Kilcoyne v. Wayland Landfill Review Panel

18 Mass. L. Rptr. 410
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedOctober 18, 2004
DocketNo. 0403824
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Mass. L. Rptr. 410 (Kilcoyne v. Wayland Landfill Review Panel) 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
Kilcoyne v. Wayland Landfill Review Panel, 18 Mass. L. Rptr. 410 (Mass. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Brassard, J.

In July 2002, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts alleged that the Town of Wayland (“Town”) improperly disposed of recyclable materials in its municipal landfill. In response to the complaint of the Attorney General, the Town agreed to a penally of $25,000, $10,000 of which would be waived if no further violations occurred. In July 2004, the Commonwealth informed the Town that it had received notice of additional violations at the landfill; during this time, the Commonwealth was considering a demand of the $10,000 waived penalty. The Town asked the Commonwealth for a stay of the demand so that it could pursue its own investigation. The Commonwealth granted the Town’s request, imposing a deadline of September 15, 2004, later extended to October 16, 2004. On July 19, 2004, the Board of Selectmen (“Board”) discussed the impending penalty and deadline. At that meeting, the Board moved, “pursuant to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 41, Section 23B” to designate Betsy Connolly (Chair of the Board), Michelle S. Wolf (Chair of the Board of Health), and Lauren Stiller Rikleen (Special Town Environmental Counsel), to conduct an investigation to determine the Town’s compliance with the Settlement Agreement. This group of persons was later named the Wayland Landfill Review Panel (“Panel”). The Panel was to “conduct an investigation . . . with respect to the operations at the Wayland Landfill, and to render a report of their findings, with recommendations, to the Board of Selectmen.” Board of Selectmen Meeting Minutes, •IA14, July 19, 2004. Subsequently, Ross Petty, a college professor who is also an attorney, joined the Panel.

Although the report of the Panel would be submitted to the Board and made public at the conclusion of the investigation, the Panel decided to conduct confidential interviews. No minutes of these meetings would be taken, and no other records or notes of the interviews would be released to the public. Town of Wayland Landfill Review Panel Operating Guidelines, ¶¶3-6. The intent of this confidentiality was to ensure voluntary participation and honest cooperation with the investigation process by employees of the Town and members of the public.

Subsequently, three registered voters of the Town, William Kilcoyne, Carol Kilcoyne, and Stanley Robinson (“Plaintiffs”), filed a claim against the Panel seeking multiple remedies for alleged violations of the Massachusetts open meeting law, M.G.L.c. 39, §§23A-23B. The claim sought 1) a declaration that the Panel is subject to the open meeting law; 2) a preliminary and permanent injunction preventing further violations of the open meeting law; 3) a remedy of past violations of the open meeting law; 4) an order invalidating any action taken by the Panel at any meeting where the open meeting law was violated. The matter before the court today concerns only the issuance of a preliminary injunction to prevent future violations; this court makes no ruling concerning relief for alleged past violations.

After an extensive hearing and careful review of the helpful papers filed by the parties, the motion for a preliminary injunction is granted.

Time-Bar and Standing

The Plaintiffs’ motion for an injunction is not time-barred, as they only seek injunctive relief to prevent future violations. “Upon proof of failure by any governmental body ... to carry out any of the provisions for public notice or meetings, for holding open meetings, or for maintaining public records thereof. . . the superior court sitting within and for the county in which such governmental body acts shall issue an appropriate order requiring .such governmental body ... to carry out such provisions at future meetings.” M.G.L.c. 39, §23B. (Emphasis added.) Although the Town contends that this requirement for the superior court to act is subject to a twenty-one-day statute of limitations, that time-bar applies only to invalidating past violations.1 Because the requested preliminary injunction is sought to prevent future violations, this court makes no decision with respect to the applicability of the time-bar with respect to the other remedies sought by the plaintiffs in their complaint. In addition, the order requiring the governmental body to act in accordance with the open meeting law may be sought “by complaint of three or more registered voters, by the attorney general, or by the district attorney of the county in which the city or town is [412]*412located.” Id. As the plaintiffs are three registered voters, they have standing to pursue an injunction.

Open Meeting Law

In order to be governed by the open meeting law, the Panel must meet the definition of a “governmental body” in M.G.L.c. 39, §23A.2 In Connelly v. School Committee of Hanover, 409 Mass. 232, 235 (1991), the Supreme Judicial Court stated that governmental bodies covered by the open meeting law are almost all “creatures of statute, ordinance, or bylaw.” In that case, a school superintendent appointed a selection committee for the purpose of assisting him in selecting a group of nominees for the position of principal at the high school. After reducing the field from sixty-eight applicants to seven candidates, the selection committee interviewed the finalists in private. The committee recommended one candidate to the superintendent, who passed the recommendation on to the school committee. The school committee formally appointed the recommended candidate in an open meeting. Id. at 233-34. The Supreme Judicial Court noted that the selection committee was an informal appointment by the superintendent, rather than created pursuant to a statute or by-law, and therefore distinguishable from several other town entities that had been considered government bodies in prior cases: a board of health, a board of selectmen, a school committee, a zoning hoard of appeals, and a housing authority. Id. at 235. Importantly, the Panel in this case is different than the selection committee in Connelly; the Board created it “pursuant to Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 41, Section 23B.” Board of Selectmen Meeting Minutes, SLA14, July 19, 2004. This delegation to the Panel of the power granted to a town board of selectmen to “make an investigation into the conduct and operation of any town department,” M.G.L.c. 41, §23B, makes clear that the Panel is a “creature of statute.”

In Connelly, the SJC also held that, if an individual or committee is not subject to the open meeting law, any subcommittee created to assist that individual or committee is itself not subject to the open meeting law:

Of special significance is the fact that the superintendent, because he is clearly not a “governmental body,” could, by himself, have accomplished the task of screening and interviewing candidates in a closed session, entirely free from the requirements of the open meeting law . . . We see no persuasive reason to hold that an interviewing and screening process, which is exempt from the open meeting law when carried out by the superintendent, should be subject to the law when carried out by individuals informally appointed by the superintendent to assist him.

Connelly, 409 Mass, at 235-36. In contrast, committees created by governmental bodies are themselves governmental bodies. See Connelly, n.7. As the Board is clearly a governmental body, any committee or board it creates to assist it in its statutory duties is likewise a governmental body.

Because the Panel is a governmental body, the operative language of the open meeting law applies to the Panel.

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Related

Board of Selectmen of Marion v. Labor Relations Commission
388 N.E.2d 302 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1979)
Nigro v. Conservation Commission of Canton
458 N.E.2d 1219 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1984)
Connelly v. School Committee
409 Mass. 232 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1991)
Attorney General v. School Committee of Taunton
386 N.E.2d 1295 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1979)
Pearson v. Board of Selectmen
726 N.E.2d 980 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Mass. L. Rptr. 410, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilcoyne-v-wayland-landfill-review-panel-masssuperct-2004.