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Brenner v. Governor's Office of Employee Relations

N.Y. App. Div.January 8, 2004Cited 2 times
Mixed ResultNew York State Office of Mental Health
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Kane
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Claim Types

Breach of Contract

Outcome

The court partially reversed the dismissal of petitioners' Article 78 challenge, remitting the above-grade out-of-title work grievances to GOER for further determination, while affirming dismissal of the below-grade grievances.

What This Ruling Means

# Brenner v. Governor's Office of Employee Relations Summary ## What Happened Brenner, an employee at the Office of Mental Health, was assigned work outside his job title. He filed a grievance, arguing these out-of-title assignments violated employment rules. The lower court dismissed his case, but Brenner appealed. ## What the Court Decided The appellate court partially sided with Brenner. The court said the lower court was wrong to dismiss the case entirely. It sent the case back for a new review to determine whether Brenner's out-of-title work assignments (taking up 1-18% of his time) were truly "occasional and infrequent" as rules allow. However, the court upheld the dismissal of his grievances about lower-grade work assignments. ## Why This Matters for Workers This ruling clarifies that employers cannot assign workers to jobs outside their title regularly without limit. While occasional assignments are permitted, the court required actual examination of whether assignments were truly temporary and rare. This protects workers from being routinely used in different roles without proper compensation or job classification changes.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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