DOMINIK LAY v. CITY OF LOWELL & another.

101 Mass. App. Ct. 15
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedApril 28, 2022
StatusPublished

This text of 101 Mass. App. Ct. 15 (DOMINIK LAY v. CITY OF LOWELL & another.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DOMINIK LAY v. CITY OF LOWELL & another., 101 Mass. App. Ct. 15 (Mass. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

LAY vs. CITY OF LOWELL, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 15

DOMINIK LAY vs. CITY OF LOWELL & another. [Note 1]

101 Mass. App. Ct. 15

January 14, 2022 - April 28, 2022

Court Below: Superior Court, Middlesex County

Present: Milkey, Massing, & Hershfang, JJ.

No. 21-P-436.

Domicil. School and School Committee. School and School District, Residence. Evidence, Prima facie evidence. Moot Question. Injunction. Practice, Civil, Preliminary injunction.

In a civil action brought in the Superior Court by the plaintiff seeking to enjoin the defendants (a city and its election commission) from filling a vacancy on the city's school committee (committee) with anyone else and a declaration that he was domiciled in the city and therefore entitled to serve on the committee, the appeal was not moot, where its resolution in the plaintiff's favor would insulate him from the city's repeated challenges to his eligibility for office [20]; further, no due process violation arose from the judge's consolidation of the plaintiff's application for a preliminary injunction with a trial on the merits, where the defendants were content with the state of the evidence, had no additional evidence to offer, and were happy to rest on the record without additional argument, and where the judge had everything he needed to fairly assess the defendants' arguments and evidence [20-21]; moreover, the judge properly concluded that the commission's decision was not supported by substantial evidence, where the commission evaluated the plaintiff's domicil under an impermissibly narrow legal standard and disregarded evidence indicating the place in which the plaintiff conducted his civic life [21-24]; finally, the judge properly granted the plaintiff's request for a permanent injunction and declared that he was domiciled in the city and eligible to fill the vacancy on the committee, where the plaintiff sufficiently demonstrated that he was a resident of the city, in that, among other evidence, he voted in thirteen city elections, held elective office in the city from 2017 to 2019, purchased property in the city and had lived there continuously since shortly after the purchase, and used his city property's address for his driver's license, real estate license, and motor vehicle registration [24-25].


Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on March 12, 2021.

The case was heard by William M. White, Jr., J.

Christine P. O'Connor, City Solicitor (Nicholas L. Anastasi, Assistant City Solicitor, also present) for the defendants.

Page 16

Roland L. Milliard for the plaintiff.


MASSING, J. A vacancy on the school committee of Lowell (school committee) was created when a member resigned mid-term. As the person who had received the most votes among the defeated candidates in the last election, the plaintiff, Dominik Lay, was next in line to fill the vacancy under applicable State law. Following a hearing initiated by the city of Lowell (city or Lowell), however, the election commission of Lowell (commission) determined that Lay was not a resident of Lowell and was therefore ineligible to assume the vacant seat.

Lay immediately brought an action in the Superior Court seeking to enjoin the commission and the city (collectively, defendants) from filling the vacancy with anyone else and for a declaration that he was domiciled in Lowell and entitled to serve. See G. L. c. 56, § 59 (granting Superior Court jurisdiction over civil actions to enforce election laws and authorizing court to "award relief formerly available in equity or by mandamus"). After consolidating Lay's application for a preliminary injunction with a trial on the merits, a Superior Court judge concluded that the commission's decision was not supported by substantial evidence, and judgment entered in Lay's favor. The defendants appeal. Because the commission evaluated Lay's domicil under an impermissibly narrow legal standard, and the judge correctly concluded that the commission's determination was unsupported, we affirm.

Background. 1. School committee vacancy. On February 26, 2021, a member of the school committee resigned his position. Four days later, the city solicitor submitted a letter to the mayor explaining the process for filling the vacancy. According to the city solicitor, State law required the vacancy to be filled by the person who received the highest number of votes among the defeated school committee candidates in the most recent municipal election, held in November 2019, so long as that candidate remained "eligible and willing to serve." St. 1954, c. 230 ("An Act relative to filling vacancies in elective bodies in certain cities having a plan E charter"). Although that person was Lay, the city solicitor stated that questions regarding "Lay's eligibility have come to the attention of the law department." Specifically, the city solicitor's search of property and tax records indicated that Lay resided in Boston, whereas school committee members must be residents of Lowell. The city solicitor therefore recommended that the matter be referred to the commission to determine Lay's eligibility.

Page 17

2. Commission proceedings. [Note 2] The commission convened a hearing on March 9, 2021. Prior to the hearing, Lay and the city submitted documentary evidence and legal memoranda. The record includes these submissions, but we know few details of what occurred at the hearing. We are told that Lay did not testify and that the commission asked about his current motor vehicle registration. The commission continued the proceedings to March 11, 2021. At the commission's request, both Lay and the city submitted supplemental materials. Lay's counsel and the city solicitor made additional legal arguments at the March 11 hearing, but no live testimony was introduced.

To support its contention that Lay was domiciled in Boston, the city submitted the following documents: a declaration of homestead that Lay had filed twelve years earlier for a property in the Brighton section of Boston; real estate tax records from the city of Boston addressed to Lay at the Brighton property and listing him as the property's primary owner; records from the city of Lowell showing Lay as the owner of a property in Lowell, but listing the Brighton property under "owner address"; and an affidavit from Lowell's chief tax assessor attesting that the city had not assessed excise taxes on Lay's car since 2018.

To rebut the city's allegations, and to support his contention that he was domiciled in Lowell, Lay submitted an affidavit attesting that he and his sister had coowned the Brighton property since 2009, that he had applied for a residential real estate tax exemption for the Brighton property around that time, and that the residential exemption remained valid because his sister still lived there. He further averred that he and his sister had purchased the Lowell property in 2015, that he had lived at the Lowell property "continuously since shortly after the purchase" and "intend[ed] to reside there indefinitely," and that he had registered to vote in Lowell and had not voted in Boston since relocating to Lowell. He explained that his sister handled "municipal financial matters" with respect to the Lowell property and had requested that the city mail real estate tax and water utility bills to her at the Brighton property where she lived.

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Bluebook (online)
101 Mass. App. Ct. 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dominik-lay-v-city-of-lowell-another-massappct-2022.