State of New York OPINION
Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision
before publication in the New York Reports.
No. 6
Danny Donohue, &c., et al.,
Appellants,
v.
Andrew M. Cuomo, &c., et al.,
Respondents,
et al.,
Defendants.
Eric E. Wilke, for appellants.
Frederick A. Brodie, for respondents.
New York State Public Employees Federation, AFL-CIO, United University Professions,
Police Benevolent Association of the New York State Troopers, Inc., New York State
Law Enforcement Officers Union, Council 82, AFSCME, AFL-CIO et al., Court
Attorneys Association of the City of New York et al., New York State Police
Investigators Association, Local 4 IUPA, AFL-CIO et al., amici curiae.
SINGAS, J.:
In Kolbe v Tibbetts, we left open whether a New York court should infer vesting of
retiree health insurance rights when construing a collective bargaining agreement (CBA)
(see 22 NY3d 344, 354 [2013]). The Supreme Court subsequently rejected such inferences
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as incompatible with ordinary contract principles under federal law in M&G Polymers
USA, LLC v Tackett (574 US 427 [2015]) and CNH Industrial N.V. v Reese (583 US —,
138 S Ct 761 [2018]), repudiating International Union, United Auto., Aerospace, & Agric.
Implement Workers of Am. (UAW) v Yard-Man, Inc. (716 F2d 1476 [6th Cir 1983], cert
denied 465 US 1007 [1984]) and its progeny. In response to questions certified to us by
the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, we conclude that Yard-Man-
type inferences favoring such vesting are likewise inconsistent with New York’s
established contract interpretation principles.
I.
Plaintiff Civil Service Employees Association, Inc., Local 1000, AFSCME, AFL-
CIO (CSEA) is the collective negotiating representative of the largest bargaining unit of
New York State workers. Among others, CSEA represents workers employed in New
York’s Administrative Services Unit, Institutional Services Unit, Operational Services
Unit, and Division of Military and Naval Affairs Unit. It also represents certain workers
employed by the Unified Court System. CSEA’s members and former members may
obtain health insurance through the New York State Health Insurance Plan (NYSHIP), an
optional health-benefit plan covering current and retired state employees and other public
employees.
From NYSHIP’s creation in the 1950s until 1983, the State paid 100% of both
employees’ and retirees’ costs under the plan for individual coverage and 75% of their
costs for dependent coverage, as required by statute. The State’s contribution rate changed
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in 1983 after CSEA and other unions representing state employees reached a memorandum
of understating (MOU), reducing that rate for individual coverage from 100% to 90%. The
MOU superseded contrary provisions in the 1982-1985 CBA between CSEA and the State.
The legislature amended Civil Service Law § 167 (1) to codify the negotiated contribution
rates for qualifying employees who retired after January 1, 1983, but the amendment did
not change the State’s contribution rates for qualifying employees who had retired before
that date (see L 1983, ch 14, § 1).
CSEA and the State thereafter agreed to seven CBAs, spanning 1985 to 2011, each
containing provisions continuing the contribution rates at 90% for individual coverage and
75% for dependent coverage. Given the questions certified to us by the Second Circuit,
we turn to the 2007-2011 CBA’s relevant provisions.1
Section 9.13 (a) of the 2007-2011 CBA set forth the contribution rates discussed
above, providing that “[t]he State agrees to pay 90 percent of the cost of individual
coverage and 75 percent of the cost of dependent coverage toward the
hospital/medical/mental health and substance abuse components provided under the
Empire Plan.” The section did not, however, expressly state the duration of the State’s
promise to contribute at those rates. Section 9.24 (a) said that “[e]mployees covered by
1
The Second Circuit focused its discussion “on the text of the parties’ 2007-2011 CBA”
because the relevant prior CBAs “contain provisions that are identical or substantially
similar to the provisions from the 2007-2011 CBA” (980 F3d 53, 72 n 11 [2d Cir 2020]).
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[NYSHIP] have the right to retain health insurance after retirement upon completion of
[10] years of service.”
Section 9.23 (a) concerned contribution rates for surviving dependents of deceased
retirees, stating:
“The unremarried spouse and otherwise eligible dependent
children of an employee, who retires after April 1, 1979, with
[10] or more years of active State service and subsequently
dies, shall be permitted to continue coverage in the health
insurance program with payment at the same contribution rates
as required of active employees for the same coverage.”
Sections 9.24 (b) and 9.25 pertained to procedures for using sick-leave credits to defray
premium costs. Section 9.24 (b) stated: “An employee who is eligible to continue health
insurance coverage upon retirement is entitled to a sick leave credit to be used to defray
any employee contribution toward the cost of the premium” and allowed employees to
apply specified percentages “of the calculated basic monthly value of the credit towards
defraying the required contribution to the monthly premium during their own lifetime.”
Section 9.25 said: “An employee retiring from State service may delay commencement or
suspend his/her retiree health coverage and the use of the employee’s sick leave conversion
credits indefinitely.”
The 2007-2011 CBA’s article 50 contained a merger clause, stating that the CBA
was “the entire agreement between the State and CSEA, terminate[d] all prior agreements
and understandings and conclude[d] all collective negotiations during its term.” Finally,
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article 53 contained a four-year durational clause, providing that the CBA’s term “shall be
from April 2, 2007 to April 1, 2011.”
As the 2007-2011 CBA neared its termination date, the State faced continued fiscal
distress stemming from the Great Recession, including a $10 billion budget shortfall for
fiscal year 2011-2012. In the context of that dire financial situation, CSEA and the State
agreed to a five-year CBA in June 2011 under which the State’s NYSHIP premium
contribution rates for employees represented by CSEA were reduced by various
percentages, depending on the employee’s salary grade. Section 9.14 (a) of the 2011-2016
CBA stated that, effective October 1, 2011, the State agreed to pay 88% of individual
coverage and 73% of dependent coverage for employees in a title salary grade 9 or below
and 84% of individual coverage and 69% of dependent coverage for employees in a title
salary grade 10 or above.
The legislature amended Civil Service Law § 167 (8) to provide that “the state cost
of premium or subscription charges for eligible employees covered by such agreement may
be modified pursuant to the terms of such agreement” (L 2011, ch 491, § 2; see Civil
Service Law § 167 [8]). The amended statute also stated that the Civil Service Commission
President, with approval from the Budget Director, “may extend the modified state cost of
premium or subscription charges for employees or retirees not subject to an agreement
referenced above and shall promulgate the necessary rules or regulations to implement this
provision” (L 2011, ch 491, § 2; see Civil Service Law § 167 [8]). The Department of
Civil Service thereafter amended its regulations to extend the modified contribution rates
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to certain retirees. Specifically, the amended regulation states: “for retirees who retired on
or after January 1, 1983, and employees retiring prior to January 1, 2012, New York State
shall contribute 88 percent of the charge on account of individual coverage and 73 percent
of the charge on account of dependent coverage” (4 NYCRR 73.3 [b] [1]).
II.
After the State implemented the reduced NYSHIP contribution rates for the affected
retirees in October 2011, CSEA, along with its president and certain retirees who were
formerly in CSEA bargaining units (collectively, CSEA), commenced this action in federal
court against, among others, certain New York State officials (collectively, the State).2
CSEA asserted, among other claims, that the State breached the CBAs in effect at the time
of the retirees’ retirements and violated the United States Constitution’s Contract Clause
(see US Const, art I, § 10, cl 1). Other unions and retirees filed 10 related actions.
The United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, as relevant
here, granted the State’s summary judgment motions in all 11 actions and denied CSEA’s
motion for summary judgment (see 347 F Supp 3d 110, 146 [ND NY 2018]). The court
concluded that “the unambiguous terms of the CBAs at issue did not create a vested interest
in the perpetual continuation of premium contribution rates at a specific level” (id. at 129).
The court determined that “the premium contribution rates are subject to the general
2
CSEA originally brought suit against the State of New York, the Governor, the Civil
Service Department and its Acting Commissioner, the Civil Service Commission and its
Commissioners, the Budget Director, the Comptroller, the New York State and Local
Retirement System, and the Unified Court System and its Chief Judge.
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durational clauses and that [the] obligation ceased upon the termination of each respective
CBA” (id. at 131). Because the retirees had no vested rights to a specified premium
contribution rate, CSEA’s breach of contract and Contract Clause claims failed as a matter
of law.
The Second Circuit reserved decision on the 11 appeals and certified two questions
to this Court (see 980 F3d at 87-88).3 The first question concerns “under what
circumstances, if any, New York law permits an inference of vested post-retirement
benefits under a state-law CBA, notwithstanding the absence of any express specification
that those benefits extend beyond the term of the CBA” (id. at 84). The court explained
that in order to prevail on both the breach of contract and Contract Clause claims, CSEA
“must establish that the relevant CBAs provide for a vested right to health-insurance
coverage at fixed contribution rates for the life of the retiree” (id. at 59). The court
concluded that “the CBAs do not expressly provide for a vested right to coverage at fixed
contribution rates” and, thus, CSEA’s “suggested interpretation of the CBAs is tenable only
if a vested right—or, at minimum, ambiguity with respect to such a right, as is necessary
for the consideration of extrinsic evidence of the meaning of the CBAs—may be inferred
under the circumstances” (id.; see id. at 63).
3
The certified questions pertain only to CSEA’s action, which has been treated as the lead
case throughout the litigation. The Second Circuit concluded that our resolution of the
state law questions at issue here would allow it to decide the 10 other actions (see 980 F3d
at 64 n 6).
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The Second Circuit highlighted that, in Kolbe, this Court “previously declined to
either adopt or reject an inference that retirees’ health benefits vest under CBAs in the
absence of express vesting language” (id. at 63, citing Kolbe, 22 NY3d at 354-355). The
Circuit Court also explained that we had not addressed the impact of the Supreme Court’s
subsequent decisions in Tackett and Reese, which concern vesting of rights pursuant to
CBAs under federal law, and concluded that the Second and Third Departments “have
taken divergent approaches to applying” those holdings (id. at 71). The Second Circuit
therefore could not “confidently predict” whether we would “adopt the holdings of Tackett
and Reese” (id. at 72; see id. at 75).
“Assuming, without deciding,” that CSEA could “successfully establish that the
CBAs provide for a vested right to fixed contribution rates” (id. at 75), the Second Circuit
turned to whether the alleged resulting harm was “a remediable breach” of the CBA or “an
irremediable repudiation” of the CBA’s “contrary obligations” (id. at 77). The court
determined that an open question existed concerning “whether the State’s unilateral
statutory and regulatory reduction of its contribution rates to retirees’ NYSHIP costs
invalidated any contrary contractual obligations and thereby precluded a damages remedy
under state law” (id. at 86).
The Second Circuit therefore certified the following two questions:
“Under New York state law, and in light of Kolbe v. Tibbetts,
22 N.Y.3d 344, 980 N.Y.S.2d 903, 3 N.E.3d 1151 (2013), M
& G Polymers USA, LLC v. Tackett, 574 U.S. 427, 135 S.Ct.
926, 190 L.Ed.2d 809 (2015), and CNH Indus. N.V. v. Reese,
— U.S. —, 138 S.Ct. 761, 200 L.Ed.2d 1 (2018), do §§ 9.13
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(setting forth contribution rates of 90% and 75%), 9.23(a)
(concerning contribution rates for surviving dependents of
deceased retirees), 9.24(a) (specifying that retirees may retain
NYSHIP coverage in retirement), 9.24(b) (permitting retirees
to use sick-leave credit to defray premium costs), and 9.25
(allowing for the indefinite delay or suspension of coverage or
sick-leave credits) of the 2007-2011 collective bargaining
agreement between the Civil Service Employees Association,
Inc. and the Executive Branch of the State of New York (“the
CBA”), singly or in combination, (1) create a vested right in
retired employees to have the State’s rates of contribution to
health-insurance premiums remain unchanged during their
lifetimes, notwithstanding the duration of the CBA, or (2) if
they do not, create sufficient ambiguity on that issue to permit
the consideration of extrinsic evidence as to whether they
create such a vested right? . . .
“If the CBA, on its face, or as interpreted at trial upon
consideration of extrinsic evidence, creates a vested right in
retired employees to have the State’s rates of contribution to
health-insurance premiums remain unchanged during their
lives, notwithstanding the duration of the CBA, does New
York’s statutory and regulatory reduction of its contribution
rates for retirees’ premiums negate such a vested right so as to
preclude a remedy under state law for breach of contract?”
(id. at 87-88). We accepted the questions (see 36 NY3d 935 [2020]).
III.
A.
In New York, our general contract interpretation principles are well established.
“The fundamental, neutral precept of contract interpretation is that agreements are
construed in accord with the parties’ intent” and “[t]he best evidence of what parties to a
written agreement intend is what they say in their writing” (Greenfield v Philles Records,
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98 NY2d 562, 569 [2002] [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]). “[W]here a
contract was negotiated between sophisticated, counseled business people negotiating at
arm’s length, courts should be especially reluctant to interpret an agreement as impliedly
stating something which the parties” specifically did not include (2138747 Ontario, Inc. v
Samsung C&T Corp., 31 NY3d 372, 381 [2018] [internal quotation marks and citation
omitted]).
“Evidence outside the four corners of the document as to what was really intended
but unstated or misstated is generally inadmissible to add to or vary the writing” (W.W.W.
Assoc. v Giancontieri, 77 NY2d 157, 162 [1990]). Extrinsic or parol evidence “is
admissible only if a court finds an ambiguity in the contract” (Schron v Troutman Sanders
LLP, 20 NY3d 430, 436 [2013]; see Greenfield, 98 NY2d at 569); such evidence “is not
admissible to create an ambiguity in a written agreement which is complete and clear and
unambiguous upon its face” (W.W.W. Assoc., 77 NY2d at 163 [internal quotation marks
and citation omitted]). A contract’s silence on an issue does not “create an ambiguity which
opens the door to the admissibility of extrinsic evidence to determine the intent of the
parties” (Greenfield, 98 NY2d at 570). More to the point, “‘an ambiguity never arises out
of what was not written at all, but only out of what was written so blindly and imperfectly
that its meaning is doubtful’” (id. at 573, quoting Trustees of Southampton v Jessup, 173
NY 84, 90 [1903]). Determining whether a contract is ambiguous “is an issue of law for
the courts to decide” (id. at 569). Under our established standards, “[a] contract is
unambiguous if the language it uses has a definite and precise meaning, unattended by
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danger of misconception in the purport of the [agreement] itself, and concerning which
there is no reasonable basis for a difference of opinion” (id. [internal quotation marks and
citation omitted]). “Ambiguity in a contract arises when the contract, read as a whole, fails
to disclose its purpose and the parties’ intent, or when specific language is susceptible of
two reasonable interpretations” (Ellington v EMI Music, Inc., 24 NY3d 239, 244 [2014]
[internal quotation marks and citations omitted]). Consistent with New York law, “‘[a]
written agreement that is complete, clear and unambiguous on its face must be enforced
according to the plain meaning of its terms’” (Kolbe, 22 NY3d at 353, quoting Greenfield,
98 NY2d at 569).
B.
We applied our settled contract principles in Kolbe, where the plaintiffs were four
former employees of a school district who retired between 2003 and 2008. During their
employment, the plaintiffs were members of a collective bargaining unit represented by
CSEA. In 2010, after the plaintiffs had retired, CSEA and the school district agreed to a
successor CBA, which continued verbatim certain provisions regarding retiree health
insurance benefits. One section provided that “‘[r]etired employees shall be eligible to
continue group health insurance upon [timely] payment of premium’” (id. at 350). Another
section, section 6.5.3, provided that full-time employees who retired from the school
district under a stated plan “‘shall be entitled to receive credit toward group health
insurance premiums (including District contribution toward Flexible spending account) for
accumulated sick leave’” (id.). “The premium credit was to be calculated as a percentage
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according to a formula and to be paid by the District ‘until the employee reaches age 70’”
(id.). “The same provision contained the sentence that gave rise to the . . . litigation, ‘[t]he
coverage provided shall be the coverage which is in effect for the unit at such time as the
employee retires’” (id.).
When the plaintiffs retired, the relevant CBAs contained certain provisions with
respect to co-pays for prescription drugs and flexible spending for health care expenses.
The 2010 successor CBA made changes to those two benefits; the co-pays were increased,
as were the limits for flexible spending. After the school district informed the plaintiffs
that their co-pays and flexible spending benefits would be governed by the successor
CBA’s terms, the plaintiffs commenced the breach of contract action alleging that the
school district “violated the terms of the CBAs in effect when [the] plaintiffs retired” by
increasing their co-pays (id. at 351). On appeal to this Court, the relevant issues were
whether the CBAs gave plaintiffs “a vested right to the same health insurance coverage
they had when they retired and, if so, whether unilateral modifications to that coverage
[were] nonetheless permissible under . . . the contract terms” (id. at 348-349).
In addressing those issues, we explained that, “[a]s a general rule, contractual rights
and obligations do not survive beyond the termination of a [CBA]” (id. at 353, citing Litton
Financial Printing Div., Litton Business Systems, Inc. v NLRB, 501 US 190, 207 [1991]).
Still, “‘[r]ights which accrued or vested under the agreement will’” generally “‘survive
termination of the agreement’” (id., quoting Litton 501 US at 207). We made clear that a
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court “must look to well established principles of contract interpretation to determine
whether the parties intended that the contract give rise to a vested right” (id.).
Applying those principles, we held that the plain meaning of section 6.5.3
“unambiguously establishe[d]” that the plaintiffs had “a vested right to the ‘coverage which
[was] in effect for the unit at such time as [they] retire[d],’ until they reach[ed] age 70”
(id.). Because the CBA was “clear on its face,” we declined “to rule on whether New York
applies an inference of vesting for retiree health insurance rights” (id. at 354), while citing
Yard-Man.
We proceeded to the “crux of the parties’ disagreement,” which was “not the
existence but the scope of the vested right” contained in section 6.5.3 (22 NY3d at 354).
We concluded that “the operative provision in section 6.5.3” was ambiguous, “making it
appropriate . . . to consider extrinsic evidence” (id. at 355, citing W.W.W. Assoc., 77 NY2d
at 162). Because the “evidence submitted on summary judgment” did not “resolve the
ambiguity,” we remitted the case for a hearing to decide that issue of fact (id.).
As noted, in Kolbe, we left open the question whether “New York applies an
inference of vesting for retiree health insurance rights” (id. at 354), and cited Yard-Man.
In Yard-Man, the CBA between the union and the employer, Yard-Man, Incorporated,
stated that when a former employee reached 65 years of age, Yard-Man would “provide
insurance benefits equal to the active group benefits . . . for the former employee and [their]
spouse” (716 F2d at 1480 [emphasis omitted]). When Yard-Man notified retirees that it
planned to terminate their health and life insurance benefits upon the expiration of the
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CBA, the retirees commenced an action claiming that the CBA provided lifelong insurance
benefits. The Sixth Circuit agreed, holding that “the parties intended to create
nonterminating lifelong insurance benefits for the Yard-Man retirees” (id.).
Finding the CBA provision ambiguous, the court “look[ed] to other provisions of
the [CBA] for evidence of intent and an interpretation which [was] harmonious with the
entire document” (id.). First, the court concluded that it was “improbable that retiree
benefits were intended to depend in duration upon the fortunes of the active employees”
(id. at 1481). Second, because “the insurance provisions limit[ed] health insurance
coverage for a retiree’s spouse and dependent children in case of the retiree’s death to
expiration of the” CBA, it was “more reasonable to infer that the spouse-dependent child
provision was meant as an exception to the anticipated continuation of benefits beyond the
life of the” CBA (id.). Third, terminating retiree benefits at the end of the CBA could
render the insurance provisions “completely illusory for many early retirees under age 62”
(id.). “Fourth, the inclusion of specific durational limitations in other provisions of the”
CBA “suggest[ed] that retiree benefits, not so specifically limited, were intended to survive
the expiration of successive agreements in the parties’ contemplated long term
relationship” (id. at 1481-1482). “Finally, . . . the context in which these benefits arose
demonstrate[d] the likelihood that continuing insurance benefits for retirees were intended”
because retiree benefits “are only permissive not mandatory subjects of collective
bargaining” (id. at 1482). Thus, “it is unlikely that such benefits, which are typically
understood as a form of delayed compensation or reward for past services, would be left to
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the contingencies of future negotiations” (id.). The court further explained that “retiree
benefits are in a sense ‘status’ benefits which, as such, carry with them an inference that
they continue so long as the prerequisite status is maintained” (id.). The court determined
that these “persuasive considerations . . . demonstrate[d] that retiree benefits were intended
to outlive the” CBA’s “life and outweigh any contrary implications derived from a routine
duration clause terminating the agreement generally” (id. at 1482-1483). Indeed, “[s]uch
an intent takes precedence over a non-specific, general clause” (id. at 1483).
The Supreme Court repudiated Yard-Man, holding, in Tackett, that Yard-Man “is
incompatible with ordinary principles of contract law” (574 US at 430). In Tackett, retirees
and their former union claimed that expired CBAs “created a right to lifetime contribution-
free health care benefits for retirees, their surviving spouses, and their dependents” (id.).
The employer maintained that the health care provisions terminated when the CBAs
expired and, thus, “announced that it would begin requiring retirees to contribute to the
cost of their health care benefits” (id. at 432). The Sixth Circuit, relying on Yard-Man,
“sided with the retirees,” concluding that “retiree health care benefits are unlikely to be left
up to future negotiations” (id. at 430). The Supreme Court vacated the judgment and
remanded to the Sixth Circuit “to apply ordinary principles of contract law” (id.).
The Supreme Court explained that it interprets CBAs “according to ordinary
principles of contract law” and disagreed with the Sixth Circuit’s “assessment that the
inferences applied in Yard-Man and its progeny represent” such principles (id. at 435, 438).
Instead, “Yard-Man violates ordinary contract principles by placing a thumb on the scale in
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favor of vested retiree benefits in all” CBAs and “distorts the attempt to ascertain the
intention of the parties” (id. at 438 [internal quotation marks, citation, and emphasis
omitted]). The Supreme Court further criticized Yard-Man for refusing “to apply general
durational clauses to provisions governing retiree benefits,” thereby “distort[ing] the text of
the agreement and conflict[ing] with the principle of contract law that the written agreement
is presumed to encompass the whole agreement of the parties” (id. at 440).
Three years later, in Reese, the Supreme Court extended its Tackett holding. After
reiterating that the Yard-Man inferences are not ordinary principles of contract law, the
Court rejected the Sixth Circuit’s analysis that used those inferences to render a CBA
ambiguous (see 583 US at —, 138 S Ct at 763). The Court explained that the discredited
inferences the Sixth Circuit formerly used to presume lifetime vesting likewise were
inappropriate considerations when analyzing whether ambiguity existed concerning that
issue. In other words, the inferences “cannot be used to create a reasonable interpretation
any more than they can be used to create a presumptive one” (583 US at —, 138 S Ct at 6).
As the Second Circuit noted, we have not expressly adopted or rejected Yard-Man-
type inferences, nor addressed the impact of Tackett and Reese on New York law. Notably,
he Appellate Division has been inconsistent in its handling of Tackett and Reese.4 In
responding to the Second Circuit’s questions, we resolve these questions of New York law.
4
Compare Village of Old Brookville v Village of Muttontown (179 AD3d 972, 975 [2d
Dept 2020] [rejecting Yard-Man-type inferences and concluding that because the CBA
was “silent as to the duration of the health benefits promised therein . . . , it must be
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IV.
Initially, in accord with our established contract principles, we agree with the
Second Circuit that the 2007-2011 CBA does “not expressly provide for a vested right to
coverage at fixed contribution rates” (980 F3d at 59). Settling the question left open in
Kolbe, we decline to adopt any Yard-Man-type inferences, either in favor of vested rights
or in favor of determining that ambiguity exists concerning that issue. Such inferences
conflict with this State’s established contract law, which focuses on the parties’ chosen
language, by injecting considerations untethered to the words that the parties included in
their agreement.
We foreshadowed this conclusion in Kolbe, where we said that “contractual rights
and obligations” generally “do not survive beyond the termination” of a CBA (22 NY3d at
353). We made clear that, in New York, courts should analyze whether a vested right exists
under a CBA like any other contract question—using our well established principles of
contract interpretation. Inferences akin to those applied in Yard-Man are inconsistent with
New York’s ordinary contract principles because they “plac[e] a thumb on the scale in
favor of vested retiree benefits” (Tackett, 574 US at 438). Instead of adopting such
assumed that those benefits were promised only until the expiration of that agreement”]),
with Evans v Deposit Cent. Sch. Dist. (183 AD3d 1081, 1083 [3d Dept 2020] [stating that
the absence of durational language specific to retiree benefits renders it “logical to
assume . . . that the bargaining unit intended to insulate retirees from losing important
insurance rights during subsequent negotiations” (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted)]), and Guerrucci v School Dist. of City of Niagara Falls (126 AD3d 1498, 1500
[4th Dept 2015] [same], lv dismissed 25 NY3d 1194 [2015]).
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inferences based on policy considerations grounded in employment matters, or any other
considerations, existing outside the four corners of the CBA, we adhere to our contract
principles which preclude a New York court from “disregard[ing] the precise terminology
that the parties used” (Global Reins. Corp. of Am. v Century Indem. Co., 30 NY3d 508,
519 [2017]). This rule conforms to our precedent, thereby promoting our commitment to
“impart[] stability to commercial transactions” in this State (W.W.W. Assoc., 77 NY2d at
162 [internal quotation marks and citation omitted]).
Moreover, Kolbe did not implicitly adopt any inferences favoring vesting that we
explicitly declined to rule on therein. Although we drew an “inference . . . that the parties
intended the right to continued coverage to operate for the same period as the section as a
whole,” this inference stemmed from New York’s ordinary contract principles—namely,
the “well established” interpretation rule that “[p]articular words should be considered, not
as if isolated from the context, but in the light of the obligation as a whole and the intention
of the parties manifested thereby” (22 NY3d at 353 [internal quotation marks and citation
omitted]). Applying that construction rule, not Yard-Man-type inferences, we held that the
CBA was “clear on its face” and “unambiguously establishe[d]” that the plaintiffs had a
vested right to the coverage they claimed (id. at 353, 354).
We maintain our traditional contract interpretation principles, including those set
forth in Kolbe, but clarify that New York’s contract law does not recognize Yard-Man-like
inferences. Absent such inferences, none of the CBA provisions identified by the Second
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Circuit in the first certified question establish a vested right to lifetime fixed premium
contributions, either singly or in combination.
Having resolved the issue we left open in Kolbe, we proceed no further and accept
the Second Circuit’s invitation to limit the questions as appropriate (see 980 F3d at 88).
We believe that our analysis answers the pivotal question that prompted the Second
Circuit’s certification, and settles New York law that governs the first certified question.
We act cautiously in this regard, cognizant of exceeding our role on certification by
applying New York’s now-established law to the facts presented in this federal action in
the first instance. We therefore have no occasion to determine whether the CBA’s text is
ambiguous (see Liriano v Hobart Corp., 92 NY2d 232, 243 [1998]). Because we conclude
that the CBA does not expressly provide for vested contribution rates and do not answer
whether the CBA is ambiguous on that issue, we likewise respectfully decline to address
the second certified question.
Accordingly, the certified questions should be answered in accordance with this
opinion.
Following certification of questions by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit and acceptance of the questions by this Court pursuant to section 500.27 of this
Court's Rules of Practice, and after hearing argument by counsel for the parties and
consideration of the briefs and record submitted, certified questions answered in
accordance with the opinion herein. Opinion by Judge Singas. Judges Rivera, Garcia,
Wilson and Cannataro concur. Chief Judge DiFiore and Judge Troutman took no part.
Decided February 10, 2022
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