DocketNumber: No. 77 Civ. 4478 (GLG)
Judges: Goettel
Filed Date: 11/11/1977
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Plaintiff is a statewide association representing public employees in the State of New York. It brings this motion for a preliminary injunction on behalf of four local chapters of the state association under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Defendants are members of the New York Public Employment Relations Board (“PERB”), which is charged with enforcing New York’s Taylor Law prohibiting strikes by public employees and providing sanctions for violations of its provisions. Plaintiffs assert that one of the statutory sanctions, the suspension of a union’s privilege to have dues payments from members “checked off” from their paychecks, is unconstitutional because its application discriminates between unions under the jurisdiction of the state PERB and unions operating under local government jurisdictions.
Three of the four local chapters who are plaintiffs are operating under privilege suspensions imposed by the PERB. The fourth claims that a suspension of its dues checkoff privilege is imminent.
New York’s Taylor Law
The Taylor Law, Article 14 of the New York Civil Service Law, §§ 200-14 (McKinney 1973), governs public employees in the state. The statute recognizes the right of public employees to organize and to bargain collectively, and it creates the PERB to “assist in resolving disputes between public employees and public employers.” Id. § 200(d); see id. § 205. The PERB is given the power to resolve disputes concerning the representation status of employee organizations, to conduct studies of public employees’ problems, to establish panels of mediators to assist in dispute resolution, and to supervise generally the relations between the employees and their governmental employers. Id. § 205. Section 208.1(b) of the Act grants to certified or recognized employee organizations the right to have membership dues regularly deducted from their members’ paychecks.
The regulatory core of the act is Section 210.1, which prohibits strikes by public employees. Section 211 gives the chief officer of the specific governmental employer involved the power to apply to the Supreme Court for injunctive relief to prevent any strike or work stoppage in violation of Section 210.1. Section 211 requires further application to the state court for an order of criminal contempt under the Judiciary Law if the injunction is disobeyed. In Section 210.3(f), the Act also gives the PERB the power to suspend the dues check-off privileges of any employee organization which it determines, after administrative hearing, to have violated Section 210.1.
Section 212 allows for an alternative to this statewide scheme of administrative supervision and enforcement. Section 212.1 permits local governmental employers to create their own administrative boards to implement the Taylor Law in their jurisdictions. These local boards are known colloquially as “mini-PERBs,” and thirteen local jurisdictions have taken advantage of their power to establish such local administrative machinery.
Section 212.2 provides specifically for New York City and, although it too requires substantial equivalency, it does not require submission of the city’s local provisions for prior PERB approval. It does permit the New York City provisions to be invalidated, however, by the PERB suing for a declaratory judgment finding that city procedures are not substantially equivalent to those in the state statute.
“Where an employee organization . . . wilfully disobeys a lawful mandate of a court of record, or wilfully offers resistance to such lawful mandate, in a case involving or growing out of a strike in violation of . the civil service
law, the punishment for each day that such contempt persists may be by a fine fixed in the discretion of the court. In the case of a government exempt from certain provisions of article fourteen of the civil service law, pursuant to section two hundred twelve of such law [miniPERB governments,] the court may, as an additional punishment for such contempt, order forfeiture of the rights granted pursuant to the provisions of paragraph (b) of subdivision one of section two hundred eight of such law [the right to dues check-off privileges] . . .”
Thus, if a contempt proceeding is initiated by a particular local governmental employer, the employer may request the court to impose a check-off suspension, and the court has the discretion to do so. This procedure is different from that followed by the PERB, which must proceed administratively to impose the penalty on an employee organization found to have violated the Act.
The record before Judge Frankel in the Buffalo Teachers case indicated that this contempt mechanism was the only way in which an organization under the jurisdiction of a mini-PERB could be punished with a dues check-off suspension.
“may have their dues deduction privileges suspended only by a court, and then only as punishment for contempt of the court’s order. Eighteen strikes by such employee organizations have occurred since the advent of the Taylor Law, and in no case has there been any suspension . . . .”
In re United Federation of Teachers, Local 2, 9 PERB ¶ 3071, at 3129 n. 2 (1976).
The record before this Court, however, evidences that this statement is simply incorrect, not only in its conclusion about the law, but also in its historical statistical summary. Under the substantial equivalency standard, all mini-PERBs are required by the PERB to have the capability to impose the suspension sanction through an administrative proceeding like that used by the PERB. The mini-PERBs, like the state PERB, are directed to institute suspension proceedings when it appears that a violation of the Act has occurred. See N.Y.Civ.Serv.Law § 210.3(b)-(f). The record before Judge Frankel was therefore erroneous. The mini-PERBs are not required to go to court to impose the suspension penalty; rather, they have the same power as the PERB to conduct administrative hearings and impose the sanction through that vehicle.
The provisions in Section 212.2 of the Taylor Law relating to New York City are different from both those governing the PERB and mini-PERBs. The city is the only locality that is not required to seek prior PERB approval of its Taylor Law enactments, although even New York City’s provisions are required to be substantially equivalent to the state scheme. The city’s Office of Collective Bargaining, unlike the PERB or mini-PERBs, is a tripartite panel composed of union members, government representatives and civilian members. The Board does not have the power to suspend the check-off privileges of a city public employee organization, but must rely on a court to do so in the contempt proceeding authorized by Section 751 of the Judiciary Law. See New York City Administrative Code, ch. 54, §§ 1173-1.0 to -13.0 (1975). Section 212.2 of the Taylor Law authorizes the New York City provisions to remain in effect until the PERB brings a declaratory judgment action in state court to invalidate them. Only a court may do this, after finding that the city procedures are not substantially equivalent to the state statutory scheme.
Before Judge Frankel the civil service union argued, on an inaccurate factual basis, that the Taylor Law unconstitutionally discriminated against employee organizations under the PERB’s jurisdiction, since the suspension penalty could be imposed against them administratively, while a suspension against a mini-PERB union could be granted only in the discretion of a court. Plaintiffs here reassert that claim of discrimination, but it is clear that now that the real nature of the statutory scheme has been presented, their claim must be evaluated in a new light.
The Equal Protection Challenge
Although there was some argument to the contrary in the Buffalo Teachers
Section 212 of the Taylor Law creates two classifications distinct from the state provisions for the PERB — one for the local jurisdictions that establish mini-PERBs and another for New York City. Plaintiffs, in basing their challenge on the Buffalo Teachers holding, assert that the difference between the PERB and mini-PERB procedures renders the scheme unconstitutionally discriminatory.
The only difference between the PERB and mini-PERB procedures, however, is that the mini-PERB has the option to proceed either administratively or judicially to effect the sanction of suspension. As Judge Frankel pointed out, the essential difference between these two alternatives is the standard under which the suspension is imposed. Under local provisions parallel to Section 210.3(f) of the Act, the mini-PERB “shall” suspend the dues privileges of a union found to have violated the Act, and under Section 751.2 of the Judiciary Law, the court “may” impose the penalty. Nonetheless, it is clear that the mini-PERBs, in order to meet the substantial equivalency test, must have the authority to impose the penalty without the aid of a judicial proceeding, just as the state PERB does.
As a result, the only difference in authority between the PERB and the mini-PERB is that a mini-PERB may limit its power to exclude those cases in which a contempt proceeding has been instituted and has reached a judgment on the merits. See, e.g., In re Town of Rye, PERB docket no. S-0055 (April 3, 1968) (recommending such a limitation in the local enactment).
The limitation of the power to impose the suspension penalty is nothing more than a recognition of the principle of res judicata as it relates to a court’s determination on whether to impose the penalty. As stated in a PERB recommendation to a local government, the limitation is suggested in order to avoid the “possible imposition of a double penalty.” Id. at 2. Because the
The scheme, then, is not one in which only courts may impose the penalty on unions under mini-PERB jurisdiction. The mini-PERBs, just like the PERB, have the primary responsibility to take action to enforce the penalty; only when a court has already determined the issue is a miniPERB precluded from taking such action. The distinction between the procedures seems to be one without effective legal difference. Moreover, whatever difference does exist is clearly rationally related to a legitimate state purpose.
Although the legislative history of the Act is sparse, it is clear that the general purpose of permitting the decentralization of public labor administration is based on a belief that “local political units are often in the best position to understand and deal with the problems affecting their employees . . . .” N.Y. State Legislative Annual (273-74 (1967) (Governor’s memorandum issued upon enactment of the Taylor Law). This purpose led to a flexibility in the statutory scheme allowing for the creation of mini-PERBs, and allowing for local officials to consolidate their pursuits of dues privilege suspensions with contempt proceedings under Judiciary Law Section 751. It is apparent that the circumstances which could give rise to an injunction will not exist in all cases, especially when brief strikes or stoppages occur. When an injunction is obtained and then violated, however, the mini-PERB may pursue all its remedies in the court proceeding. This limited option given to mini-PERBs must be viewed as an essential element to provide the local flexibility desired.
Moreover, the difference in treatment, if it can be viewed as one, is not an accident of geography or the result of legislative caprice. The differing scheme arises only if a local government decides to establish local machinery for the supervision of public labor disputes. This exercise of local initiative is encouraged by the Taylor Law in an effort to promote more sensitive governmental responses to the particular problems of local public employees. Giving the miniPERBs the limited option to pursue all the available remedies against a union in violation of the Act through a contempt action is one way in which the Act attempts to allow local administrators, who no doubt do not enjoy the resources of the PERB, an extra degree of flexibility. Certainly, this option cannot be viewed as “wholly irrelevant to the achievement of the State’s objective” of increased local discretion. McGowan v. Maryland, 366 U.S. 420, 425, 81 S.Ct. 1101, 1105, 6 L.Ed.2d 393 (1961).
Plaintiffs cite statistics which they assert support the conclusion of unequal treatment of PERB-supervised unions as opposed to those within mini-PERB jurisdictions. Specifically, it appears that ten work stoppages have occurred within mini-PERB jurisdictions outside of the City of New York. In those ten instances, three resulted in suspensions imposed by mini-PERBs. (Defendants assert that three of these stoppages did not involve unions, and a fourth was a “wildcat” strike for which a union could not be held responsible. Consequently, suspensions were imposed in half the applicable instances.)
Plaintiffs also cite statements by the PERB itself that “the administrative machinery provided by the law does not insure a standard of even-handedness in the imposition of the statutory penalty.” In re United Federation of Teachers, Local 2, supra. The Board’s opinion on the overall fairness or effectiveness of the law, however, is a policy decision not specifically relevant to the question of constitutionality. Similarly, the Court’s opinion of the wisdom of the law is not relevant to a principled determination of the constitutional issue:
“When local economic regulation is challenged solely as violating the Equal Protection Clause, this Court consistently defers to legislative determination as to the desirability of particular statutory discriminations. See, e.g., Lehnhausen v. Lake Shore Auto Parts Co., 410 U.S. 356, 93 S.Ct. 1001, 35 L.Ed.2d 351 (1973) . . . States are accorded wide latitude in the regulation of their local economies under the police powers, and rational distinctions may be made with substantially less than mathematical exactitude. .
In short, the judiciary may not sit as a superlegislature to judge the wisdom or desirability of legislative policy determinations made in areas that neither affect fundamental rights nor proceed along suspect lines . . . .”
City of New Orleans v. Dukes, 427 U.S. 297, 303, 96 S.Ct. 2513, 2517, 49 L.Ed.2d 511 (1976) (citation omitted). For these reasons, this aspect of the Taylor Law’s statutory scheme is not a violation of the Equal Protection Clause.
Similarly, the difference in treatment of New York City municipal workers clearly bears a rational relationship to the legitimate state interest involved. Municipal employees in New York City are governed by the city’s Office of Collective Bargaining, pursuant to New York City Administrative Code, ch. 54 (1975). The Taylor Law, in Section 212.2, specifically permits a significant degree of independence on the part of city government in labor relations. The Collective Bargaining Board does not have the power to impose the suspension penalty like the PERB and mini-PERBs, but must rely on a court to do so in a contempt action. The legislative rationale for viewing the city as unique is portrayed in a subsequent legislative report:
“The provisions in the Taylor Law permitting a local system in New York City reflected legislative recognition that public employee relations for New York City employees had developed more rapidly and in a somewhat different pattern than elsewhere in the state. It apparently was concluded that some degree of flexibility was appropriate in New York City rather than the imposition of a structure which might have disrupted the organizations and relationships developed over a substantial period of time.”
Report of the Joint Legislative Committee on the Public Employees Fair Employment Act, N.Y. Legislative Document No. 25, at 20 (1972). Defendants also assert here that the reason that the city Board was not given the power to impose the dues privilege suspension was the presence of union representatives on the Board. Defendants state that giving the Board the power to impose the sanction in these circumstances would have been “inappropriate.” While there is a temptation to be cynical concerning the reasons for giving New York City civil service unions preferred treatment, there is, concededly, a substantial difference between the realities of public labor problems there and in the rest of the state.
In any case, it appears that classifying New York City municipal employees differently from public employees through
It is apparent that plaintiffs have not demonstrated a likelihood that their constitutional claim is a valid one. The probability of success is, of course, a required showing on a motion for preliminary relief. Triebwasser & Katz v. American Telephone & Telegraph Co., 535 F.2d 1356 (2d Cir. 1976); Sonesta International Hotels Corp. v. Wellington Associates, 483 F.2d 247 (2d Cir. 1973). See generally Mulligan, Preliminary Injunction in the Second Circuit, 43 Brooklyn L. Rev. 831 (1977). Since the plaintiffs have not sustained this burden, the other factors normally weighed upon such a motion need not be considered. Accordingly, the motion for a preliminary injunction is hereby denied.
SO ORDERED.
. The locals in Columbia County, Orange County and Dutchess County have received suspension orders from the PERB. The first two of these suspensions have commenced and are to last for one year each. The third suspension is on appeal before the Appellate Division and has not yet commenced. The Geneva County Unit has not been finally penalized, but the PERB hearing officer has recommended that such a penalty be imposed.
. Based on material submitted to the Court by defendants, it appears that the following local governmental bodies have established miniPERBs: Nassau County, Westchester County, Tomkins County, City School District of Syracuse, Village of Valley Stream, Town of Hemp-stead, City of Syracuse, Town of Oyster Bay, Suffolk County, Onondaga County, Town of Rye, Delaware County and the Town of North Castle. Subsequent citations to the local laws are drawn from defendants’ submissions.
. See 435 F.Supp. at 1100-01:
“Employee organizations which have violated the no-strike requirement are disciplined in one of two ways, depending on whether or not they operate within the jurisdiction of a local governmental unit which has assumed responsibility for labor relations with its employees ....
The authority to withdraw the dues check-off privilege from [a mini-PERB] organization is vested in the first instance in the State courts.”
. The local provisions establishing mini-PERBs are patterned after § 210.3(b) — (f) of the Taylor Law. See, e. g., Town of Oyster Bay, local law no. 6, Public Employees’ Fair Employment Law, § 11.3 (1967); Westchester Act No. 84-1967, § 10(c), as amended, Act No. 1-1968.
. The provisions of Nassau County, Town of Rye, Delaware County and the Town of North Castle contain such a restriction. See note 9 infra.
. See Caso v. Nassau Co. Patrolmen’s Benevolent Ass’n, (Nassau Co. PERB 1976); In re Local 342, Long Island Service Employees Union, No. 109 (Village of Valley Stream PERB 1974); In re Faculty Senate of Nassau Community College, No. D-0001 (Nassau Co. PERB 1972).
. Indeed, Judge Frankel must have realized the different factual basis for this action since he refused to accept assignment of this case as one related to his Buffalo Teachers case.
. Defendants do not argue against the Court reaching the merits of plaintiffs’ challenge. As Judge Frankel pointed out in Buffalo Teachers, even if the administrative proceedings were pending against all the plaintiffs, the ability of the PERB to adjudicate plaintiffs’ constitutional claims is not apparent, and' the abstention doctrine of Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37, 91 S.Ct. 746, 27 L.Ed.2d 669 (1971), is not applicable. Gibson v. Berryhill, 411 U.S. 564, 93 S.Ct. 1689, 36 L.Ed.2d 488 (1973). The article 78 proceeding used in New York to review PERB decisions also apparently is not appropriate for a constitutional attack on the statute. See Kovarsky v. Housing & Dev. Admin., 31 N.Y.2d 184, 335 N.Y.S.2d 383, 286 N.E.2d 882 (1972). Defendants also do not assert exhaustion of
. Under § 210.3(c) of the state Act, when it appears that a violation has occurred,
“the chief legal officer of the government involved, or the [PERB] on its own motion, shall forthwith institute proceedings before the [PERB] to determine whether such employee organization has violated the provisions of subdivision one of this section.”
The PERB recommends that local provisions be worded identically to § 210.3(c), with the following clause added:
“. . . unless an application to punish for contempt has been made pursuant to the last sentence of section 211 of the Civil Service Law and such application terminates in a judgment on the merits.”
. The three stoppages in which suspensions were not imposed were, we are told, very brief and involved only a day or so.
. Defendants state in their brief that the PERB has recently notified the Mayor of the City of New York that the PERB intends to bring a declaratory judgment action, seeking a declaration that the New York City procedures are not substantially equivalent to the Taylor Law provisions.