Appellate court affirmed lower court's decision compelling the Retirement System to pay preretirement death benefits to the petitioner as the designated beneficiary under the separation agreement, rejecting the appellant's argument that the petitioner had waived death benefits.
What This Ruling Means
# Black v. New York State & Local Employees' Retirement System
**What Happened**
A former state employee designated someone as the beneficiary to receive death benefits if he died before retirement. Later, the employee left his job and signed a separation agreement. The New York State and Local Employees' Retirement System argued that by leaving, the employee had given up his right to those death benefits. The designated beneficiary disagreed and took the retirement system to court.
**What the Court Decided**
The appeals court sided with the beneficiary. The court said the separation agreement did not mean the employee had waived—or given up—his death benefits. The retirement system was ordered to pay the preretirement death benefits to the designated beneficiary as promised.
**Why This Matters for Workers**
This ruling protects workers' benefit designations. Even if you leave a job, the benefits you've already designated for your family don't automatically disappear. Employers cannot claim you've given up these benefits unless you clearly agree to do so in writing. This helps ensure your family is protected financially if something happens to you.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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