Filed Date: 2/27/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
In a proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78, inter alia, to compel respondent to reinstate petitioners to their former positions, petitioners appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Dutchess County (Rosenblatt, J.), entered January 12,1983, which granted respondent’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the petition. Judgment reversed, on the law, without costs or disbursements, motion denied, petition reinstated, and matter remitted to Special Term for further proceedings consistent herewith. Petitioners are teachers employed by respondent .Dutchess County Board of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES). In the 1981-1982 school year, petitioner Gill taught a class of six hearing-impaired students, five of whom were from the Wappingers Central School District and one of whom was from the Arlington Central School District. In the same year, petitioner Robinson taught educable mentally retarded children; although petitioners claim that she taught students from both the Pine Plains and the Red Hook Central School Districts, respondent asserts that Robinson taught only Red Hook children. Neither Gill nor Robinson had the most nor the least seniority in their respective tenure areas. Sometime in the spring of 1982, the Wappingers Central School District notified BOCES that it was withdrawing its elementary school hearing-impaired students from the BOCES program and would instead conduct its own program. Similarly, the Red Hook Central School District notified BOCES that it would withdraw its educable mentally retarded students from the BOCES program and include the class that Robinson taught as part of its own district program. Both these changes were effective at the start of the 1982-1983 school year. BOCES deemed these actions “takeovers” of programs pursuant to section 3014-b of the Education Law. By separate letters dated May 14, 1982, BOCES advised Gill that she would be a teacher in the Wappingers Central School District and advised Robinson that she would be a teacher in the Red Hook Central School District, both effective September 1, 1982. Gill and Robinson were informed that they would maintain the same tenure status as they had at BOCES and that “[f]or salary, sick leave, and seniority purposes, the length of service credited to [them] at BOCES will be credited to you as employment time in” their respective school districts. Subsequently, Gill and Robinson brought this proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 seeking reinstatement, back pay, lost benefits, repayment of any out-of-pocket expenses, and any necessary payments on their behalf to the New York State Teachers Retirement System. Special Term granted summary judgment and dismissed the petition, holding that section 3014-b of the Education Law indicates a clear legislative intent that such transfers should be automatic in a “takeover” situation such as the one at bar. We disagree and, accordingly, we reverse the judgment of Special Term and reinstate the petition. The facts of this case are virtually identical to those of Koch v Putnam-Northern Westchester Bd. of Coop. Educational Servs. (98 AD2d 311). In that case, we rejected the Putnam-Northern Westchester BOCES’ argument that, when school districts take over a program formerly provided by BOCES, the BOCES teachers who are actually employed in that program are automatically dismissed by BOCES and transferred to the employment of the takeover district by operation of law. Rather, we held that the seniority protections