Citation Numbers: 153 A.D.2d 270, 551 N.Y.S.2d 378, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 902
Judges: Casey, Levine
Filed Date: 2/1/1990
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/31/2024
OPINION OF THE COURT
Petitioners, Christopher D. Judd and Michael F. Mergler, began their service as State Troopers on February 16, 1970 and remained in that status beyond April 1, 1984. Petitioners both incurred disabling injuries prior to their completion of 14 years of service as troopers, and, after exhausting periods of paid sick-leave status, were placed on sick leave without pay for periods of approximately seven weeks before returning to active duty. Each claimed entitlement to receive the statutory 14-year longevity increment of $1,112 on April 1, 1984, pursuant to the provisions of Executive Law former § 216-b (3) (c) (1) (as added by L 1982, ch 462, § 3) then in effect. That section granted such an increment when a trooper "has, by or after April first, nineteen hundred eighty-two, completed [14] years of service”, payable "on the first day of the fiscal year following completion of such service ” (emphasis supplied).
Respondent Comptroller disallowed payment of the increment to petitioners on April 1, 1984 on the ground that they had not yet completed 14 years of service because, in one of such years, their service had been interrupted by being on leave without pay. The Comptroller explained that his office has "always * * * interpreted” the completion-of-years-of-ser
After unsuccessfully pursuing their remedies under the grievance machinery provided in the State Troopers’ collective bargaining agreement, petitioners initiated this proceeding under CPLR article 78 to challenge the Comptroller’s determination. Supreme Court ruled in their favor, and respondents now appeal.
Respondents’ argument for reversal is, essentially, that the Comptroller has consistently followed a uniform interpretation and application of the various longevity salary increment statutes for State employees to deny service credit for any period in which the employee was on unpaid leave (citing principally, Civil Service Law § 130 [3] [c]). Respondents contend that uniform construction of the longevity increment statutes is desirable, fair and promotes equitable treatment of all persons in State service. Hence, they argue that, since a parallel construction of the completion of service requirement of Executive Law former § 216-b (3) (c) (1) does not conflict with any express provision of the State Troopers’ longevity increment statute, the Comptroller’s interpretation is reasonable and should be upheld. This remains so, according to respondents, despite the uncontested fact that petitioners were never actually separated from State Police service and, indeed, remained fully subject to the authority of their superiors while on unpaid leave.
In view of the manner in which respondents have posed their argument for reversal, i.e., that the Comptroller’s interpretation of the governing statute is reasonable and, therefore, must be upheld even if the statute is reasonably subject to a different construction, the preliminary question before this court is whether this is a case where the administrative agency’s interpretation of the statute is entitled to special weight or deference (see, e.g., Matter of Howard v Wyman, 28 NY2d 434). Without attempting an exhaustive delineation of all of the instances where judicial deference should be accorded an 'agency’s interpretation of a statute, they would principally include the following: (1) where the statute employs technical terms within the agency’s expertise, so that interpretation or application of legislative language entails "understanding of underlying operational practices or * * * evaluation of factual data and inferences to be drawn therefrom” (Kurcsics v Merchants Mut. Ins. Co., 49 NY2d 451, 459); (2) where the general statutory language and legislative his
None of the foregoing criteria or principles applies here to require any significant deference to the Comptroller’s interpretation of the completion of service provision of Executive Law former § 216-b (3) (c) (1). There is nothing in the use of the words or in their statutory context to suggest that the statutory phrase, referring to completion of years of service, was employed in any technical sense apart from its common usage (see, Matter of Occidental Chem. Corp. v Public Serv. Commn., 114 AD2d 149, 153-154, lv denied 68 NY2d 608). Likewise, neither the statute nor its legislative history evinces any legislative intent to delegate broad policy-making or interpretive authority upon the Comptroller (see, supra, at 153). Indeed, the legislative history discloses that the statute under consideration, as well as many of its predecessors, was enacted to implement a specific collective bargaining agree
From our analysis, we conclude that Supreme Court correctly ruled that the Comptroller’s interpretation of the completion-of-years-of-service requirement of Executive Law former § 216-b (3) (c) (1) was erroneous. Literally, since petitioners were never separated from State Police service as a result of their unpaid leaves, they qualified for the statutory longevity increment on April 1, 1984, "the first day of the fiscal year following completion of [14 years] service” (Executive Law former § 216-b [3] [c] [1]). The Comptroller based his incorporation of the additional requirement that each qualifying year’s service must be uninterrupted, without credit for other than paid service, upon the provisions of Civil Service Law § 130 (3) (b). Those provisions, however, expressly are for the purpose of defining "continuous service” (§ 130 [3] [c]), a requirement for qualifying certain classes of State employees (not State Troopers) for longevity increments as specified elsewhere in Civil Service Law § 130 (3). Respondents have not shown, by reference to legislative history or otherwise, why restrictions applicable to the requirement of continuous service for entitlement to longevity increments under Civil Service Law § 130 (3) should be implied in the requirement merely of completion of years of service for entitlement of State Troopers to longevity increments under Executive Law former § 216-b (3) (c) (1).
The inference that the foregoing distinctions in the statu
The conclusion that the differences in statutory language was intentional becomes virtually inescapable when the evolution of State Police longevity increment legislation under Executive Law § 216-b is reviewed. In its initial form, as enacted in 1962 (Executive Law former § 216-b [3], as added by L 1962, ch 212, § 5), all members of the State Police from State Trooper to Assistant Superintendent were granted longevity increments after attaining maximum salary levels, but conditioned on having "rendered continuous [years of] service” for the requisite additional years. In 1969, however, Executive Law former § 216-b (3) was amended (L 1969, ch 335, § 5). The amendment retained the continuous service requirement for longevity increments entitlement as to members "other than a trooper” (Executive Law former § 216-b [3] [a], as amended by L 1969, ch 335, § 5). For a trooper, however, the same subdivision granted the first longevity increment merely when the trooper "has completed at least ten years of service as a trooper by April first, nineteen hundred sixty-nine, or at least nine years of service as a trooper by or after April first, nineteen hundred seventy” (former § 216-b [3] [a]). These distinctions were carried forward in each subsequent version of Executive Law § 216-b, through to the provision under consideration here.
Under familiar canons of construction, the foregoing difference in statutory language in the same statute should be given effect (see, Matter of Albano v Kirby, 36 NY2d 526, 530; McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 1, Statutes § 236). Also, the inclusion of the continuous service requirement for some members of the State Police other than troopers under Execu