Georgetown v. ESSEX COUNTY RETIREMENT BOARD
This text of 560 N.E.2d 127 (Georgetown v. ESSEX COUNTY RETIREMENT 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.
Opinion
TOWN OF GEORGETOWN
vs.
ESSEX COUNTY RETIREMENT BOARD & another.[1]
Appeals Court of Massachusetts, Essex.
Present: ARMSTRONG, CUTTER, & KASS, JJ.
Richard J. Fallon for the plaintiff.
John F. Tierney for Gretchen Wilmarth.
ARMSTRONG, J.
Gretchen Wilmarth, a Georgetown police officer, was discharged by the selectmen based on findings, after hearing, of misconduct, not in the course of her work as a police officer, but nevertheless in violation of police department regulations proscribing conduct unbecoming an officer and mandating that her conduct should "be above reproach *273 in all matters both within and outside the [d]epartment" and that she should be truthful "in all reports as well as when [she] appears before any judicial ... proceeding." Based, apparently, on her longevity in office (the point is not contested), she was entitled to review of the discharge by the Essex County retirement board under G.L.c. 32, § 16(2), to which the town duly forwarded a record of its proceedings. The record included a transcript of the hearing before the board of selectmen, the exhibits introduced, and the findings of the selectmen (originally stated orally at the close of the hearing, then recapitulated in a letter to the retirement board, by the police chief, writing for the selectmen). The retirement board, after a nonevidentiary (so far as appears) hearing, reviewed the record of proceedings before the selectmen and found, without amplification, that the removal of Gretchen Wilmarth "was unjustified." The retirement board ordered that she be restored to her office without loss of compensation. The town, having no right of appeal to the District Court under § 16(3) or to the Contributory Retirement Appeal Board under § 16(4), see Barrett v. Police Commr. of Boston, 347 Mass. 298, 300-301 (1964), brought an action in the nature of certiorari (G.L.c. 249, § 4) in the Superior Court.[2]
The case was heard in the Superior Court on cross motions for summary judgment. The judge, reviewing the record of proceedings, allowed the motion of the retirement board, ruling that its decision was supported by substantial evidence. He ordered entry of a judgment affirming the retirement board's decision and ordering reinstatement of Wilmarth with no loss of benefits or compensation. The town appealed.
Although the judge took some pains to state the standard of review that he applied, he did not identify the evidence that he regarded as offering substantial support for the decision of the retirement board. This would probably have been *274 a futile task, as the retirement board had not articulated the rationale for its decision. The "substantial evidence" test makes sense when it is applied to evaluate articulated subsidiary findings against the evidentiary record that was (or was asserted to be) the basis for them a process that is normally the crux of judicial review of adjudicatory decisions under the State Administrative Procedure Act, G.L.c. 30A, §§ 11(8) and 14(7)(e). See New York Cent. R.R. v. Department of Pub. Util., 347 Mass. 586, 593 (1964). Here the only factual findings that have been stated are those of the board of selectmen, and the pivotal question is the role that the retirement board should play under G.L.c. 32, § 16(2), in reviewing the decision of the selectmen.
The tenor of the few reported cases that have considered that point has been to curtail rather sharply the scope of the retirement board's review. In Welch v. Contributory Retirement Appeal Bd., 343 Mass. 502, 508 (1962), the court stated that review by a local retirement board under § 16(2) of the removal of a department head by the city manager "could not be a broad one. It would not be an examination `de novo' of the propriety of the removal." Contrasting a review of a removal for specified causes, the court stated, "It is hard to see how any review under c. 32, § 16(2), of a removal at pleasure ... could result in a reinstatement unless, perhaps, the local board could determine that the city manager's reasons, if any, stated for removal were nothing more than a gross subterfuge." Ibid. The court was even more pointed in School Comm. of Brockton v. Teachers' Retirement Bd., 393 Mass. 256 (1984), reversing a decision of a retirement board ordering, under § 16(2), reinstatement of a teacher discharged by the school committee for incompetence. Rejecting the view that § 16(2) was "intended to invest the board with plenary powers to review and reverse the personnel decisions of local school committees," id. at 261, or that it authorized "the board to engage in its own fact-finding process," id. at 263, the School Comm. of Brockton decision defined the issue before the retirement board as "whether, upon a review of the `fair summary of the facts' *275 presented by the committee, the dismissal is justified.... In this context, we conclude that a dismissal is `justified' if it is based on `any ground which is not arbitrary, irrational, unreasonable, in bad faith, or irrelevant to the committee's task of running a sound school system.'" Id. at 263, 264, quoting from Springgate v. School Comm. of Mattapoisett, 11 Mass. App. Ct. 304, 308 (1981).
In defining the scope of review, the Welch decision emphasized the strong municipal interest in cooperation between a city manager and his department heads, and the School Comm. of Brockton decision emphasized the preeminent role of the school committee in defining educational policy and standards. No less compelling, however, is the interest of a municipality in ridding itself of police officers found by it to be lacking in personal integrity.
We assume, for purposes of decision, that a retirement board under § 16(2) could find arbitrary and unreasonable a removal based on findings that manifestly lack support in the appointing authority's evidentiary record. Such was not the case here. The selectmen's finding that Gretchen Wilmarth "misappropriated" ticket money at the drive-in theater where she worked as ticket-taker was supported by the eyewitness accounts of four fellow police officers, who, when assigned to the theater as special detail officers,[3] observed her to be undercounting patrons regularly in the records she kept of ticket sales, despite charging those patrons. The selectmen could properly regard that testimony to be more probative than the testimony of DeSantis, the theater's operator, in support of Wilmarth, because he would have no way of knowing that cash receipts were short if they tallied with the allegedly false records prepared by Wilmarth.[4] The finding *276 that Wilmarth failed to report her cash income from the drive-in theater on her Federal tax returns for 1981 through 1986 was not contested. Her defense, essentially, was that it was unintentional and that she had filed amended returns in 1988 reporting the cash income without repercussions from the Internal Revenue Service. The selectmen could properly find the omissions to have been deliberate, especially in light of the fact that the amended returns were filed three days after it came to light through subpoenas in a related case (see note 5, infra
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560 N.E.2d 127, 29 Mass. App. Ct. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/georgetown-v-essex-county-retirement-board-massappct-1990.