Judges: Corcoran
Filed Date: 10/7/1949
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On June 30,1947, the City of New York assumed operation of the Flathush plant of the New York Water Service Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the Corporation), a utility which supplied water to the residents of the Flathush area in the borough of Brooklyn. Shortly before that date arrangements were being made by the Corporation and the city for the transfer of employees of the Flathush plant to the city, and to that end a proposed local law was introduced in the city council which became Local Law No. 62 for the year 1947, effective August 1, 1947. It provided, in part, that “ * * * all employees, except officers, of any water works company, the operation of which, in whole or in part, is assumed by the city, who were in the employ of such water works company at the time of such assumption by the city, shall be continued in the employment of the city in similar or corresponding positions in the department of water supply, gas and electricity and department of finance of such city ”, and that “ The positions so held by such employees shall be in the non-competitive class.”
Continuity of employment under this local law as to persons who were employees of the Corporation at the Flathush plant on the date of assumption of operation by the city was mandatory, except that the municipal civil service commission could exclude a person who was not of good character. While this legislation was pending in the city council, the municipal civil service commission adopted a resolution substantially to the same effect. It related to those employees which the city “ elects ” to continue in employment. Such election under the local law which the resolution was to implement could only refer to an election based on the character of the employee. Clearly, the commission could not, by resolution, make continuity of employment discretionary when such continuity was made mandatory by local law.
Although Local Law No. 62 did not become effective until August 1, 1947, the city in anticipation of its enactment began to make arrangements for the transfer of employees prior to the assumption of operation of the Flatbush plant. On or about June 13, 1947, the commissioner of water supply, gas and electricity sent a mimeographed form letter to all the employees of the Corporation, including the petitioner.- This letter explained the proposed local law which eventually became Local Law No. 62 and the resolution of the municipal civil service commission, and stated that each of the employees of the Corporation was eligible to enter city service in the noncompetitive class. Although neither the local law nor the resolution contained a deadline with respect to the time for accepting the offer of city employment, the commissioner in the letter asked the petitioner to signify his willingness to accept employment by June 18,1947.
The petitioner did not specifically respond to the commissioner’s request and the respondents contend that the petitioner was guilty of laches and that the relief which he requests should be denied on this ground. This claim is groundless. The court appreciates that in the transition of operations it was necessary to have the Corporation’s employees act promptly in accepting city employment. Only by continuity of employment could the residents be assured of adéquate and uninterrupted water service, a feature which is recognized in the finding in the local law and the recital clauses in the commission’s resolution. A brief examination of the causes of the delay in the petitioner’s case, however, demonstrates that he was not guilty of laches.
At about the time that the petitioner received the letter from the commissioner, he was requested to assist the Corporation in winding up the affairs of the Flatbush plant. The city officials acquiesced in his doing this work (as they did in the case of some other employees), and gave the petitioner a leave of
In my opinion, the petitioner was duly appointed on August 21, 1947, when the assistant to the commissioner had him execute the oath and acceptance of employment; and advised him that he would be assigned to work shortly. The commissioner himself approved of what his assistant had done. The commissioner knew that his assistant had had the petitioner take the oath and sign the acceptance of the offer of employment when he put ' “ O.K.” on the memorandum. The granting of several formal leaves of absence by the city is further evidence that the city officials treated the petitioner as an employee. With this record, it is difficult to follow the city’s contention that the petitioner was guilty of laches.
The petitioner, however, is not entitled to receive salary retroactive to August 21, 1947. Section 23 of the Civil Service Law, on which the petitioner relies for retroactive salary, is predicated on reinstatement after a wrongful removal. The type of employment in this case where the city acquires ownership and control of a private enterprise, and seeks to achieve continuity of employ
The award of back pay, moreover, would appear to violate the provisions of the State Constitution prohibiting gifts of public money or property (art. VIII, § 1; art. IX, § 10). (See Matter of Mullane v. McKenzie, 269 N. Y. 369; Matter of Rindone v. Marsh, 183 Misc. 10.)
The Statute of Limitations is no bar to the proceeding, since the respondent did not take final action on the petitioner’s repeated demands until March 9,1949.
Settle order.