Citation Numbers: 124 A.D.2d 460, 507 N.Y.S.2d 775, 1986 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 61439
Judges: Casey, Yesawich
Filed Date: 10/30/1986
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/28/2024
On this appeal, claimant contends that the Board’s September 1985 determination was erroneous as a matter of law since the Board failed to apply Labor Law § 600 (7) as interpreted by this court in decisions subsequent to the original October 1980 determination (citing Matter of Peat [Roberts], 95 AD2d 884; Matter of Cullen [Roberts], 93 AD2d 907).
For the following reasons, the decision should be reversed. Labor Law § 600 incorporates the provisions of 26 USC § 3304, which provides that the States are to offset work-related pension income from unemployment benefits (26 USC § 3304 [a] [15]). Employers who are subject to the Federal Unemployment Tax Law receive a tax credit if the State law is certified by the United States Secretary of Labor to be in substantial compliance with 26 USC § 3304. During the period when claimant was eligible for unemployment benefits (see, e.g., Labor Law § 590 [3], [4]; §§ 523, 521), 26 USC § 3304 and Labor Law § 600 were amended to narrow the grounds upon which unemployment benefits could be reduced due to a claimant’s receipt of Social Security benefits (see, 26 USC § 3304, as amended by Pub L 94-566; Labor Law § 600, as amended by L 1980, ch 895, §§ 1-3). We authoritatively construed those provisions not to require a reduction in unemployment benefits under circumstances, such as are presented here, where an individual receives Social Security benefits as a result of employment with employer A, subsequently com
The unequivocal language of Labor Law § 600 (as amended by L 1980, ch 895), is to the effect that in New York there shall be a limitation on the reduction of unemployment benefits which takes "into account the claimant’s contributions” to a pension or retirement fund "to the maximum extent permitted under the federal unemployment tax act” (Labor Law § 600 [7] [b] [emphasis supplied]). Clearly, New York statutory policy was to offset unemployment benefits only to the extent mandated by Federal law (see also, Legislative mem, 1981 McKinney’s Session Laws of NY [L 1980, ch 895], at 2378-2379). Consequently, applying the law as it now seems to have been during claimant’s period of eligibility, she should not have been required to suffer an offset of her unemployment benefits as a result of her receipt of Social Security benefits.
Decision reversed, with costs, and matter remitted to the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board for a redetermination of unemployment insurance benefits in accordance with the decision herein. Mahoney, P. J., Weiss and Levine, JJ., concur.