Dunn v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board

705 N.E.2d 1167, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 359, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 169
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 1999
DocketNo. 97-P-549
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 705 N.E.2d 1167 (Dunn v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board) 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
Dunn v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Board, 705 N.E.2d 1167, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 359, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 169 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Armstrong, J.

John Dunn (Dunn), a Plymouth County correctional case worker, died in 1992 of lung cancer. Five months before his death, he had filed a change of beneficiary form with the Plymouth County retirement board (Plymouth board), intended to exclude his wife, Geraldine Dunn (who had left him in September, 1989, and had in 1991 retained an attorney to institute divorce proceedings), in favor of Shelby Reno, whom Dunn listed as his fiancée. Both women filed claims with the [360]*360Plymouth board for benefits (in this case, a return of John Dunn’s total accumulated contributions, with interest). The case is before us on an appeal by Geraldine Dunn from a judgment affirming the decision of the Contributory Retirement Appeal Board (CRAB) in favor of Shelby Reno. We reverse the judgment because the CRAB decision was based on an erroneous legal standard.

Shelby Reno’s claim was based on Dunn’s designation of her as his beneficiary. Geraldine Dunn’s claim was based on G. L. c. 32, § 12(2)(d), as appearing in St. 1972, c. 743, § 1, which gives a surviving spouse the right to claim as the retirement beneficiary, “provided, that said spouse and the deceased member [of the retirement system] were living together at the time of death of such member, or that the board finds that they had been living apart for justifiable cause other than desertion or moral turpitude on the part of the spouse.” She acknowledged that she was living apart from Dunn but claimed that it was for a justifiable cause: namely, that Dunn had been having an adulterous, homosexual relationship with a friend, Larry_.

The conflicting claims were heard by the Plymouth board. The evidence for Geraldine Dunn consisted primarily of her own testimony. While acknowledging that she had never caught the two men in flagrante delicto, she based her inference as to the affair on long periods of estrangement, an aggregation of incidents of suspicious behavior involving personal hygiene and undergarments, a succession of clues that convinced Geraldine Dunn her husband was spending inordinate amounts of time with Larry_, and various remarks by her husband suggestive of an obsession with homosexual behavior. The evidence for Shelby Reno consisted, most importantly, of the testimony of Larry_, who denied having engaged in a homosexual affair with Dunn and, beyond that, testified that he had been (and still was) happily married to his wife of thirty-four years and that his relationship with Dunn was only that he was one of a number of boat owners who, like Larry_, spent substantial amounts of time hanging around the Scituate docks; and of the testimony of Shelby Reno, who attested to Dunn’s heterosexuality. She also described the period of his final illness and her care of him during that time; and, she and one Thomas Donohue, a close friend of Dunn’s, described the steps taken by Dunn in his closing months to rearrange his affairs to ensure that his house and his pension benefits would go to Shelby [361]*361Reno rather than to his wife Geraldine. Having heard these witnesses and several others whose testimony was marginally relevant, and having received the affidavits of two other relatively tangential witnesses, the five members of the Plymouth board, without explanation, voted unanimously to return Dunn’s accumulated contributions to Shelby Reno as Dunn’s named beneficiary.

Geraldine Dunn appealed the Plymouth board’s adverse decision to CRAB, before which she was statutorily entitled to a de novo fact-finding hearing. See G. L. c. 32, § 16(4), second par., as amended by St. 1990, c. 331; Namay v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd.., 19 Mass. App. Ct. 456, 461-462 (1985). Under the statute, the de novo hearing is conducted by a hearing officer (“administrative magistrate”) assigned by the Division of Administrative Law Appeals, G. L. c. 7, § 4H, as amended by St. 1983, c. 683, whose decision is final unless a party seeks review by GRAB’S three-member board. See § 16(4), second par. See generally Vinal v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd., 13 Mass. App. Ct. 85, 93-94 (1982). In this case, the appeal was assigned to an administrative magistrate who was prepared to conduct a full evidentiary hearing; the parties agreed, however, not to present live witnesses but instead to submit the case for decision by the administrative magistrate on the transcript of evidence and exhibits that had been before the Plymouth board. This was, in effect, the submission of the case for decision on an agreed statement of the evidence, see Frati v. Jannini, 226 Mass. 430, 431-432 (1917), empowering the administrative magistrate to make her findings of fact on her evaluation of the evidence therein just as she would have done if the same evidence had been adduced through testimony. See id. at 431; Commonwealth v. Triplett, 398 Mass. 561, 570 (1986). The administrative magistrate did exactly that, entering extensive findings wherein she credited the testimony of Geraldine Dunn as to all or nearly all of the various clues from which Geraldine Dunn had drawn the inference that her husband was engaged surreptitiously in a homosexual liaison. “The issue in this appeal,” the administrative magistrate concluded, “is whether the fact that Ms. Dunn reasonably believed that her husband was bisexual and committing adultery provides justifiable cause for living apart.” The administrative magistrate [362]*362answered the question affirmatively,2 based on her conclusion that “[d]uring the [relevant] time period . . . there was objective evidence to support Ms. Dunn’s suspicions that [her husband] was engaging in homosexual, adulterous encounters.” The administrative magistrate’s conclusion, in other words, was that Geraldine Dunn’s suspicions were genuine and well founded; she did not go further to find that they were also true. The administrative magistrate ordered that the accumulated contributions.be returned to Geraldine Dunn.

Shelby Reno sought review of the decision by GRAB’S three-member appeal board3 which took the following view of the case: Only eleven of the administrative magistrate’s forty-two subsidiary findings were based on the documentary exhibits put in evidence before the Plymouth board. The other thirty-one subsidiary findings were based on the testimonial transcript from that board, from which the administrative magistrate, CRAB reasoned, had made findings contrary to those made by the Plymouth board. The Plymouth board had heard the witnesses live and thus had been in a better position to assess their credibility; accordingly, under the decisional law (CRAB here cited Vinal v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd., 13 Mass. App. Ct. at 97), CRAB concluded that the administrative magistrate could not make findings from a printed transcript contrary to those made by the Plymouth board. Following that reasoning, CRAB adopted the eleven findings based on the documentary exhibits and struck all thirty-one findings based on the testimonial transcript. Then, reasoning that the burden of proof lay on Geraldine Dunn as the one appealing the decision of the Plymouth board, CRAB ruled that the eleven summary findings (which were incoherent taken out of their testimonial context) did not suffice to show that the Plymouth board had erred in finding for Shelby Reno. On that basis, CRAB affirmed [363]*363the decision of the Plymouth board.

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Bluebook (online)
705 N.E.2d 1167, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 359, 1999 Mass. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-contributory-retirement-appeal-board-massappct-1999.