Lee Academy Education Ass'n v. Academy

556 A.2d 218, 1989 Me. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 30, 1989
StatusPublished

This text of 556 A.2d 218 (Lee Academy Education Ass'n v. Academy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Academy Education Ass'n v. Academy, 556 A.2d 218, 1989 Me. LEXIS 67 (Me. 1989).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff Lee Academy Education Association, a local union of the Maine Teachers Association, seeks to organize the faculty of defendant Lee Academy. Because the Academy educates public high school students under contract with School Administrative District No. 30, the union contends that the teachers at the Academy are indirectly employed by SAD 30 and are entitled to the protection of the Municipal Public Employees Labor Relations Law, 26 M.R.S. A. §§ 962-974 (1988). Reversing a preliminary decision by one of its hearing examiners, the Maine Labor Relations Board (MLRB) held that the Academy is not a “public employer” within the meaning of the Labor Relations Law and dismissed the union’s petition for a bargaining unit deter *219 mination. The Superior Court (Kennebec County; Brody, C.J.) affirmed. We agree with the MLRB that the Academy, despite its contract with SAD 30, has continued to function independently as a private school, and we affirm.

School Administrative District No. 30, comprising the Town of Lee and four other municipalities in eastern Penobscot County, was established by P. & S.L.1963, ch. 90. That enabling legislation expressly provided that SAD 30 could contract for Lee Academy, a private school incorporated in 1845, to serve as the high school for the District. Under that contractual arrangement, the Academy is obligated to accept all high school students residing within the territory encompassed by SAD 30. Those students now constitute between 40 and 50 percent of the Academy’s student body, and SAD 30 pays their tuition to the Academy with public funds at the rate specified by state statute, 20-A M.R.S.A. § 5806 (Supp.1988). SAD 30 has been represented on the Academy's governing boards for over a decade; presently the chairman of SAD 30’s board is an ex officio voting member of the Academy’s eight-member board of directors, and that chairman and one other SAD 30 board member are two of the 30 trustees of the Academy. The union argues that a symbiotic and interdependent relationship between the District and the Academy has evolved over the quarter century since SAD 30 was created.

Taking the position that this relationship subjects the Academy to the provisions of the Municipal Public Employees Labor Relations Law, the union filed a petition for bargaining unit determination under MLRB Rule 1.03. See 26 M.R.S.A. § 966. Bifurcating the unit determination proceeding, the MLRB hearing examiner dealt first with the threshold question whether the Academy was a public employer at all. He ruled “that the Academy is subject to the public employers’ ‘right to control,’ ” and is therefore subject to the jurisdiction of the MLRB. The Academy appealed that decision to the MLRB pursuant to 26 M.R.S.A. § 968(4).

With the employee representative dissenting, the MLRB sustained the Academy’s appeal and dismissed the union’s petition, holding that the union had “not met its burden of establishing that the Academy is either a public employer or ‘acting on behalf of’ a public employer within the meaning of the Municipal Public Employees Labor Relations Law.” 1 The MLRB found that the Academy’s role in providing services for SAD 30 is properly analogized to that of an independent contractor, not that of a servant. The union filed a complaint seeking judicial review under M.R. Civ.P. 80B or alternatively under M.R.Civ. P.80C, and the Superior Court affirmed the decision of the MLRB.

At the center of the union’s appeal is the MLRB’s construction of the governing statute. The Academy is subject to bargaining unit determination under the Municipal Public Employees Labor Relations Law only if it is a “public employer.” 26 M.R.S. A. §§ 961, 966. As here relevant, that statute defines a public employer as “any officer, board, commission, council, committee or other persons or body acting on behalf of any municipality or ... school ... district_” 26 M.R.S.A. § 962(7) (emphasis added).

As the MLRB and the hearing examiner both recognized, the starting point in any analysis of the “acting on behalf of” standard is our decision in Baker Bus Service, Inc. v. Keith, 416 A.2d 727 (Me.1980), in which the City of Augusta, in the course of an ongoing labor dispute, attempted to privatize its school bus service. We held that an ostensibly private employer is “public” for collective bargaining purposes if it is an *220 “agent-servant” of a public entity rather than an “agent-independent contractor.” Id. at 730. Employees whose work ultimately benefits the public are thus regarded as “public employees” under 26 M.R.S. A. § 962(6) when their immediate employer, if a natural person, would itself be a common law employee of the public entity. The test we applied in determining that the employer in Baker Bus “actually was, for all practical purposes, the alter ego” of the City of Augusta was whether it was “subject to the City’s control or right of control.” 416 A.2d at 731.

Baker Bus held further that the Municipal Public Employees Labor Relations Law mandates a high level of judicial deference to the MLRB’s decision whether that control or right to control is present. That question typically arises, as it did both here and in Baker Bus, in the context of a petition for a bargaining unit determination under 26 M.R.S.A. § 966. The MLRB’s decision in a unit determination case “shall be subject to review by the Superior Court in the manner specified in section 972,” the section governing judicial review of labor arbitration. Id. § 968(4). The “manner specified” includes the standard of review, and under section 972 the MLRB’s “binding determination ... in the absence of fraud, upon all questions of fact shall be final.” See Baker Bus Service, Inc. v. Keith, 416 A.2d at 729. Cf. 39 M.R.S.A. § 99 (Pamph. 1988); Dunton v. Eastern Fine Paper Co., 423 A.2d 512, 514 (Me.1980) (“final in absence of fraud” standard in workers’ compensation appeals).

Although the case at bar is factually quite different from Baker Bus, the governing legal principles are the same: the MLRB’s task here was to determine whether SAD 30 (or SAD 30 together with other quasi-municipal entities) has “control or the right to control” over the Academy; and the MLRB’s factual findings are to be taken by a reviewing court as “final in the absence of fraud.” The essence of the union’s case in this appeal is that Baker Bus should be overruled or confined narrowly to its facts on both of those points. Its arguments are unpersuasive.

Although the union raises the fear that applying the “final in the absence of fraud” standard in circumstances such as these gives the MLRB free rein to determine its own jurisdiction, there is no reason for any unusual judicial scrutiny of the MLRB’s factfinding merely because the MLRB’s own jurisdiction is at stake in the proceedings. The factual questions involved here fall well within the agency’s expertise, and the decision was subject to full judicial review for any error of law, 26 M.R.S.A.

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Related

Baker Bus Service, Inc. v. Keith
416 A.2d 727 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1980)
Dunton v. Eastern Fine Paper Company
423 A.2d 512 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
556 A.2d 218, 1989 Me. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-academy-education-assn-v-academy-me-1989.