From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Levitt v. Board of Bargaining

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 20, 1992
79 N.Y.2d 120 (N.Y. 1992)

Opinion

Argued January 14, 1992

Decided February 20, 1992

Appeal from the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the First Judicial Department, Jeffrey M. Atlas, J.

Steven C. DeCosta for appellant. Victor A. Kovner, Corporation Counsel (Linda Young, Pamela Seider Dolgow and Patrick L. Taylor), for respondents.



This appeal centers on the determination of the Board of Collective Bargaining of the City of New York (the Board) that New York City committed an improper public employer practice in unilaterally ordering that, as a condition of appointment or promotion, candidates disclose and pay debts owed the City. We conclude that, in overturning the Board's determination, Supreme Court and the Appellate Division failed to accord proper deference to the decision of that neutral administrative body, and therefore modify the order before us.

I

In February 1986, New York City Mayor Edward I. Koch sent a memorandum to City employees urging them voluntarily to disclose and pay any debts they owed the City. He wrote that the City was already vigorously pursuing its private sector debtors and would shortly implement measures to collect debts from City employees, in order to better enable the City to deliver needed services to all New Yorkers; no person would be hired without disclosure of indebtedness and agreement to pay it. The Koch memorandum began and ended on the same note: "every dollar we cannot collect is a dollar we cannot use to pay for cleaner streets, better schools, more police and fire protection — and better employee benefits."

Two months later, the policy was instituted, without prior negotiation with municipal employee unions, in a Personnel Policy and Procedure Bulletin promulgated by the City Personnel Director. That document, captioned "Debt Collection From City Employees of Debts Owed to the City through Payroll Deduction," began with the words, "[i]n order to collect debts owed to the City." As explained therein, all applicants for employment or promotion would be required to complete a two-part form. The first part was a questionnaire seeking 10 years of home addresses as well as information regarding motor vehicle registrations; unpaid parking violations or other fines, penalties or judgments in favor of the City; public assistance overpayments; and whether State and City income tax returns had been filed for the previous five years. Second, the form contained the following repayment agreement:

"As a qualification for appointment and continued employment with the City, I agree to repay any amounts which I owe to the City or any agency or department thereof, either by lump sum payment or, if I am able to demonstrate hardship, by deductions from my paycheck not to exceed 10% of the net income indicated on my paycheck. I further agree to cooperate with officials of the City or any agency or department thereof in determining the amounts which I may owe to the City. Failure to repay any amounts which I owe the City or any agency or department thereof may be grounds for disciplinary action."

Any applicant who refused to complete the form and sign the repayment agreement was to be denied employment or promotion.

Three municipal employee unions filed separate improper practice petitions with the Board challenging the policy. The unions argued that the repayment agreement, which provided for payroll deductions and the possibility of discipline, affected wages or terms and conditions of employment and thus could not be implemented without prior good-faith bargaining. The unions further claimed that the questionnaire portion of the form was so personally invasive that it also affected a term or condition of employment.

While conceding that "the purpose of the new procedure [was] to both ensure that the City recovers the monies owed to it and that the recovery is accomplished in an expeditious manner," the City in its response to the petitions added the affirmative defense that, as an employment qualification relating to character and reputation, the policy was a managerial prerogative not subject to mandatory bargaining. The City further claimed that, in any event, the policy did not affect wages because an employee could choose to pay the debt in a lump sum, and the information sought was largely a matter of public record and not an unwarranted invasion of privacy.

In its decision on the consolidated petitions, the Board recognized that character and reputation could be an appropriate qualification for employment or promotion. In this instance, however, the Board concluded from the combined substance and history of this policy that it was neither intended nor used as such by the City but was purely an economic measure. First viewing the substance of the policy, the Board observed that no matter how much was owed or how long the debt was delinquent, no candidate was disqualified from City employment or promotion on character grounds so long as the debt was paid; conversely, every applicant who refused to pay, however recent or nominal the debt, was automatically disqualified. Turning to the history of the policy, the Board took into account that neither the Koch memorandum nor the policy itself mentioned character or reputation, and the City conceded that its purpose was to raise money expeditiously.

Having rejected the City's contention that this policy was a test of character and reputation, the Board proceeded to consider whether the policy affected any mandatory subjects of bargaining, concluding that the payroll deductions and threat of disciplinary action contained in the repayment agreement were both bargainable. As for the questionnaire, the Board recognized only a "minimal" expectation of privacy in the information requested, and allowed the City to ask the questions of new hires. With respect to candidates for promotion, however, the Board deemed these same questions an "intrusion into employee privacy affecting a term or condition of employment." The Board consequently prohibited the City from making the inquiries of promotion candidates and enjoined use of the repayment agreement.

The Board alternatively held that as to new hires, the questionnaire was a preemployment action not covered by the Collective Bargaining Law. This aspect of the Board's determination is not challenged.

The City sought review in a CPLR article 78 proceeding, and Supreme Court, finding the Board's decision unreasonable, arbitrary and legally impermissible, annulled it in its entirety. The Appellate Division affirmed, and we granted the Board leave to appeal. We now modify the Appellate Division order to reinstate the Board's determination with respect to the repayment agreement and otherwise affirm.

II

Recognizing the benefits of decentralized administration of public sector labor relations (see, McHugh, New York's Experiment in Public Employee Relations: The Public Employees' Fair Employment Act, 32 Albany L Rev 58, 82 [1967]), the Public Employees' Fair Employment Act (the Taylor Law) permits local government bodies — including New York City — to enact substantive and procedural provisions governing labor relations, so long as they are "substantially equivalent" to the Taylor Law (Civil Service Law § 212, [2]).

Consistent with the Taylor Law, the New York City Collective Bargaining Law (Administrative Code of City of New York § 12-301 et seq.) imposes a duty on public employers and certified employee organizations to bargain in good faith on wages, hours and working conditions (Administrative Code § 12-307 [a]). An employer commits an improper practice if it alters, without prior good-faith negotiation, a term or condition of employment (see, Administrative Code § 12-306 [a] [4]; Matter of State of New York [Department of Transp.] v Public Employment Relations Bd., 174 A.D.2d 905; Matter of State of New York, Governor's Off. of Employee Relations v Public Employment Relations Bd., 116 A.D.2d 827). Specifically excluded from the scope of collective bargaining, however, are certain fundamental managerial decisions — management prerogatives — such as the methods by which an operation will be performed (see, Administrative Code § 12-307 [b]). Although these decisions are excluded from bargaining, their practical impact on employees may be bargainable (Administrative Code § 12-307 [b]; Matter of West Irondequoit Teachers Assn. v Helsby, 35 N.Y.2d 46, 51-52). In the exercise of managerial prerogatives, moreover, the employer must act in good faith (see, Matter of Lezette v Board of Educ., 35 N.Y.2d 272, 278).

Although terms and conditions of employment (subject to bargaining) and management prerogatives (exempt from bargaining) may be neatly separated in principle, the practical task of assigning a particular matter to one category or the other is often far more difficult. Indeed, in many instances a matter may partake of both categories, requiring a balancing of the interests involved (see, 140 Misc.2d 727, 732). No litmus test has yet been devised that automatically identifies a term or condition of employment, or a management prerogative, or establishes whether a particular subject should be placed into the first category or the second (see, Matter of Association of Cent. Off. Adm'rs [Board of Educ.], 4 PERB ¶ 4509, at 4599).

Just such a difficulty arises in the present case. The City urges that promulgation of character standards is the exclusive, nondelegable statutory duty of the City Personnel Director, outside the scope of collective bargaining, and that the Board must defer to her designation; the only limitation on this authority is reasonableness. The Board, by contrast, claims that a dispute as to whether a particular matter falls within terms and conditions of employment and is thus a mandatory subject of negotiation, must be resolved in the first instance by the labor relations agency with jurisdiction over the employees involved, not by the City Personnel Director. For the reasons that follow, we agree with the Board.

The Board is a neutral adjudicative agency with powers at the local level akin to those of the Public Employment Relations Board at the State level. It is authorized by the Collective Bargaining Law to prevent and remedy improper practices as they are defined in the statute (Administrative Code § 12-309 [a] [4]). The Board consists of two members appointed by the Mayor, two designated by a committee of unions, and three elected by unanimous vote of the other four (NY City Charter § 1171). By constituency, therefore, the Board is the impartial body before which both public employers and public employee organizations may be advocates.

This regulatory scheme envisions that in the first instance the threshold issue whether a particular subject matter is bargainable should be decided by the impartial body with expertise in the area (see, Matter of Rensselaer City School Dist. v Newman, 87 A.D.2d 718; Matter of Saratoga Springs City School Dist. [New York State Pub. Employment Relations Bd.], 68 A.D.2d 202, 208, lv denied 47 N.Y.2d 711), rather than by the public employer, who could by declaring conditions of employment to be "qualifications" unilaterally put such matters beyond the statutory duty to bargain. Once the Board decides that the employer is exercising in good faith a managerial prerogative that does not affect terms and conditions of employment, then the Board's inquiry ends and the employer is entitled to broad deference in implementing its action (Administrative Code § 12-307 [b]; see, 1971-1972 Report of Joint Legis Comm on Taylor Law, 1972 N.Y. Legis Doc No. 25, at 34; Note, The Taylor Law, the OCB and the Public Employee, 35 Brooklyn L Rev 214, 227 [1969]). Here the Board determined that the City was not in fact exercising in good faith the managerial prerogative of setting employment qualifications, but was in reality engaged in revenue-raising. That determination should not be upset unless "arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion" (CPLR 7803; see also, Matter of Incorporated Vil. of Lynbrook v New York State Pub. Employment Relations Bd., 48 N.Y.2d 398, 404; Matter of West Irondequoit Teachers Assn. v Helsby, 35 N.Y.2d, at 50-51, supra).

The Board began its analysis by acknowledging that character and reputation, measured by some objective standard, can indeed constitute an employment qualification, which includes an appropriately framed policy regarding the disclosure and repayment of City indebtedness. The Board then set forth the grounds for its conclusion that this particular policy — in essence, "your checkbook is your character" — sought not to raise morality but simply to raise money. Those reasons explicating and supporting the Board's conclusion were drawn from record evidence of the operation of this particular policy, considered in combination with its origins, including the City's acknowledged economic purpose in taking this action. On this record, we cannot say that the Board's determination was arbitrary, capricious or legally impermissible.

In this litigation, the parties accept the Board's definition of an employment qualification, even one relating to character and reputation, as a "level of achievement or a special status deemed necessary for optimum on-the-job performance." We therefore have no occasion to examine this standard.

Nor is the City's contention, that an employee's current refusal to pay a debt alone establishes a lack of necessary integrity for public service, a proper basis for overturning the Board's conclusion about this policy. First, the City's theory — however logical or prudent it may be — overlooks the Board's determination that any relationship between this policy and employee integrity was pretextual, an afterthought traceable to the unions' legal challenge. The City's theory, moreover, carves out a per se exception to bargaining that we have not previously endorsed. As we made clear in Matter of Board of Educ. v New York State Pub. Employment Relations Bd. ( 75 N.Y.2d 660, 667-668), the obligation to bargain is a strong and sweeping policy of the State, not lightly overridden. We find no basis in the law for now holding that a policy mandating the disclosure and repayment of public debt must in every instance be considered a matter of employee integrity so as to foreclose negotiation.

Contrary to the dissent, the issue is not whether the policy, in retrospect, "serves as a legitimate measure of character and reputation" (dissenting opn, at 134-135, emphasis added). We need only examine whether there is a rational basis supporting the Board's conclusion that at the time the City adopted the policy, it was not exercising in good faith a managerial prerogative to set character qualifications but was instead engaged in revenue-raising. We conclude that there was an adequate basis for that finding.

III

Having determined that the policy at issue was not a managerial prerogative excluded from collective bargaining, the Board next considered whether the policy affected terms and conditions of employment, and concluded that it did. That conclusion, similarly, is entitled to deference by the courts. As we have written in a related context, "'[s]o long as PERB's interpretation is legally permissible and so long as there is no breach of constitutional rights and protections, the courts have no power to substitute another interpretation'" (Matter of Board of Educ. v New York State Pub. Employment Relations Bd., 75 N.Y.2d 660, 666, supra, quoting Matter of West Irondequoit Teachers Assn. v Helsby, 35 N.Y.2d 46, 50, supra).

As did the Board, we separately consider the repayment agreement and the questionnaire.

The Repayment Agreement

The repayment agreement provides that if an employee demonstrates hardship, payroll deductions may be made, up to 10% of net pay. The Board held that payroll deductions affect wages and were therefore a matter within the scope of collective bargaining.

We cannot say this was an impermissible conclusion. Indeed, this Court recognized only last month, as a constitutional matter, that a 10% payroll deduction can have a substantial impact on an employee already confronted with expenses for the necessities of life (Association of Surrogates Supreme Ct. Reporters v State of New York, 79 N.Y.2d 39, 46-47; see also, National Educ. Association — Kansas City v Unified School Dist. No. 500, Wyandotte County, 227 Kan. 541, 608 P.2d 415, 418 [payroll deductions are a mandatory subject of bargaining]). Although the City policy provides for lump-sum payment as an alternative to payroll deductions, the Board found that this option was, depending on an individual's finances, largely illusory; indeed, the policy is captioned "Debt Collection From City Employees of Debts Owed to the City through Payroll Deduction" (emphasis added). Again, the Board's finding was rational and should not have been set aside.

The dissent elaborately distinguishes Surrogates (dissenting opn, at 136), which of course was decided in a different context. The significance of Surrogates here is simply the Court's recognition of the potential impact of a 10% salary deduction on employees.

We further note that as to employees represented by the Uniformed Firefighters Association, one of the petitioners before the Board, the City's duty to bargain extended to "all matters" (Administrative Code § 12-307 [a] [4]), not just wages, hours and working conditions.

That "payroll deductions" is not expressly listed in the Collective Bargaining Law as a subject within the scope of bargaining is irrelevant, contrary to the dissent's suggestion (dissenting opn, at 136, n 4). The statutory delineation of the topics of bargaining is intentionally broad, to be explicated by the Board on a case-by-case basis, because "it is impossible to provide [in a statute] a detailed listing of all issues which are negotiable." (1971-1972 Report of Joint Legis Comm on Taylor Law, 1972 N.Y. Legis Doc No. 25, at 33.)

Moreover, that the City purportedly "could" have insisted on lump-sum payment (dissenting opn, at 136) does not transform this bargainable term and condition of employment into one that is not. We are not concerned with what the City could have done, but must examine what it did. The Board concluded that the presence of a payroll deduction term in the repayment agreement should have been bargained. That finding has a rational basis and we are constrained to uphold it. The Questionnaire

Having concluded that the payroll deduction aspect of repayment agreement violated the Collective Bargaining Law, we do not decide whether the agreement additionally violated the Collective Bargaining Law on the ground that the form established nonpayment as a basis for discipline. Whether the City is correct that the Collective Bargaining Law grants it a managerial prerogative to discipline (Administrative Code § 12-307 [b]), or the Board is correct in its assertion that the subject is mandatorily bargainable under an isolated clause in Binghamton Civ. Serv. Forum v City of Binghamton ( 44 N.Y.2d 23, 28), is not necessary to the resolution of the dispute before us and therefore must be left for future resolution.

We reach a different conclusion, however, as to the Board's holding that the questionnaire so intruded on the personal privacy of promotion candidates that it constituted a unilateral change in the terms and conditions of their employment.

In a recent case challenging a public employer's disclosure requirement, we upheld as rational PERB's finding, after a weighing of the competing interests, that a questionnaire was so intrusive that bargaining was required (Matter of Board of Educ. v New York State Pub. Employment Relations Bd., 75 N.Y.2d, at 670-671, supra). There, however, the intrusiveness was manifest: the questionnaire ran 18 pages — six of which sought financial data — and it covered 13 categories of information, including health and political party affiliations (see, id., at 664-665; Matter of Board of Educ. [United Fedn. of Teachers, Local 2], 19 PERB ¶ 3015).

Here, by contrast, and as the Board acknowledged, virtually all of the information sought — if not already in the City's possession — is a matter of public record. The Board itself characterized the expectation of privacy in such information as "minimal," and concluded that such questions were permissible of new hires. No rational balancing of the competing interests — the City's substantial interest in collecting outstanding debt against an employee's right to privacy — could result in a conclusion that this questionnaire alters a term or condition of employment.

Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be modified, without costs, to reinstate the Board's determination with respect to the repayment agreement, and otherwise affirmed.


Chief Judge WACHTLER and Judges TITONE and HANCOCK, JR., concur with Judge KAYE; Judge SIMONS dissents in part and votes to affirm in a separate opinion in which Judge BELLACOSA concurs; Judge ALEXANDER taking no part.

Order modified, without costs, in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed.


I would hold, as did Supreme Court and a unanimous Appellate Division, that the City may require applicants, as a precondition for employment or promotion, to either pay their unchallenged debts to it in full or, if the applicants cannot afford to pay in full, to authorize payment from their wages over a period of time following employment or promotion. The dispositive question is whether such a requirement is a legitimate qualification for employment because it measures character and, therefore, is not subject to mandatory bargaining, or is a term and condition of employment and is subject to bargaining. In my view, the requirement is an appropriate and objective measure of character and the respondent Board's contrary determination in this case is unreasonable. I, therefore, dissent from the Court's decision insofar as it reinstates the Board's determination that the repayment agreement is subject to mandatory bargaining.

In 1986 the City of New York realized that delinquent debtors and scofflaws owed it substantial sums of money. The problem was aggravated by the fact that the City's own employees owed large amounts for such things as traffic fines, real property taxes and overpaid social services benefits. In an effort to recover these delinquencies, the City adopted a policy requiring all applicants for employment or promotion to complete a questionnaire supplying information which would facilitate it in discovering whether the applicant owed it money. Along with general information of present and past residences, vehicle registration and such, the applicant also was required to list all debts owed the City and to indicate whether liability was contested. The applicant was not eligible for employment or promotion until he or she agreed to pay the uncontested debts in full. If economic hardship was established, the applicant could agree to pay the debt over time through a wage deduction. Three unions representing municipal employees challenged the policy claiming that it affected a term and condition of employment and was subject to mandatory bargaining. Respondent Board agreed and ordered the City to cease and desist using the questionnaire (except as to new employees) and the repayment agreement.

For example, the City's brief states that approximately 25,690 City employees, including 1,300 employees of the Department of Transportation, owed a total of $5.7 million in outstanding parking fines. Looking only to those, and excluding other forms of debts, roughly 10% of City employees owed the City money for this type alone.

Analysis starts by recognizing that the Board determines in the first instance whether a particular subject matter is bargainable. Its determination is entitled to deference from the courts and should be vacated only if it is arbitrary, capricious and unreasonable as a matter of law (see, Matter of Incorporated Vil. of Lynbrook v New York State Pub. Employment Relations Bd., 48 N.Y.2d 398, 404; Matter of West Irondequoit Teachers Assn. v Helsby, 35 N.Y.2d 46, 50-51; Nassau Ch., Civ. Serv. Employees Assn. v Helsby, 54 A.D.2d 925, affd 43 N.Y.2d 755). For the reasons that follow, I conclude that the Board's determination was unreasonable as a matter of law. Accordingly, I would affirm the order of the Appellate Division.

To start with points of agreement, the majority holds, and I agree, that the questionnaire was a proper exercise of the City's powers, for both prospective employees and those seeking promotion. Although the majority and the Board would invalidate the repayment agreement at issue in this case, they agree that the City has a substantial and paramount public interest in the prompt and efficient collection of debts owed to it. They also agree that the City has the power to set policies to determine employee qualifications; that character and reputation, when measured by some objective standard, may be a legitimate qualification of employment; and that an "appropriately framed policy" regarding disclosure and repayment of indebtedness may be a proper measure of one's character and reputation (see, majority opn, at 128; Administrative Code of City of New York § 12-307 [b] ["(i)t is the right of the city, or any other public employer, acting through its agencies, to determine * * * the standards of selection for employment"]).

I would note that — unlike common subjective assessments of character based on appearance, reputation and other intangibles — the City's policy was both objective and uniformly applied: Those who acknowledged their debts to the City and arranged to pay them were eligible for employment or promotion; those who refused were not.

Our disagreement centers on whether the repayment agreement in this case was intended as a character qualification or was, as the Board found, merely adopted as a pretext to raise revenues. The unions contended that the policy was a subterfuge — an expedient way to collect debts from employees protected by civil service without the delay and expense of legal proceedings to enforce the debts. The City conceded that one of the purposes of the policy was to raise money expeditiously, but contended that the policy, which induced applicants to acknowledge and pay their just debts, was also an appropriate measure of character because it reflected maturity, a sense of responsibility and loyalty to their employer. When related to public employment, the policy gauged an applicant's understanding that those who have an opportunity to work for the public and enforce the law have a duty to obey the law. Moreover, the City noted that the requirement of proving character is not new; established procedures governing municipal employment routinely require candidates to prove good character.

The Board did not find these arguments persuasive. It noted that the public statements by the Mayor at the time the policy was instituted referred to revenue raising and it found additional evidence that this was the overriding purpose of the policy in the fact that it did not take into consideration the size, nature or duration of the applicant's debt in determining the good character of the individual.

I fail to see how those considerations support the Board's finding that the policy was intended merely to raise revenue. The City's policy was to disqualify from hiring and promotion not just applicants who refused to pay debts of a certain type, but rather any who refused to pay debts owed to it, no matter how much was due or how long the debt had been delinquent. It was not the amount of revenue that could be collected by the City that was decisive, it was the refusal to pay money justly owed to the City that reflected adversely upon the applicant's character. The use of the repayment agreement to evaluate character is implicit in it and is valid irrespective of whether the Koch memorandum or the policy itself mentioned the word "character." Indeed, had the policy been designed solely as a revenue-raising measure, the City undoubtedly would have attempted to impose a repayment obligation on all employees, not merely applicants for employment and promotion. Accordingly, I conclude that the City's policy serves as a legitimate measure of character and reputation well within the City's managerial power to "determine the standards of selection for employment" (Administrative Code § 12-307 [b]). Considering the basis for the Board's decision, I find its determination to the contrary irrational.

The majority contends that the dissenters have substituted their discretion for that of the Board by determining in "retrospect" that the policy serves as a legitimate measure of character and reputation (majority opn, at 129, n 3). On the contrary, we find the Board's determination irrational because the Board has ignored the indicia of character qualifications in the City's policy and instead relied on evidence of subjective intent to support its determination. The inference to be drawn from the majority's acceptance of the Board's finding, based on this evidence, is that if the City had stated that the policy was a test of character, the outcome would be different. It is difficult to see why the City's purpose should be determined by self-serving public statements when the character aspects of the City's policy are manifest.

However, this does not end the inquiry. As noted by the majority, "[a]lthough these [managerial] decisions are excluded from bargaining, their practical impact on employees may be bargainable" (majority opn, at 127; Matter of West Irondequoit Teachers Assn. v Helsby, 35 N.Y.2d 46, 51-52, supra). Here, the Board concluded that the City's policy affected mandatory subjects of bargaining because the payroll deductions and threat of disciplinary action contained in the repayment agreement were "terms and conditions" of employment. While this determination is entitled to deference so long as it is not affected by an error of law, arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion, the Board had no reasonable basis for finding that the City's policy affected a mandatory subject of bargaining under the facts of this case.

The repayment agreement provides that applicants who have not paid their public debts may either pay by "lump sum" or, if they can demonstrate hardship, by deductions from their paycheck "not to exceed 10%" of their net income. The Board concluded that these payroll deductions affect wages and were therefore a matter within the scope of collective bargaining. Contrary to the Board's conclusion, however, the mere fact that an applicant could authorize a payroll deduction does not convert an otherwise valid condition of employment into a mandatory subject of collective bargaining. The applicants are lawfully obligated to pay these debts and the agreement provides two avenues for doing so — payment in a lump sum or extended periodic payments through payroll deductions. To be sure the deductions affect wages, just as voluntary deductions to repay an employee credit union loan do, but the deductions do not thereby automatically become a matter subject to mandatory bargaining. The City could, if it wished, insist that payment be made in full and that the applicant borrow the funds at interest from a bank or third party to do so. In that way, it would avoid the Board's conclusion that the payroll deductions provision was a "term and condition" of employment but the applicant would be severely disadvantaged. The majority concedes that the City could frame a policy requiring repayment of indebtedness to it by lump sum, and that such a policy could constitute a legitimate test of character. If that is so, then it is difficult to see why it is not a legitimate test of character to allow the employee to pay off the debt over time. To accept the finding of the Board, that the agreement to repay City debts is a "term and condition of employment" because of the optional provision allowing payments by wage deductions, deprives the employee of an ameliorative feature of the policy and requires the City to negotiate with union representatives over whether and how an applicant seeking employment or promotion with the City will pay a legally owed debt.

It is notable that although section 12-307 of the Collective Bargaining Law provides that wages are within the scope of collective bargaining, it does not specifically state that payroll deductions are also, except in the limited circumstance in which the deduction covers union dues for nonmembers of the pertinent union.

This case is vastly different from Association of Surrogates Supreme Ct. Reporters v State of New York ( 79 N.Y.2d 39) relied on by the majority. Association of Surrogates did not involve a labor law dispute over "terms or conditions" of employment. Rather, it was an action seeking a declaratory judgment that a section of the State Finance Law was unconstitutional. In dispute was a statute enacted by the State Legislature to eliminate a budgetary shortfall which attempted to lag or defer judicial employees' pay against their wishes. The State was, in effect, compelling its employees to loan it money for State purposes. Here, the employees may authorize the City to periodically withhold a portion of their pay, not to eliminate the City's budgetary shortfall, but to satisfy a legal obligation to the City. The City has merely recognized a procedure which permits employees to use a wage deduction to satisfy their personal needs (cf., Nassau Ch., Civ. Serv. Employees Assn. v Helsby, 54 A.D.2d 925, affd 43 N.Y.2d 755, supra). Inasmuch as there is no rational basis for the distinction between lump-sum payment and an employee election to use extended periodic payments, I would reverse the Board's finding regarding payroll deductions.

Nor does the agreement violate the Collective Bargaining Law because nonpayment is, under its terms, a potential basis for discipline. The repayment agreement provides that failure to repay any amounts claimed to be owed to the City "may be grounds for disciplinary action." Although the Board conceded that this "right to take disciplinary action is a management prerogative [of the City] under NYCCBL § 1173-4.3b", it nevertheless concluded that the City's policy was a term or condition of employment which must be bargained because it "imposes the non-payment of City debt as an on-going predicate for disciplinary action" (Board of Collective Bargaining Decision No. B-7-87, at 22-23, citing Binghamton Civ. Serv. Forum v City of Binghamton, 44 N.Y.2d 23).

The majority found it unnecessary to reach this issue.

In the City of Binghamton case, we held (supra, at 28) that "disputes relating to whether the necessary predicate exists for taking disciplinary action against a public employee and the proper penalty to be imposed if that predicate exists are terms and conditions of employment under the Taylor Law" — i.e., that certain disciplinary matters, such as disciplinary procedures and penalties, are terms and conditions of employment (see, e.g., Matter of Auburn Police Local 195 v Helsby, 62 A.D.2d 12, affd 46 N.Y.2d 1034). But we have never held that a simple statement that breach of a qualification for employment may in principle be disciplined constitutes a "term and condition of employment." Indeed, such a holding would be contrary to the clear language of New York City's Collective Bargaining Law relegating such determinations to the employer (see, Administrative Code § 12-307 [b]).

Accordingly, I agree with the Appellate Division that the repayment agreement implemented an appropriate measure of applicant's character qualifications and, as such, was not subject to mandatory bargaining. I would, therefore, affirm its order.


Summaries of

Levitt v. Board of Bargaining

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Feb 20, 1992
79 N.Y.2d 120 (N.Y. 1992)
Case details for

Levitt v. Board of Bargaining

Case Details

Full title:In the Matter of JUDITH A. LEVITT, as City Personnel Director, et al.…

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Feb 20, 1992

Citations

79 N.Y.2d 120 (N.Y. 1992)
580 N.Y.S.2d 917
589 N.E.2d 1

Citing Cases

Mayor v. Council

Accordingly, the Taylor Law preempts the purported amendments' curtailment of the Mayor's bargaining…

Mayor v. Council

In relevant part, it provides that "[e]very [local] government . . ., acting through its legislative body, is…