Citation Numbers: 57 A.D.3d 1193, 870 N.Y.2d 499
Filed Date: 12/18/2008
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Claimant applied for unemployment insurance benefits when her employment with the New York City Housing Authority ended. After she was denied benefits, extended hearings and proceedings ensued which culminated in an August 10, 2007 decision of an Administrative Law Judge (hereinafter ALJ) ruling that claimant was ineligible to file a valid original claim. By letter dated September 1, 2007, claimant appealed the ALJ’s decision to the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board. The Board conducted a telephone hearing concerning the timeliness of claimant’s appeal. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Board dismissed the appeal as untimely. Claimant now appeals the Board’s decision.
We affirm. Labor Law § 621 (1) provides that an appeal to the Board from an ALJ’s decision must be made within 20 days of the date the decision is mailed or personally delivered to the claimant. This statutory time period is strictly construed (see Matter of Moorer [Commissioner of Labor], 40 AD3d 1335 [2007]). In the case at hand, the ALJ’s decision was mailed on August 10, 2007.
Cardona, P.J., Spain, Rose, Kane and Kavanagh, JJ., concur. Ordered that the decision is affirmed, without costs.
Although claimant initially testified that she did not receive the ALJ’s decision until the end of September 2007, she later admitted that she did not know exactly when she received it, but that it was probably in August 2007. Claimant’s equivocal testimony is insufficient to refute the notation on the decision that it was mailed on August 10, 2007.