Court Opinion

ID: 5833244
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-12 22:30:59.686067+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:43:30.994333
License: Public Domain

OPINION OF THE COURT
Shapiro, J.
In a proceeding pursuant to CPLR article 78 the New York State and the Nassau County Administrative Judges appeal from a judgment directing them to restore petitioner to the position of confidential attendant and to pay him the appropriate salary retroactive to January 1, 1978, less the amount of earnings, if any, he received from that date. We reverse and dismiss the proceeding.
THE FACTS AND THE APPLICABLE STATUTES
In February, 1975 petitioner was appointed as a confidential attendant (a noncompetitive and confidential position) to Honorable Bertram Harnett, then a Justice of the Supreme Court, Nassau County. The appointment was made pursuant to former section 28 of article VI of the State Constitution and section 168 of the Judiciary Law, which, inter alia, respectively provided:
Constitution (art VI, § 28): "The authority and responsibility for the administrative supervision of the unified court system for the state shall be vested in the administrative board of the judicial conference.”
Judiciary Law (§ 168): "Power of supreme court justices in Kings, Queens, Richmond, Nassau and Suffolk counties to appoint court officers. [T]he justice or justices of the supreme court residing in Nassau county, or a majority of them; the justice or justices of the supreme court residing in Suffolk county, or a majority of them, may appoint, and at pleasure remove all clerks, attendants, messengers, and court officers in the supreme court in said counties, and fix their compensation except where such compensation is fixed by law.”
In January, 1977, Mr. Justice Harnett resigned. Petitioner nevertheless was retained on the court payroll in accordance with the provisions of former section 222 of the Judiciary Law (as amd by L 1969, ch 742), which provided: "Wherever, under the provisions of any law heretofore adopted, a judge or justice of the unified court system is authorized to appoint personal assistants to render to him legal or clerical services, the power of such judge or justice to make such appointments shall continue, notwithstanding the provisions of section two *714hundred fourteen of this chapter, in accordance with the standards and administrative policies adopted by the administrative board pursuant to the provisions of section two hundred twelve of this chapter and subject to the final determination of budgets by appropriating bodies as provided in section twenty-nine of article six of the constitution. Should a judge or justice die, or cease to hold office, the personal assistants thus appointed by him shall continue in office until an appointment shall be made under this section by the judge or justice elected, or appointed to ñll such vacancy. The judge or justices of the court, or a majority of them shall, until the appointment or election of such succeeding judge or justice, regulate, determine and ñx the duties of any such personal assistant thus continued in office.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The foregoing section of the Judiciary Law was repealed (L 1978, ch 156, § 6, eff May 19, 1978) and replaced by what is now section 36 of the same law which reads:
"Personal assistants to judges and justices.
"1. Notwithstanding any other provisions of law, each justice of the supreme court may appoint and at pleasure remove one law clerk and one secretary, subject to standards and administrative policies promulgated pursuant to section twenty-eight of article six of the constitution.
"2. Should a judge or justice of the unified court system cease to hold office for any reason other than expiration of his term, his personal assistants shall continue in office until a successor is appointed or elected to ñll such vacancy. Until such vacancy is filled, the chief administrator of the courts shall determine the functions to be performed by such personal assistants.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Thus, on April 1, 1977 petitioner was still listed on the State payroll as a confidential attendant, although no appointment had been made to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Mr. Justice Harnett. On April 26, 1977 Eli Wager was sworn in as a Supreme Court Justice to fill the position vacated by Mr. Justice Harnett and the petitioner was assigned to serve him as his confidential attendant. It is not evident from the record who made that assignment. However, that assignment was probably made, formally or informally, in accordance with the revision (at a meeting of the Administrative Board held on February 18, 1977) of subdivision (a) of section 20.3 of the board’s rules (22 NYCRR 20.3), effective April 1,1977. Section 20.3 provides:
*715"Requirements for appointment of personal assistants to justices and judges.
"(a) Each justice of the Supreme Court may appoint and at pleasure remove one law secretary to justice and one secretary to justice. A law secretary to justice appointed pursuant to this section must meet the requirements set forth in subdivision (b) of this section. No justice of the Supreme Court may appoint or continue to employ any other personal assistant to render legal or clerical services unless approved by the administrative board. ” (Emphasis supplied.)
Petitioner’s "assignment” to Mr. Justice Wager proved to be short-lived. The latter was defeated for election in November, 1977 and he left the bench on December 31, 1977. On January 3, 1978 the Chief Clerk of the court, purportedly at the direction of appellant Mr. Justice Widlitz, Administrative Judge of Nassau County, advised petitioner that his services were terminated as of December 31, 1977.
In an affidavit opposing petitioner’s article 78 proceeding for reinstatement, appellant Richard J. Bartlett, then New York State Administrative Judge, correctly stated that under the rule of the Administrative Board quoted above (22 NYCRR 20.3), no Justice of the Supreme Court had the right to appoint or continue to employ a confidential attendant without the approval of the Administrative Board, and that the board had approved the continuation in employment of all incumbent confidential attendants as of April 1, 1977 as reflected by the minutes of a board meeting, held on February 18, 1977. Appellant Bartlett further declared in his affidavit that it was "the intent of the Administrative Board [at its February 18, 1977 meeting] to phase out the position of Confidential Attendant in the unified court system and not to approve any additional appointments to that position.” (Emphasis supplied.)
THE LAW
The position of confidential attendant to a Justice of the Supreme Court has never been protected by tenure. A confidential attendant is employed "at pleasure” of the Justice who appointed him, and that Justice can "at pleasure” remove him (Judiciary Law, § 168). If the Justice were to "die, or cease to hold office”, the attendant’s position was to continue only until the succeeding Justice decided who was to be his attend*716ant (Judiciary Law, former § 222). That law indicated a compassionate concern for the nontenured attendant and gave him the opportunity to obtain a new lease of employment life since the succeeding Justice, "at pleasure”, could decide that his services should be continued as his attendant. The intent of the statute was that the attendant’s continuation on the payroll should not suffer any hiatus if he were ultimately appointed by the new Justice, nor the shock of sudden unemployment for a reason beyond his control, i.e., the death or cessation of office of the Justice who had appointed him.
Therefore, petitioner’s employment did not cease when Mr. Justice Harnett resigned in January, 1977. In the ordinary course his continued employment depended upon whether it was the succeeding Justice’s "pleasure” to retain him. One thing was certain —his employment continued until the investiture of the succeeding Justice. One thing was uncertain — whether the succeeding Justice would then choose to appoint him.
As of April 1, 1977, no Justice had been appointed to succeed Mr. Justice Harnett, so petitioner was still employed pursuant to the hiatus protection of section 222 of the Judiciary Law. Thus after April 26, when the Honorable Eli Wager was appointed to fill the vacancy created by Mr. Justice Harnett’s resignation, petitioner’s continued employment in the ordinary course, would depend upon whether Mr. Justice Wager (or any other Justice) would choose to appoint him as his confidential attendant. But the course was not ordinary for, as noted, the Administrative Board of the Judicial Conference, on February 18, 1977, adopted a revision of subdivision (a) of section 20.3 of its rules, effective April 1, 1977 (22 NYCRR 20.3; now Rules of the Chief Judge), which in relevant part stated: "No justice of the Supreme Court may appoint or continue to employ any * * * personal assistant [other than one law secretary and one secretary] * * * unless approved by the administrative board”.1
Therefore, Mr. Justice Wager, on his investiture on April *71726, 1977, could not appoint anyone to be his confidential attendant unless he obtained the approval of the board.2
The essence of petitioner’s position is that a literal reading of former section 222 of the Judiciary Law mandates his continued employment until the successor Justice makes a new appointment, and that since neither Mr. Justice Wager nor the latter’s successor could make a new appointment, petitioner’s employment continued. Thus, the happenstance of the board’s amendment of subdivision (a) of section 20.3 of its rules (eff April 1, 1977) which essentially eliminated the power of a new Justice to appoint a confidential attendant, has been serendipitously grasped by petitioner as a mandate for his continued employment. If petitioner is correct he has obtained a unique form of tenure based on an alleged discrepancy in the interlocking of former section 222 of the Judiciary Law with subdivision (a) of section 20.3 of the Rules of the Administrative Board.
That the Administrative Board had the power to abolish the position of confidential attendant seems to be without question (Matter of Blyn v Bartlett, 39 NY2d 349). In Blyn the court upheld the validity of a resolution of the board abolishing that position, stating (p 358) that the board had properly "exercised the power it clearly has under the Constitution and Judiciary Law of ascertaining and mandating needs and priorities - as respects court programs and personnel”. Further, stated the court (p 361): "It would thwart the overriding intent and purpose of the unified court system, however, to say that the Judges could abolish, change or alter these positions under the appointing authority. Such changes are matters of policy, in this case budget policy, clearly left to authorized centralized administration.”
The board’s unofficial "continuation of employment of all existing personal assistants to judges” (as stated in the minutes of its meeting of February 18, 1977) could properly be interpreted by it as applying only to those persons who were officially assigned to the services of a Judge. It would defy logic for the board to have continued petitioner as a floating confidential attendant while essentially denying to any incoming Justice the right to appoint one. In any event, the interpretation of the appellant Bartlett (that the board’s "saving” *718recommendation did not apply to confidential attendants who were not serving a particular Justice) is not irrational and is entitled to great weight (see Matter of Sigety v Ingraham, 29 NY2d 110, 114; Matter of Roosevelt Hosp. v New York State Labor Relations Bd., 27 NY2d 25).
Former section 222 of the Judiciary Law was enacted at a time when the right of a new Justice of the Supreme Court to appoint a confidential attendant was traditional and apparently entrenched. Since it was not then conceived that a new Justice would not have such power, it seemed not unnatural for the law to provide that a confidential attendant to the departed Justice should continue in office until he could learn whether the new Justice would appoint him.
The granting of a period of employment to a confidential attendant to continue beyond the date of investiture of the new Justice, up to the time when the latter would decide who his confidential attendant should be, may not be converted, as petitioner is seeking to do here, into an anomalous tenure based on the post-April 1, 1977 prohibition of appointment of a confidential attendant by a new Justice. It may be fairly assumed that investiture of permanent tenure was neither intended by former section 222 of the Judiciary Law nor by the February 18, 1977 amendment by the board of subdivision (a) of section 20.3 of its rules (cf. New York State Bankers Assn. v Albright, 38 NY2d 430, 436-437).
Petitioner argues that there is an inconsistency between appellant Bartlett’s statement (on the one hand) that it was "the intent of the Administrative Board [at its February 18, 1977 meeting] to phase out the position of Confidential Attendant in the unified court system and not to approve any additional appointments to that position”, and (on the other hand) the statement in the February 18, 1977 minutes that "He [Bartlett] explained that the amended rule would afford the Board the opportunity to evaluate the need for each position as vacancies occur after April 1 [1977].” I find no such inconsistency for, as I see it, the combined effect of those two statements is simply that it was to be the general policy to phase out the position of confidential attendant but to reserve the possibility for appointment in a special case where a new Justice might be in particular need of a confidential attendant (e.g., if he were blind or otherwise physically incapacitated).
Nor do I believe that it was inappropriate or improper for the board to refuse to take an "either-or” attitude towards *719confidential attendants, i.e., that it had to either abolish the position of confidential attendants for all Supreme Court Justices, or to retain them for all (future as well as incumbent) Justices. Budgetary needs could properly be met by attrition of incumbent confidential attendants. As stated in Matter of Blynn v Bartlett (39 NY2d 349, 361, supra), "[s]uch changes are matters of policy, in this case budget policy, clearly left to authorized centralized administration.” The rule promulgated by the board that new confidential attendants were not to be appointed was merely another form of a widely-accepted attrition policy long since adopted by many other divisions of government of which we take judicial notice.
The judgment which in effect gave petitioner permanent tenure as a "floating” confidential attendant should therefore be reversed and his petition should be dismissed without costs.

. The minutes show that this was recommended by Richard J. Bartlett, then the New York State Administrative Judge, who "further recommended that the Board approve the continuation in employment of all existing personal assistants”. He also "explained that the amended rule would afford the Board the opportunity to evaluate the need for each position as vacancies occur after April 1. The proposed amendments to section 20.3 were thereupon approved unanimously. The Board also approved the continuation of employment of all existing personal assistants to judges.”

. The record shows that since April 1, 1977 "no * * * incoming justice of the Supreme Court, Nassau County, has been permitted to appoint a confidential attendant.”