Dupont v. Commissioners of Essex County

704 N.E.2d 530, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 235
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1999
DocketNo. 97-P-1594
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 704 N.E.2d 530 (Dupont v. Commissioners of Essex County) 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
Dupont v. Commissioners of Essex County, 704 N.E.2d 530, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 235 (Mass. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

In late 1988 the commissioners of Essex County recognized there would be very substantial shortfalls of revenue for fiscal 1990. The county advisory board met several times to consider how to cut the prospective budget to meet the crisis. On April 29, 1989, a budget was voted with heavy reductions of force and with various other economies. Most members of the staff of the county engineering department, including the present plaintiffs, were to be laid off. The plaintiffs received termination notices on or about May 12, 1989, effective on July 1, 1989.

[236]*236On the books at the time was G. L. c. 32, § 16(2), as amended by St. 1982, c. 630, § 21 (text in the margin).3 Under that statute the “removal or discharge” of an employee in the plaintiffs’ classification “shall not become effective” until a written notice, with a fair summary of the facts on which the action was based, had been filed with the retirement board, following which there would be a hearing, if the employee requested it. Unless the board found the action was justified, the employee would be entitled to be reinstated with back pay.

The county commissioners, as employers, failed to follow the procedure of the statute in respect to these plaintiffs. The record does not explain the omission — whether sheer inadvertence or perhaps an assumption that there was no point in invoking the procedure because it was known to all that the termination was justified by the fiscal situation.4

Nearly six years after the layoffs, on February 16, 1995, the plaintiff Dupont (joined shortly by the other plaintiffs) commenced the present action claiming the statutory reinstatement and back pay.5 The defendant county commissioners and treasurer, as third-party plaintiffs, impleaded as third-party [237]*237defendants the Deutsch Williams law firm who had served as attorneys for the county commissioners, alleging that the firm would be liable to the commissioners if the commissioners were cast in damages in the main action. In due course the plaintiffs moved, and the third-party defendants cross-moved, for summary judgment.

On August 9, 1996, with the present action pending in Superior Court, St. 1996, c. 306, § 19, was enacted, repealing G. L. c. 32, § 16(2). The act was without a saving clause. Relying on the repealer, the judge below denied the plaintiffs’ motion and allowed the third-party defendants’ motion and entered judgment dismissing the action. The plaintiffs appealed.

From the absence of a saving clause in the 1996 act, we can infer that the Legislature “intended” (if the word can fairly be used) not only to nullify c. 32, § 16(2), for the future, but also to abort any lawsuit under § 16(2) commenced before, and pending on, the date August 9, 1996. Indeed, that such was the legislative intention is not seriously disputed.

1. The parties spend much space wrangling over a statement by Justice Gray in New London N.R.R. v. Boston & Albany R.R., 102 Mass. 386, 389 (1869):

“[A] statute which wholly repeals an earlier one, either expressly or by implication, without any saving clause, makes it ineffectual to support any proceedings, whether not yet begun, or pending at the time of its passage, and not already prosecuted to final judgment vesting absolute rights.”

To a reader of this pronouncement more than a century later, it appears to be too sweeping to be true to the full reach of its literal boundaries, and ought to be understood in relation to its context. The court had appointed commissioners under a stand[238]*238ing statute (Gen. Sts. c. 63, § 117) to take evidence and award reasonable compensation for the plaintiff company’s admitted use of the defendant company’s road, and to report to the court. After the commissioners had begun hearings, the Legislature passed an act of 1869 (St. 1869, c. 408) which established a board of railroad commissioners to be appointed by the Governor and conferred on them the duties previously exercised by the court-appointed commissioners, subject as before to report to the court. The statutory switch from a judicial to an administrative mode was easily validated in the New London case, and the quotation reads well enough upon that situation. However, the absolutist language of automatic total supercession of an earlier statute by a later one could not stand firm when sought to be applied to imaginable cases of individual rights rather than governmental structures. And so we see the New London dictum in effect being limited over the years by appeal to distinctions between the procedural and the substantive, remedial and punitive, unsettled and vested.6 As the old dictum has been haltingly modified, it has approached present thought about “retroactive” legislation, and that, rather than the dictum, is our better resort in dealing with the instant case.

2. In considering whether the 1996 statute repealing § 16(2) may be given effect to cancel such a right or interest as the plaintiffs then had, we follow the precepts of Carleton v. Framingham, 418 Mass. 623, 631-635 (1994), and are reminded that “a claim that a statute violates due process protections by abolishing rights retroactively7 has called for a balancing of interests to determine whether the legislative action is unreasonable,” and “[i]n any evaluation of reasonableness, the plaintiffs have a heavy burden to meet, and we will recognize every rational presumption in favor of the legislation.” Id. at 631.

a. Nature of the rights affected.8 We note at the threshold that a favorable outcome for the plaintiffs in the lawsuit was doubtful even if the statute had not intervened. Reading § 16(2) with [239]*239its internal citation to the procedure of § 16(1), one sees it was expected that the notice, hearing, etc., would be carried out promptly, and surely not over a period of years. This suggests that an employee, complaining of lack or refusal of notice, must take action with some expedition. However, there is no reference in § 16(2) or its environs to a limitations period. The defendants have contended that the relevant period is not the statutory six years for actions on contract, relied on by these plaintiffs, but a much shorter period on analogy, e.g., to the six-month provision of the Civil Service Act for initiation of application to court, G. L. c. 31, § 42.9 So too, it is suggested that the doctrine of laches could be applied to bar the untowardly late commencement of the action. Compare Yetman v. Cambridge, 7 Mass. App. Ct. 700, 707-709 (1979).

All this apart, there is a fundamental consideration. The plaintiffs’ basic grievance is that the commissioners did not give them the required notice under § 16(2). Suppose the notice had been given. The commissioners would “justify” before the retirement board, pointing to the crisis conditions that occasioned the layoffs, and the justification would no doubt have been held good; the plaintiffs do not gainsay this. And see Shaw v. Selectmen of Marshfield, 36 Mass. App. Ct. 924, 925-926 (1994). Thus the “rights affected” were slim at most.10

b. Nature of the public interest. Considering what might have [240]

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Bluebook (online)
704 N.E.2d 530, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupont-v-commissioners-of-essex-county-massappct-1999.