A blog edited by Arbitrator Mitchell Rubinstein which is designed to inform employers, unions, individuals, and lawyers about my practice and about recent developments in the field of labor and employment law. Mitchell Rubinstein is a labor arbitrator and handles business and commercial arbitrations before FINRA.
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
Civil Service Law Sec. 75 Decision-Employee Cannot Be Found Guilty of Uncharged Conduct
Nitti v. County of Tioga, ____A.D.3d____, 2017 NY Slip Op 02868 (3d Dep't. April 13, 2017), is an interesting Civil Service Law Section 75 decision which addresses important legal principals. Specifically, in order to discipline a public employee with civil service protection, the public employer must bring the employee up on specific charges and the hearing is limited to those specific charges. Stated another way, an employee cannot be found guilty of uncharged conduct. Additionally, even if the employee is found guilty of the charged misconduct, the penalty must be proportionate to the offense. If it is shocking to the courts sense of fairness it can be vacated.
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