SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Appellate Division, Fourth Judicial Department
183
CA 13-00640
PRESENT: CENTRA, J.P., PERADOTTO, LINDLEY, AND WHALEN, JJ.
HONORABLE JOSEPH J. CASSATA,
PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
V MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
STATE OF NEW YORK, THOMAS P. DINAPOLI,
AS COMPTROLLER OF STATE OF NEW YORK,
DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS,
ET AL., DEFENDANT.
ERIC T. SCHNEIDERMAN, ATTORNEY GENERAL, ALBANY (JEFFREY W. LANG OF
COUNSEL), FOR DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.
WEBSTER SZANYI, LLP, BUFFALO (KEVIN A. SZANYI OF COUNSEL), FOR
PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT.
Appeal from a judgment (denominated order and judgment) of the
Supreme Court, Niagara County (Catherine R. Nugent Panepinto, J.),
entered November 21, 2012. The judgment, inter alia, granted the
motion of plaintiff for summary judgment and declared that the pay
disparity between City Court judges in the City of Buffalo and the
City of Tonawanda, as set forth in Judiciary Law § 221-i, violates
plaintiff’s equal protection rights, and denied the cross motion of
defendants State of New York and Thomas P. DiNapoli, as Comptroller of
State of New York, for summary judgment.
It is hereby ORDERED that the judgment so appealed from is
unanimously reversed on the law without costs, plaintiff’s motion is
denied, the cross motion of defendants-appellants is granted insofar
as they seek a declaration in their favor, and it is
ADJUDGED AND DECLARED that the salary disparity between
City Court judges in Buffalo and Tonawanda, as set forth in
Judiciary Law § 221-i, is constitutional.
Memorandum: Defendants-appellants (hereafter, defendants),
appeal from a judgment granting plaintiff’s motion for summary
judgment and declaring that the pay disparity between City Court
judges in the City of Buffalo and the City of Tonawanda, as set forth
in Judiciary Law § 221-i, violates plaintiff’s rights to equal
protection under the federal and state constitutions, and awarding
plaintiff back pay and other relief. We agree with defendants that
Judiciary Law § 221-i is constitutional insofar as challenged. We
therefore reverse the judgment, deny plaintiff’s motion, grant
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defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment insofar as they seek a
declaration in their favor rather than dismissal of the complaint (see
generally Alexander v New York Cent. Mut., 96 AD3d 1457, 1457), and
declare that the salary disparity between City Court judges in Buffalo
and Tonawanda, as set forth in Judiciary Law § 221-i, is
constitutional.
It is undisputed that the disparate judicial salary schedule set
forth in Judiciary Law § 221-i does not implicate a suspect class or a
fundamental right, and thus it is subject to the rational basis
standard of review (see Affronti v Crosson, 95 NY2d 713, 718-719, cert
denied 534 US 826; D’Amico v Crosson, 93 NY2d 29, 31-32). Such
rational basis review “is a paradigm of judicial restraint” (Affronti,
95 NY2d at 719 [internal quotation marks omitted]). “A statute
subject to rational basis scrutiny is presumed to be constitutional,
and the party challenging the statute bears the heavy burden of
proving that there is no reasonably conceivable state of facts which
rationally supports the distinction” (D’Amico, 93 NY2d at 32; see
Heller v Doe, 509 US 312, 320; Port Jefferson Health Care Facility v
Wing, 94 NY2d 284, 290). Thus, “the State has no obligation to
produce evidence to sustain the rationality of a statutory
classification. A legislative choice is not subject to courtroom
factfinding and may be based on rational speculation unsupported by
evidence or empirical data” (Affronti, 95 NY2d at 719 [internal
quotation marks omitted]).
Here, we conclude that there is a rational basis for the salary
disparity between Tonawanda City Court and Buffalo City Court judges
and, thus, that the disparity does not violate equal protection (see
id. at 717; see generally Matter of Tolub v Evans, 58 NY2d 1, 8,
appeal dismissed 460 US 1076). The cities of Buffalo and Tonawanda,
although both located within Erie County and separated by only 12
miles, are very different municipalities. Buffalo is the largest city
in Erie County and the second largest city in New York State.
Tonawanda, by contrast, is “[o]ne of the smallest cities in Erie
County.” Nearly one third of the residents of Erie County (28%) live
in Buffalo, while only 1.5% of the county’s population resides in
Tonawanda. In 2009, Buffalo’s population was 18 times the size of
Tonawanda’s, i.e., 270,240 residents as compared to 14,766 residents.
Tonawanda City Court has one full-time judge and one “half-time”
judge, while Buffalo City Court has 13 full-time judges. Buffalo
therefore has 20,787 residents per judge, which is more than twice the
9,844 residents per judge in Tonawanda.
We agree with defendants that it is rational for the State to pay
a higher salary to judges who serve a larger population both as a
proxy for caseload and as an indicator of potential future filings.
Indeed, in our view, the substantial population differences between
the two cities alone are sufficient to provide a rational basis for
the 4.5% salary disparity (see Mackston v State of New York, 200 AD2d
717, 718, appeal dismissed 83 NY2d 905, lv denied 84 NY2d 803; cf.
Affronti, 265 AD2d 817, 818, modified on other grounds 95 NY2d 713,
cert denied 534 US 826; Vogt v Crosson, 199 AD2d 722, 723; Davis v
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Rosenblatt, 159 AD2d 163, 170-171, appeal dismissed 77 NY2d 834, 79
NY2d 822, lv denied 79 NY2d 757; Weissmann v Bellacosa, 129 AD2d 189,
195; see generally Cass v State of New York, 58 NY2d 460, 464, rearg
denied 60 NY2d 586). We further agree with defendants that caseload
differences between Buffalo City Court and Tonawanda City Court
provide a rational basis for the salary disparities between the two
courts (see Barr v Crosson, 95 NY2d 164, 170; see generally Cass, 58
NY2d at 464). Although the number of filings per judge in both courts
is roughly equivalent, Office of Court Administration (OCA) statistics
reflect that Buffalo City Court judges handle a more complex and
potentially time-consuming caseload than their counterparts in
Tonawanda, with a significantly greater volume of criminal, civil, and
landlord-tenant cases than Tonawanda City Court. Between 2008 and
2010, Buffalo City Court handled, on a per judge basis, more than
twice as many criminal cases, three to four times as many civil cases,
and more than 10 times as many landlord-tenant cases than were
handled, per judge, in Tonawanda City Court. In 2008, for example,
38% (22,915) of Buffalo City Court’s 60,363 filings were criminal
matters, 37% (22,182) were civil matters, and 13% (7,878) were
landlord-tenant matters. Of the 5,847 filings in Tonawanda City Court
that year, only 19% (1,127) were criminal matters, 11% (629) were
civil matters, and 1% (79) were landlord-tenant matters. By contrast,
OCA statistics reflect that Tonawanda City Court predominately handles
more routine matters, such as non-criminal motor vehicle infractions
and parking violations. Indeed, motor vehicle and parking cases
comprised 63% of Tonawanda’s docket in 2008 and 62% of its docket in
2009. In 2010, parking and motor vehicle matters constituted 71% of
the cases filed in Tonawanda City Court. Buffalo City Court does not
hear parking violation cases and hears only criminal motor vehicle
cases, which constituted less than 10% of its docket in 2010.
The caseload differences between Buffalo City Court and Tonawanda
City Court are not surprising given the stark demographic differences
between the two cities. According to census data in the record, from
2005 to 2009, the median household income in Tonawanda was $49,678,
75% of all housing units in Tonawanda were owner-occupied, and the
median value of owner-occupied homes was $85,300. Further, only about
7% of the housing units in Tonawanda were vacant, and less than 10% of
Tonawanda residents lived below the poverty line. The median
household income in Buffalo during the same period was $30,376, only
44.4% of the housing units in Buffalo were owner-occupied, and the
median value of owner-occupied homes was $65,200. Nearly one third of
Buffalo’s residents (28.6%) fell below the poverty line and roughly
one fifth (19.1%) of Buffalo’s housing units were vacant. Thus, both
the OCA statistics and the census data indicate that Buffalo City
Court judges face the often more complicated cases typically
associated with urban areas—e.g., evictions, landlord-tenant disputes,
criminal matters, and cases arising from vacant and deteriorated
housing—while judges serving the City of Tonawanda, a much smaller and
relatively more affluent community, deal with comparatively less
serious or complex cases, thereby justifying the minimal salary
differential (see generally Henry v Milonas, 91 NY2d 264, 268-269).
Plaintiff, however, contends that the OCA statistics do not
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properly account for his unique circumstances, including the fact that
he presides over several “specialty courts,” that Tonawanda City Court
serves as a “Hub Court” for drug cases in Erie County, and that, as
the only full-time judge in Tonawanda City Court, he serves as the de
facto administrative judge of that court. We note that Buffalo City
Court is also a Hub Court for drug cases, and that Buffalo City Court
judges likewise preside over specialty courts, albeit not as many as
those overseen by plaintiff. In any event, even assuming, arguendo,
that plaintiff’s workload is in fact comparable to that of a Buffalo
City Court judge based upon individual circumstances not reflected in
court statistics, we conclude that plaintiff’s individual workload
would not invalidate the salary differences set forth in Judiciary Law
§ 221-i. As the Court of Appeals stated in Cass (58 NY2d at 464),
“when a rational basis exists for the classification enacted by the
Legislature, equal protection does not require that all
classifications be made with mathematical precision . . . Thus[,] . .
. the fact that the general statutory scheme, when applied on a
Statewide basis, may produce some inequities for certain Judges within
a particular class does not render the statute unconstitutional”
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Entered: March 21, 2014 Frances E. Cafarell
Clerk of the Court