Village of Ilion v. County of Herkimer

18 N.E.3d 359, 23 N.Y.3d 812
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 N.E.3d 359 (Village of Ilion v. County of Herkimer) 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
Village of Ilion v. County of Herkimer, 18 N.E.3d 359, 23 N.Y.3d 812 (N.Y. 2014).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Chief Judge Lippman.

The primary issue in this breach of contract action is whether a municipality’s liability upon withdrawing from a county self-insurance fund should have been discounted to present value. Under the circumstances presented, we hold that the withdrawal fee reflected benefits to be paid in the future and therefore should have been discounted to its current value as of the date it was due.

The case arises out of a dispute over the administration of a workers’ compensation self-insurance plan (Plan) administered by defendant-respondent Herkimer County (County). In 1956, the County created the Plan pursuant to article 5 of the Workers’ Compensation Law. By 2005, the participants included 32 cities, towns, and villages, including plaintiff Village of Herkimer (Village). The terms of the Plan were dictated by local law (see Local Law No. 2 [2005] of County of Herkimer; Local Law No. 4 [1995] of County of Herkimer). Rather than purchasing private insurance, the participants pooled their funds to administer and pay for all of their workers’ compensation claims. Each year the Plan administrator estimated the Plan’s costs for the upcoming year and apportioned them among the participants. The apportionment was based on a formula contained in the Plan, which, following the adoption of a 1978 amendment, was based partially on the property taxes levied by each municipality, and partially on a valuation of each participant’s workers’ compensation claims.

Participants in the voluntary Plan could withdraw at the end of any calendar year by giving notice of withdrawal by the pre[816]*816ceding July 1 and by paying “an equitable share of the outstanding liabilities of the plan as of the date of withdrawal” (Workers’ Compensation Law § 65 [1]; see also Local Law No. 4 [1995] of County of Herkimer). Although neither the Plan nor the Workers’ Compensation Law provided a mechanism for determining the Plan’s “outstanding liabilities,” the Plan followed the standard practice in the insurance industry of obtaining an actuarial assessment, also known as a reserve analysis. So, for example, when the Town of Webb gave notice in 2003 of its intention to withdraw from the Plan, the County hired an actuarial firm to estimate the Plan’s liabilities as of June 30 of that year. The 2003 reserve analysis estimated the total “projected liabilities” at almost $8.9 million, on an “undiscounted basis.” The report also provided examples of “discounted liabilities” tied to various interest rates, including approximately $7.7 million (2% interest rate), $7.3 million (3%), and $6.9 million (4%). The 2003 reserve analysis explained the basis for the discounted amounts as follows:

“The timing of payments and the time value of money are reflected in the discounted values .... The effect of investment income is determined by applying a payout pattern and an assumed interest rate to projected ultimate loss, [expenses] and assessments in order to calculate anticipated payments in future periods. The payments are then discounted to [the date of withdrawal].”

The Town of Webb decided not to withdraw in 2003 but reversed course in 2004 and, along with the Town of Salisbury, gave notice of withdrawal effective December 31, 2004. Another reserve analysis was commissioned, and the estimated liabilities dramatically increased to about $17.2 million. Like the 2003 analysis, the 2004 report referred to the assessed amount as “undiscounted” and provided examples of discounted totals, based on interest rates ranging from one to five percent.

Due to concern over rising costs, in June 2005 the County passed a resolution to terminate the Plan pursuant to Workers’ Compensation Law § 73, effective December 31, 2005 (Local Law No. 2 [2005] of County of Herkimer). The Plan would take on no new claims after that date, but would remain in existence to fund the approximately 125 outstanding workers’ compensation claims, known as “tail claims.” In order to ensure funding for the tail claims, the County created an abandonment plan (Abandonment Plan) that gave member municipalities two [817]*817choices. They could either remain as participants in the Abandonment Plan and pay an annual assessment of their portion of the tail claim liabilities, or they could withdraw from the Plan and pay a lump sum withdrawal fee. The lump sum fee, due at the end of the calendar year, would reflect the withdrawing member’s equitable share of the Plan’s outstanding liabilities according to the final annual estimate prior to abandonment. The final reserve analysis would assess the Plan’s future losses as of December 31, 2005 (2005 Reserve Analysis).

In October 2005, seven of the participating municipalities, including the Village, instituted the instant action, challenging the Plan and the Abandonment Plan based on alleged mismanagement by the County. The County answered and, insofar as relevant here, raised counterclaims for breach of contract, seeking to recover the withdrawal liability based on the 2005 Reserve Analysis.

In June 2006, while the litigation was pending, the 2005 Reserve Analysis was released. The report estimated the Plan’s outstanding liabilities as of December 31, 2005 to be $18.4 million on an undiscounted basis, an increase of $1.2 million from the previous year. The Village’s share was calculated as approximately $1.6 million.

At this point, the Plan had run out of money and had resorted to borrowing funds from the County to keep up with payments on the tail claims. Given the dire situation, in October 2006 the County adopted a resolution allowing withdrawing municipalities to pay 75% of their withdrawal liability in full satisfaction of their obligations under the Abandonment Plan. Four of the seven plaintiffs in the lawsuit took the settlement offer, but the Village, along with two other municipalities, declined.

As relevant to this appeal, the County prevailed on summary judgment as to liability on its counterclaim for breach of contract against the Village. At the ensuing jury trial on damages, the parties presented extensive evidence on the actuarial methods underlying the reserve analyses. There was also testimony regarding various discount rates for the Plan liabilities contained in the reports. Witnesses for the County testified that the $18.4 million assessment in the 2005 Reserve Analysis represented an undiscounted liability and that examples of discount percentages ranged from one to five percent. A former executive director of the State Insurance Fund (SIF) testified that the State requires the SIF to apply a [818]*818discount rate of five percent. Over the Village’s objection, the jury was provided with a verdict form that did not allow for any damages discount. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the County and awarded the full amount of damages sought by the County against the Village, $1,617,528. This figure represented the Village’s undiscounted withdrawal liability as of December 31, 2005. Judgment was entered against the Village for $2,451,108.87, including $833,580.87 in prejudgment interest on the undiscounted verdict. The two other municipal plaintiffs did not perfect their appeals.

On the Village’s appeal, the Appellate Division affirmed, concluding, in pertinent part, that discounting was inappropriate because “the County’s award of damages did not actually constitute compensation for future losses; by its verdict, the jury found that plaintiff owed the County $1,617,528 as of December 31, 2005, a sum that it thereafter wrongfully withheld”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.E.3d 359, 23 N.Y.3d 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-ilion-v-county-of-herkimer-ny-2014.