Weber v City of New York

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Weber v City of New York 2012 NY Slip Op 31704(U) June 25, 2012 Supreme Court, New York County Docket Number: 107840/2011 Judge: Paul G. Feinman Republished from New York State Unified Court System's E-Courts Service. Search E-Courts (http://www.nycourts.gov/ecourts) for any additional information on this case. This opinion is uncorrected and not selected for official publication. [* 1] SCANNED ON 612712012 SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK NEW YORK COUNTY m. PRESENT: - WON. PAUL 0. F E I W PART Justlce Index Number : 1 ~ ~ 4 0 1 2 0 1 1 WEBER, EDWARD vs. CITY OF NEW YORK SEQUENCE NUMBER : 001 /a MOTION DATE WlOTlONdLQ.NO. Q I ' ARTICLE 78 UNFILED JUDGMENT This judgment has not been entered by the County Clerk and notice of entry cannot be served based hereon. To obtain entry, counsel or authorired representative must appear in pman a the Judgment Clerk's Desk (Ram t 1416). . - & J.8.C. ..................................................................... XASE DISPOSED 2. CHECK AS APPROPRIATE: .............. MOTION IS: QRANTED ~ E N I E 3. CHECK IF APPROPRIATE: ................................................ 0 S ¬lTLE ORDER NON-FINAL OlSPOSlnON I. CHECK ONE: uDO NOT POST D 0ORANTED IN PART 0OTHER SUBMIT ORDER FIDUCIARY APPOINTMENT REFEREWE [* 2] Index Number: 107840/2011 Mot. Seq. No.: U -againstCITY OF NEW YORK, NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, DENNIS WALCOTT, CHANCELLOR OF NEW YORK CITY DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, Respondents. For the Pstltlonsr Glass Krakowtr LLP By: Bryan D. Olass, Esq. 1 I Penn Plaza, S'" fl. New York, NY IO00 I (212) 537-6859 DECISION, ORDER A N D JUDGMENT For the Regpondcnt: Michael A. Cardozo. Esq. Corportulon Counsel of the City of New York By: Kerl Redl McNally, Esq. l00Church Si., rrn. 2-103 Ncw York, NY 10007-2601 (212) 788-0922 Papers conaldrred in review o f thls petition: Notice of pelition, verified petition and annexed A D Rcspondenls verified answcr, memorandum of law in suppon of answer and anncxcd cxhlbiis A - N Rcply aflirrnaiion in further suppon and vcrified rcply Transcrlpr of oral argument held January 2S, 2012 NYC Law Depanmcnt Operations Departmcni transcript o f audio recording of petitioner's appcal hcnring - Papers Numbered: 1-2 3-4 5-6 7 8 PAULG . FEINMAN, J.: In this CPLR article 78 proceeding, petitioner, Edward Weber, seeks reversal of a determination denying his appeal of his unsatisfactory rating for the 2009-2010 academic year, and an award of back pay lost on the salary scale and other related benefits as a result of the unsatisfactory rating. Respondent's verified answer asserts that the decision to sustain petitioner's rating was in all respects lawful, proper, reasonable, in conformity with all applicable laws and regulations and was neither arbitrary nor capricious or irrational. For the reasons UhIFlLED JUDGMENT This judgment has not been entered by the County Clerk and notice of entry cannot be served based hereon. To obtain entry, counsel or authorized representative must appear in person at the Judgment Clerk's Desk (Room 1418). [* 3] provided below, the petition is denied. BACKGROUND Petitioner is employed by respondent, New York City Department of Education ( DOE ), as a chemistry teacher at Brownsville Academy High School (BAHS). Initially hired in 2001, petitioner was tenured in June 2004 and maintained satisfactory annual ratings each year until the 2009-2010 school year, when he was issued an unsatisfactory, or U-rating (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at 1 9). Petitioner was transferred to BAHS by its former principal for the 2005-2006 school year to create and implement a chemistry curriculum (id. 1 10). The petition describes at 1 BAHS as part of the DOE S transfer high school network, which seeks to provide an opportunity to students on the verge of aging out of the public secondary school system to earn a high-school diploma. Most of the students at BAHS, thc petitioner alleges, have a long histor[yJ of interlocking academic and behavioral issues, including homelessness, family dysfunction, truancy, juvenile delinquency, substance abuse, jail time, and teenage parenthood (id. at 1 11). LaShawn Robinson became principal of BAHS starting with the 2008-2009 school year (id,at 1 12). Prior to becoming principal, Robinson was an assistant principal at BAHS during the 2005-2006 and 2006-2007 school years, and Aspiring Principal during the 2007-2008 school year (Doc. 3, Ver. answer at 9 56). Lana Phillips and Katwona Warren were the assistant principals at BAHS during the 2007-2008,2008-2009, and 2009-20 10 school years (id at 7 57). As principal, Robinson was petitioner s rating oficer for purposes of his annual performance review. As he did in each prior year, petitioner received a satisfactory rating from Robinson during the 2008-2009 school year. However, in the 2009-2010 school year, the petition alleges 2 [* 4] that petitioner was suddenly and without any genuine professional basis, targeted for firing by Principal Robinson and her assistant principals, and, in building a bogus paper trail to justify that termination, [the administration] issued an unbroken string of negative observation reports seeking to establish [petitioner s] incompetence (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at 7 14). This allegedly culminated in Robinson issuing petitioner first unsatisfactory rating on his year-end annual performance review ( APPR ) for the 2009-20 10 school year, Petitioner challenged the U-rating with the DOE S internal Office of Appeals and Review. A hearing was held on November 12, 20 10, before Ron Gcrstman, Chancellor s Chairperson, regarding petitioner s challenge. Petitioner appeared along with his advocate from the United Federation of Teachers Union. Principal Robinson and assistant principals Phillips and Warren also participated. At the hearing, the following documents were submitted by Robinson and accepted into evidence: (1) petitioner s APPR appraisal; (2) a report describing a classroom walkthrough dated December 7,2009; (3) a formal observation report dated February 25,2010, with attachments; (4) a classroom walkthrough dated April 9, 20 10; ( 5 ) a formal observation report dated April 19,2010, with attachments; (6) a letter dated May 3,2010, which was amended November 5 , 2010, with attachments; and (7) an observation report of petitioner s June 1,2010 lesson, with attachments. Petitioner s union advocate objected to the May 3,2010 letter being submitted into evidence, claiming the letter and its attachments had been successfully grieved and should have been removed from Petitioner s file (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at fl32-33). This objection was denied. Petitioner s union advocate also objected to the introduction of a Log of Assistance because it was not signed by petitioner, which was sustained by the Chairperson (Doc. 3, Ver. answer at 87). 3 [* 5] By letter dated March I I , 20 1 1, the DOE informed petitioner that his unsatisfactory annual rating for the 2009-2010 school year had been upheld and the said rating [was] sustained as a consequence of [petitioner s] failure to align curriculum, instruction and assessment ... [and because his] poor delivery of instruction led to classroom management problems and poor results among his students on the Regents (Doc. 2, ex. B, March 1 I , 201 1 letter). Petitioner alleges that his U-rating was the result of ill-motives and bad faith stemming from Ms. Robinson s harassment of and assault on [pletioner (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at 7 18). Petitioner urges judicial intervention is necessary, claiming that such dubious conduct is among NYCDOE administrators all too prevalent in recent years (id.at 7 19). He claims that Robinson s desire to damage [pletitioner with ,., an utterly undtsemed Unsatisfactory annual rating, as well as her determination to sustain it through the NYCDOE s mock appeal-and-review system, should be annulled as arbitrary, capricious, and in bad faith (id. at 7 20). According to the petition, the resulting internal review, in which the hearing officer is employed and paid by the NYCDOE, is widely acknowledged to be, in this instance like every one, a sham (id. at 15). Therefore, petitioner seeks to reverse and annul his U-rating for the 2009-2010 school year and to annul the determination sustaining the rating upon petitioner s appeal, dated March 11, 201 1, and to restore any pay and benefits lost by petitioner since that date. H also asks the court e to grant him attorney s fees and costs. ANALYSIS 1. Standard of Review It is well established that courts may not under the guise of enforcing a vague educational public policy, suggested to it, assume the exercise of educational policy vested by 4 [* 6] constitution and statute in school administrative agencies (Price v New York City Bd. of Educ., 51 AD3d 277,286 [ 1 Dept 20081;quoting Muiter ofhrew York Cliy School Bds. Assn. v Bd. o f Educ. o City School Dist. ofCiry ofN Y.,39 NY2d 1 1 1, 12 1 [ 19761). For this reason, judicial f review of a determination of B body or officer is limited to whether the determination was made in violation of lawful procedure, was affected by an error of law or was arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion (CPLR 7803 [3]). Arbitrary and capricious action is that taken without sound basis in reason and is generally taken without regard to the facts (In re SagulCotler v Bd. of Educ. of City of N Y.School Disi. of Ciiy ofN, Y.,-AD3d-, 2012 NY Slip Op 04281 [ I Dept 20121; quoting Pel1 v Bd. of Educ. of Union Free School Dist, No. I of Township o Scarsdale, 34 NY2d 222,23 1 [ 19741). Where there is a rational basis for an agency s f determination, the court is not permitted to substitute its own judgment for that of an administrative agency (see Mulier o f h d e r s e n v Klein,50 AD3d 296, 297 [ l Dept 20081; MatterofHuzelCine v C i p o f N Y . , 89AD3d 613,615 [l Dept2011]). When a teacher challenges a U-rating, if there is [elvidence in the record supporting the conclusion that performance wa9 unsatisfactory [then respondent] establishes [the rating] was made in good faith (Mutier of Kolmel, 88 AD3d at 528; citing Barreva v New York City Dept. of Education, 50 AD3d 283, 283 [ 1 Dept 20081 [record evidence, including seven unsatisfactory classroom observations for the 2003-2004 school year, and four unsatisfactory observation reports for the 2004-2005 school year, established administrative decision to uphold petitioner s unsatisfactory reviews was not arbitrary, capricious or irrational]; Mutter a/ Andersen v Klein, SO AD3d 296, 297 [ 1 Dcpt 20081 [unsatisfactory year-end rating was rationally supported by evidence that petitioner was unable to control his classroom, namely, the principal s reports of 5 . .. . ~. .. . [* 7] his observations of petitioner s ~Iassroom ]). An administrative determination is not inherently arbitrary and capricious simply because there were technical deficiencies in the process employed. However, where a departure is not merely technical and can be said to have undermined the integrity and fairness of the process, the procedural irregularities may support the conclusion that the administration determination was arbitrary and capricious, and not made in good faith (Mutter oJKohnel v Clr;v ofh! Y., 88 AD3d 527, 528 [ 1 Dept 201 13). In Kolmel, the Appellate Division, First Department, held there was no rational basis for petitioner s U-rating where the principal that issued the rating had not observed petitioner s teaching during either of his last two years at the school, in violation of the DOE Srules concerning teacher ratings which required at least one observation by the principal and pre-observation meetings with probationary teachers in danger of receiving a U-rating (id. at 528). The C u t based its decision, at least in part, on its or determination that petitioner s year-end report, which gave petitioner a U-rating, was on its face completed by the principal in an arbitrary manner including unsatisfactory rankings in every category, even where unsupported by evidence or contradicted by evidence in the report itself., and upon consideration of a statement submitted by petitioner from a current DOE employee who formerly worked at the high school, that the principal pressured assistant principals to give negative U-ratings without observing teachers (id at 528-529). In contrast, deficiencies in the Annual Professional Performance Review ( APPR ) process will not render a determination approving the issuance of a U-rating arbitrary and capricious where hearing testimony provides ample grounds for such determination (Matter o BruMvl v Bd. of Edwc. o the Cily School Dist. f f o the Cify qfh! Y., 89 AD3d 486,487-488 [ 1 Dept 20 1 I]; citing Mafter of Sore11 v Bd. ofEduc. f 6 [* 8] ofCify School D h f . ofcity ofh! Y., 168 AD2d 453 [2d Dept 19901 [form completed which recommended discontinuance of petitioner s probationary employment did not contain authorized signature did not deprive petitioner of any substantial right, where superintendent testimony showed that he supported the principal s rating]). As this is an Article 78 proceeding, judicial review of respondent s determination is confined to the facts and record adduced before the agency (Mufrer ofl orbough u Franco, 95 NY2d 342,347 [ZOOO]). 2. &&ation of Standqds to tbs C a s As an initial matter, it should be noted that petitioner did not submit a complete copy of the documents entered on the record at his administrative internal appeals hearing. Nonetheless, these materials have been offered by respondent. Upon their review, the court concludes that petitioner has failed to show that the U-rating was arbitrary and capricious or made in bad faith. The rating was supported by detailed observation reports by Principal Robinson and Assistant Principals Phillips and Warren. These reports show that two observation reports drafted by Assistant Principal Phillips, based on her observations of petitioner s classroom on February 25, 20 10, and April 19, 20 10, rated petitioner s lesson and teaching as unsatisfactory (Doc. 3, exs. B, D). AI though Assistant Principal Warren twice rated petitioner s performance as satisfactory based on two different classroom walkthroughs conducted December 7,2009, and April 9,2010, respectively, each time shc also indicated in her subsequent report that petitioner needed improvement in four or five assessment areas (Doc. 3, cxs. A, C). The record also contained a detailed observation reporl written by Principal Robinson based on her assessment of petitioner s June 1,20 I O chemistry class, in which she rated petitioner s lesson and teaching performance as 7 [* 9] unsatisfactory (Doc. 3, ex. G ) . In connection with each of the three formal observations conducted of petitioner s classroom, pre- and post-observation conferences were held with petitioner. The hearing record also included several letter srelating to a grievance filed by petitioner in April of 2010, and an unrelated incident where it had been alleged that petitioner had allowed students from other classes into a classroom he was covering for an absent teacher (Doc. 3, exs. E, F, H and I). Taken together, these documents and the testimony presented at the hearing were sufficient to support the Chancellor s Committee s determination to deny petitioner s internal appeal of his U-rating from the 2009-2010 school year. The detailed observation reports of the principal and assistant principal, describe petitioner s poor performance in lesson planning, deficiencies in his teaching methods, and his lack of receptiveness to constructive criticism and his administrator s efforts to address observed deficiencies in his performance (see Mutter of Murant v Dept. of Educ. ofCily ofh! Y., AD3d 576, 577 82 [,*I Dept 201 13 [detailed observation reports by principal and assistant principal describing petitioner s poor performance provided a rational basis for U-rating]; see also Mutter of Andersen u Klein, 50 AD3d 296, 297 [ 1 Dept 2008][unsatisfactory rating rationally supported by evidence, namely, the principal s reports of his observations of petitioner s classroom]). Petitioner s argues that the Chancellor s Committee improperly overruled his union advocate s objections to the admission of certain evidence claimed to be ineligible for inclusion or consideration in any way because they concerned allegations which petitioner claims have been successfully grieved by [pletitioner and [therefore] should have been contractually removed from [pletitioner s personnel file, as part of a settlement in which [pletitioner had 8 [* 10] agreed to drop a grievance ... if all references in [respondent s] letter ... were completely removed from his file (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at 71 32-33). However, it is well established that compliance with the technical rules of evidence is not required in proceedings before an administrative body (see Mafler o Sander v New York C @ Dept. of Transportufion,23 AD3d 156, 157 [ 1st Dept f i 20051; Matter of Toolasprashad v Kelly, 80 AD3d 530, 53 1 [lst Dept 201 I]; Austin v Bd. o f Education of the City School Disf. offhe Cip ofNew York, 280 AD2d 365,365 [ 1st Dept 20011). To the extent petitioner claims there was a settlement requiring complete removal of these materials from petitioner s personnel record, there is nothing to suggest that any evidence of this purported settlement was submitted at petitioner s review hearing. No support is offered for petitioner s contention that the Chancellor s Committee callously disregarded and showed no willingness to hear or understand a full explanation from UFT Advocate Gilmore or from [plctitioner, nor did [he] investigate the matter in any meaningful way, merely taking the expeditious and biased route of siding with Principal Robinson ... (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at 7 35). In fact, the transcript of the hearing before the Chancellor s Committee shows these objections were given full consideration, and the parties agreed that an amended version of the grievance letter would be substituted for the original version and considered by the Chancellor s Committee (Doc. 8, Hearing transcript at 4-5). Thus, consideration of this evidence was not arbitrary or capricious. Petitioner also contends that respondent s determination to sustain petitioner s U-rating was in violation of lawful procedure because it is violative of several of the DOE S own rules and regulations ..., and respondent repeatedly failed to abide by the Rating Pedagogical Staff Members Handbook (Doc. 2, Ver. petition at 17 37-38), In support, petitioner first alleges that 9 [* 11] the Rating Officer, Le., Principal Robinson, failed to take into account all events, incidents and developments in the teacher s career during the rating period, as required by Section 1 1.C of the Handbook. Specifically, Principal Robinson allegedly failed to properly document or take into account that petitioner had received a satisfactory rating after his first formal observation of the current school, plus petitioner s eight prior years of satisfactory ratings. Petitioner next claims that Principal Robinson failed to write up a formal observation report for an observation made in October of 2010, in purported violation of the DOE s Chief Executives Memorandum #80 (id. at 143). However, these claimed violations each pertain to matters other than the 2009-2010 review at issue, and thus cannot form the basis for disturbing the Chancellor s Committee s determination. Petitioner further alleges that Principal Robinson violated the DOE s Chief Executive s Memorandurn # 80 by failing to conduct a proper one-to-one pre-observation conference in February of 20 IO, since the pre-observation conference was attended not by one administrator, but by Principal Robinson, Assistant Principal Philips and a visiting aspiring principal who petitioner had never before met (id. 77 43-44). Next, the petition alleges that respondent at violated the Rating Pedagogical Staff Members Handbook because Principal Robinson failed to complete the entire APPR U-Rating Form (id. 7 48). Petitioner submits a copy of the Annual at Professional Performance Review and Report, acknowledged by petitioner and Robinson on June 25,2010, which shows that Robinson marked a U next to 14 separate categories, leaving comments next to 13 of these categories, but otherwise left the 9 remaining fields blank (Doc. 2, ex. A, APPR Form). These purported procedural deficiencies, even if true, does not render the Chancellor 10 [* 12] Committee s denial of petitioner s internal administrative appeal arbitrary and capricious, since the evidence and hearing testimony provided ample grounds for petitioner s U-rating (see Brown, 89 AD3d at 488 [reversing Supreme Court s grant of petition on ground that the APPR was not in strict compliance with the procedures set forth in the rating handbook]). Nor can it be said that the alleged procedural deficiencies undermined the integrity and fairness of the process (compare Mutter of Kolrnel, 88 AD3d at 529). Even if the categories left blank are areas where petitioner would have rated satisfactory, there was nonetheless a rational basis in the record for supporting his overall U-rating. Finally, petitioner s contention that the principal and assistant principals arc biased against him is speculative and insufficient to establish bad faith (Mutter of Murnane, 82 AD3d at 577). To establish bad faith, the burden falls squarely on the petitioner to demonstrate, by Competent proof, that a substantial issue of bad faith exists ,,.,and mere speculation, or bald, conclusory allegations are insuffrcient to should this burden (Matter o Tsao v Kelly, 28 AD3d f 320,321 [ I Dept 20061;citing Mutter of Green v. Board of Educ. ofCiry Dist. ofh! X ,262 AD2d 4 1 1,4 12 [2d Dept 19991; Mutter oJGarcia v New York CIly Probation Dept., 208 AD2d 475,476 [ 1 Dept 19941; Muller o Cortlj o v. Ward, 158 AD2d 345 [In f Dept 19901). As stated by the Court of Appeals, mere personality conflicts must not be mistaken for unlawful discrimination (Matter of Tsao, 28 AD3d at 321; quoting Forrest v. Jewish G i d for the Blind, ul 3 NY3d 295, 309 [2004]). Petitioner s reference to a section 3020 disciplinary proceeding commenced against him in October of 201 1, without further explanation, is not competent proof of bad faith in connection with Petitioner s 2009-2010 school year U-rating. Furthermore, although petitioner repeatedly alleges that Principal Robinson stated at petitioner s appeal [* 13] hearing that petitioner would never again receive a satisfactory rating (Doc. 5 , Reply affirm. at 7 13), the court does not find a statement of this nature in the audio recording of the hearing or its written transcription. The remaining allegations of bad faith are purely speculative, and unsupported by competent proof (see Mutter qf Tsao, 28 AD3d at 321). To the extent petitioner argues that he was the victim of the principal's abusive and harassing conduct, to be considered by this court, such allegation would have needed to be raised before the Chancellor's Committee. Assuming that it was, implicit in the Committee's approval of the U-rating is the determination that petitioner's allegations on this point were not credible or that it had no impact on petitioner's performance (see O'Fhherry v New York City Dept. of Educ., 201 1 NY Slip Op 30535 [U] [Sup Ct, NY County 201 13). In either case, petitioner had failed to sufficiently demonstrate that the Chancellor's Committee's determination to uphold his U-rating was arbitrary and capricious or in bad faith. CONCLUSION According it is ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the petitioner's application pursuant to CPLR article 78 seeking an annulment of respondent's March 11,201 1 determination is denied and the petition is hereby dismissed. This constitutes the decision, order and judgm Dated: June 25, 2012 New York, New York - UNFILED JUDGMENT (2012 pt 12 D&O 107840-201 1_00i_daz[art'l8_Urating~lSludg~nt not been entered by the County Clerk has and notice of entry cannot be sewed based hereon. To obtain entry, counsel or authorized representative must appear in person at the Judgrrmt Clerk's Deak (Room 1410). 12

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