiday pay, check-in pay, and night differential from the calculation of those members’

-2- -3- No. 95

decision through administrative hearing procedures. After the hearing process concluded

in Yonkers’s favor, it sent each Retiree a “final determination” adjusting the Retiree’s

benefits. The Retirees filed a CPLR article 78 proceeding against Yonkers, challenging its

decision to cease special pays and recoup already-made payments as arbitrary and

capricious, an abuse of discretion, and unsupported by substantial evidence. Supreme

Court granted the Retirees’ request to block Yonkers from recouping past payments, but

otherwise denied the petition.3 The Appellate Division affirmed (187 AD3d 897 [2020]).

We granted the Retirees leave to appeal (36 NY3d 911 [2021]).

I.

There are two distinct bases for including compensation in the calculation of a

permanently disabled firefighter’s section 207-a (2) supplement (see Matter of Chalachan

v City of Binghamton, 55 NY2d 989, 990 [1982]). First, all compensation constituting a

firefighter’s “regular salary or wages” must be included. Second, the municipality may

explicitly agree that certain benefits should be included, even if the benefits are not “regular

salary or wages” under section 207-a (2). In that case, a CBA must expressly provide that

the benefits in question are to be included in the 207-a (2) supplement, as a CBA should

section 207-a (2) supplements, nor did it allow Yonkers to reduce or recoup any payments. These issues were properly submitted to arbitration (see Matter of City of Yonkers v Yonkers Fire Fighters, Local 628, IAFF, AFL-CIO, — NY3d — [2022] [decided today]). Supreme Court confirmed the arbitral award and Yonkers’s appeal of that decision is now pending before the Appellate Division. 3 Yonkers did not appeal Supreme Court’s determination that its attempt to recoup past payments made to Retirees was arbitrary and capricious; therefore that issue is not before us. -3- -4- No. 95

not be interpreted to “implicitly expand whatever compensation rights are provided . . .

under the statute” (Chalachan, 55 NY2d at 990). Here, the Retirees have pursued the first

route, arguing that the special pays constitute “regular salary or wages.”

“[R]egular salary or wages is calculated based on the current salary of an active

firefighter at the same grade the pensioner held upon retirement” (Matter of Farber v City

of Utica, 97 NY2d 476, 479 [2002]). As the court noted in Phaneuf v City of Plattsburgh,

“ ‘salary’ generally is meant to be a fixed compensation periodically paid to a person for

regular work or services” (84 Misc 2d 70, 74 [Sup Ct, Clinton County 1974], affd 50 AD2d

614 [3d Dept 1975], lv dismissed 38 NY2d 1004 [1976]; see also Chalachan, 55 NY2d at

990 [citing Phaneuf approvingly]). In other words, 207-a (2) beneficiaries’ supplements

must be calculated based on the compensation they would be entitled to receive for the

performance of regular job duties if they had stayed on as active-duty firefighters at the

ranks they held at retirement (cf. Chalachan, 55 NY2d at 990; see also Matter of McKay v

Village of Endicott, 161 AD3d 1340, 1343-1344 [3d Dept 2018], lv denied 32 NY3d 913

[2019]).

General Municipal Law § 207-a reflects New York’s longstanding commitment to

taking care of its firefighters. By the late-nineteenth century, Eastern cities began to

establish paid fire departments to replace the volunteer associations that quelled

midcentury century urban fires (see Amy S. Greenberg, Cause for Alarm: The Volunteer

Fire Department in the Nineteenth-Century City 11-15 [1998]; Eric H. Monkonnen,

America Becomes Urban: The Development of U.S. Cities & Towns, 1780-1980, at 106-

107 [1988]). Many New York cities incentivized these professional firefighters with

-4- -5- No. 95

“comprehensive and generous” pensions for disabilities incurred in the line of duty. Some

New York cities granted pensions of up to one-half of their yearly compensation to

firefighters totally and permanently disabled in the performance of the duties (see John

Kenlon, Fires and Fire-Fighters 259 [1913]; see also e.g. L 1926, ch 677; Letter from John

Boyd Thacher II, Mayor of City of Albany, Bill Jacket, L 1938, ch 562 at 7; Letter from

Harold W. Baker, City Manager of City of Rochester, Bill Jacket, L 1938, ch 562 at 10).

Not all cities were so generous, however. In 1938, the New York legislature

responded by passing a law to provide “for the payment of the compensation” and medical

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Related

Farber v. City of Utica
769 N.E.2d 799 (New York Court of Appeals, 2002)
MATTER OF CHALACHAN v. City of Binghamton
434 N.E.2d 256 (New York Court of Appeals, 1982)
Matter of Whitted v. City of Newburgh
126 A.D.3d 910 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2015)
Matter of Borelli v. City of Yonkers
2020 NY Slip Op 05744 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2020)
Phaneuf v. City of Plattsburgh
348 N.E.2d 918 (New York Court of Appeals, 1976)
Mashnouk v. Miles
432 N.E.2d 761 (New York Court of Appeals, 1982)
Binghamton Firefighters v. City of Binghamton
436 N.E.2d 1341 (New York Court of Appeals, 1982)
Pease v. Colucci
59 A.D.2d 233 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1977)
Benson v. County of Nassau
137 A.D.2d 642 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1988)
Aitken v. City of Mount Vernon
200 A.D.2d 667 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1994)
Civil Service Employees Ass'n, Inc., Local 1000 v. New York State Public Employment Relations Board
207 A.D.2d 589 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1994)
Phaneuf v. City of Plattsburgh
84 Misc. 2d 70 (New York Supreme Court, 1974)

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