Commonwealth v. Board of Selectmen

21 Mass. L. Rptr. 545
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedOctober 30, 2006
DocketNo. 062167C
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Mass. L. Rptr. 545 (Commonwealth v. Board of Selectmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Board of Selectmen, 21 Mass. L. Rptr. 545 (Mass. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Locke, Jeffrey A., J.

This matter comes before the Court on a complaint by John J. Conte, District Attorney for the Middle District, seeking to enforce the provisions of M.G.L.c. 39, §23B, commonly referred to as the Open Meeting Law. According to the complaint, the Town of Westborough through its elected Board of Selectmen and a specially appointed committee to screen applicants for the position of Town Counsel, violated c. 39, §23B by considering applicants, conducting interviews, and selecting a single applicant for recommendation to the selectmen, all of which occurred in executive session, which led to the Board of Selectmen appointing the single recommended candidate without requiring disclosure of any other applicants or finalists for the position of town counsel. The district attorney seeks an order vacating all actions taken in violation of the Open Meeting Law, release of certain Search Committee minutes, and a civil fine for each violation.1

Facts

The facts underlying the case are largely undisputed, the parties differing only in their characterization of the events.2 In June 2006, the town’s Board of Selectmen established a Town Counsel Search Com-' mittee (the “Search Committee”) to solicit and consider applicants for an open position of Town Counsel and make recommendations to the Board. George Thompson, a selectman, was appointed to serve as the Board’s representative on the search committee. Also appointed were Henry L. Danis, Jr., the town coordinator and chief administrative officer, Maryanne Bilodeau, assistant town coordinator and director of human resources, Leah Talbot, town accountant, Kathryn J. Wilfert, chair of the town’s personnel board, Glenn Parker, a member of the town’s planning board, and John F. Strouse, Jr., a local attorney who served as a citizen-at-large. The Search Committee was tasked with the duty to consider and review applications for the position of Town Counsel and make recommendations to the Board.3

The Search Committee held seven meetings between June 20 and September 7,2006. All substantive review of candidates for the open position occurred in executive session, closed to the public. The Committee received and reviewed 24 applications, deliberated upon them and agreed to interview eight applicants.4 Interviews took place, again, in executive session. Thereafter, again in executive session, the Committee conducted further interviews of three candidates after which the Committee decided to forward a single candidate’s name to the Board of Selectmen.5 On September 12, 2006, during a meeting of the Board, the Search Committee recommended Attorney George B. Franks as worthy of consideration for appointment as Town Counsel. George Barrette, chair of the Board, commented that the Board had been briefed “at every level of the preliminary screening process . . .”6 Upon objection from a member of the audience questioning the Committee’s compliance with the Open Meeting Law, Selectman George Thompson (also a member of the Search Committee) asked the Board to delay voting on the appointment of Attorney Franks until the next meeting. A week later, on September 20, 2006, the Board voted to appoint Mr. Franks as Town Counsel.

Discussion

M.G.L.c. 39, §23B provides, “All meetings of a governmental body shall be open to the public and any person shall be permitted to attend any meeting . . .” To this general rule comes a series of exceptions permitting meetings in executive (closed) session. One such exception is found in §23B(8) which provides that the body may meet in executive session,

To consider and interview applicants for employment by a preliminary screening committee or a subcommittee appointed by a governmental body if an open meeting will have a detrimental effect in obtaining qualified applicants; provided, however, that this clause shall not apply to any meeting, including meetings of a preliminary screening committee or a subcommittee appointed by a governmental body, to consider and interview applicants who have passed a prior preliminary screening.

M.G.L.c. 39, §23B(8).

At issue in the instant case is the straightforward but not so simple question of when a preliminary screening of applicants for employment concludes and consideration of finalists begins.7 Both sides rely on a single decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court to support their opposing positions. In Gerstein v. Superintendent Search Screening Committee, 405 Mass. 465 (1989), the court construed clause (8), “to mean that, once such a committee has com[546]*546pleted its screening, which may include more than one step and may or may not include interviews, and has voted to recommend a candidate, the process may not be repeated in executive session.” Id. at 472. As interpreted by the SJC, the preliminary screening of applicants for employment involves a process of winnowing from a greater number of applicants a final pool of candidates worthy of recommendation to the appointing authority and may consist of several steps such as consideration of written applications or resumes, selection of some for further consideration, and interviews for the purpose of narrowing of the field of candidates. The Court specifically rejected the claim that the preliminary screening process ends when the committee first narrows the pool of applicants. Id. at 471.

In Gerstein, a search committee, considering applicants for school superintendent, reviewed letters of inquiry and resumes it had received, from which it invited some of the candidates plus 14 others whose names were referred to the committee, to submit written applications and answer written questions. The committee decided to interview 13 candidates, after which it recommended eight candidates to the school committee. Here, by contrast, the Search Committee received 24 applications, interviewed eight applicants, re-interviewed four, and decided to recommend only one to the selectmen.

According to the defendants, the procedure followed by the Search Committee was permissible under Gerstein because all of their actions preceded the selection of a “candidate worthy of recommendation . . .” Gerstein, 405 Mass. at 471. Further, say the defendants, only Attorney Franks was found worthy of recommendation for appointment through the screening process and therefore only his name was forwarded to the Board of Selectmen and made public. This argument is not persuasive. As reflected in the affidavits submitted by the members of the Search Committee, if Attorney Franks had withdrawn his name from consideration by the Board, the Committee “would have re-opened the search process by revisiting the existing applicant pool. . .”8 as well as re-advertising the position. The fact that the Search Committee would revisit the existing pool necessarily means that there were others worthy of consideration but were found not to be as qualified as Attorney Franks.

Viewed in this light it cannot be said that the Committee engaged in merely a preliminary screening process. “Preliminary” is defined as “something that precedes a main discourse, work, design, or business: something introductory or preparatory.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, 2002; or “coming before and usually leading up to the main part of something.” Black’s Law Dictionary, 7th Ed., 1999.

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Related

Gerstein v. Superintendent Search Screening Committee
405 Mass. 465 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
21 Mass. L. Rptr. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-board-of-selectmen-masssuperct-2006.