Lynch v. Police Commissioner

748 N.E.2d 1002, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 772, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 385
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 5, 2001
DocketNo. 99-P-1318
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 748 N.E.2d 1002 (Lynch v. Police Commissioner) 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
Lynch v. Police Commissioner, 748 N.E.2d 1002, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 772, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 385 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Mason, J.

Robert K. M. Lynch appeals from a judgment dismissing his complaint for contempt against the police commissioner of the city of Boston (commissioner). The complaint alleged that the commissioner had improperly failed to comply with a prior order directing him to implement a process for the issuance of an additional 260 hackney medallions (also known [773]*773as taxicab licenses) determined by the Department of Public Utilities (department) to be needed in Boston. We affirm the dismissal.

Facts.1 The present contempt action is the latest in a series of proceedings which began in the late 1980’s. At that time, Lynch applied to the commissioner for a medallion to operate a taxicab in Boston, but his application was denied because the maximum number of approved medallions had been issued. Lynch promptly appealed to the department to authorize a higher number of medallions pursuant to the provisions of St. 1934, c. 280 (chapter 280).2 After holding hearings, the department in March, 1990, ordered an immediate increase in the number of medallions from 1,525 (which had been approved in 1934) to 1,825, with additional increases over a two and one-half year period to a total of 2,025.

On appeal of the department’s order, the Supreme Judicial Court affirmed the department’s findings and power to issue an order increasing the number of available medallions, but held that the statute did not permit an incremental “phase-in” of new medallions. Boston Neighborhood Taxi Assn. v. Department of Pub. Util., 410 Mass. 686, 692 (1991). The court remanded the matter to the department “to fix an appropriate, definite number of medallions in light of the current public convenience and necessity, to take effect immediately upon the department’s order.” Id. at 692-693.

The department proceeded to fix at 1,825 the number of [774]*774medallions required by public convenience and necessity, and ordered that the additional 300 medallions be “issued immediately.” The commissioner, however, issued only forty additional medallions for special wheelchair-accessible taxicabs pursuant to a settlement agreement in another action. Accordingly, in 1995, Lynch brought a mandamus action requesting that the Superior Court order the commissioner to issue the remaining 260 medallions authorized by the department. A judge of the Superior Court ordered the commissioner to issue the remaining medallions “immediately.”

On the commissioner’s subsequent appeal to this court, we noted that the commissioner was required to effectuate the purposes of chapter 280, including the issuance of the additional medallions required by public convenience and necessity, but that nothing in either chapter 280 or the Supreme Judicial Court decree deprived the commissioner of discretion to prescribe the specific procedures and time limits for issuance of the medallions. Lynch v. Police Commr. of Boston, 43 Mass. App. Ct. 107, 111 (1997). We therefore held that the Superior Court’s order should be modified to require the commissioner to immediately implement a “process” to enable and expedite the prompt determination of applicant suitability, and to continue such process “without cessation and with reasonable dispatch” until all the additional licenses had been granted. Id. at 112.

On remand, the Superior Court judge entered such a modified order on August 12, 1997. The commissioner thereafter notified all persons with pending applications for taxi medallions that those applications were “stale” and that new applications were required to be submitted no later than December 12, 1997. More than 2,000 persons responded to the commissioner’s notice by the deadline date and the commissioner began to screen those applications for eligibility, a process that continued until May, 1998.

In the meantime, on November 17, 1997, the Legislature enacted the Convention Center Act, St. 1997, c. 152. Section 20 of the Act provides that, in order to raise funds for a new convention center in Boston, all taxi medallions then or thereafter available for issuance by the commissioner “shall be issued by public auction, public sale, sealed bid or other [775]*775competitive process . . . .” Section 20 further provides that such licenses “shall be issued in such numbers, and at such times or prices ... as [the] commissioner determines in his sole discretion.”

After notifying the public of the change in the law, the commissioner on November 27, 1998, announced that seventy-five taxi medallions3 would be offered for sale by public auction on January 15, 1999. In response to this notice, Lynch obtained a “bid registration packet,” and subsequently went to a bidder’s conference held at John Hancock Hall in Boston on December 16, 1998. Two days later, on December 18, 1998, Lynch went to the hackney carriage unit at Boston police headquarters, and spoke to Captain Albert Sweeney, inspector of carriages for the unit. Lynch asked Sweeney when the additional 185 taxi medallions would be issued and, according to Lynch, Sweeney responded that “we have to see how this auction goes,” that no plans for the issuance of the remaining medallions currently existed, and that it was “up to the Mayor and Police Commissioner.”

Promptly thereafter, on December 21, 1998, Lynch brought his complaint for contempt and, in connection therewith, requested the issuance of a summons to the commissioner. See Mass.R.Civ.P. 65.3, 386 Mass. 1245 (1982). After holding a hearing, a Superior Court judge (not the judge who had issued the mandamus) determined that no summons should issue on Lynch’s complaint because (1) the August 12, 1997, modified order at issue was insufficiently definite to be enforced through contempt proceedings; and (2) the commissioner had not committed an “undoubted” violation of that order in any case. The judge accordingly declined to issue the summons and entered judgment dismissing the complaint.

1. Effect of Convention Center Act. Although the judge did not rely on the Convention Center Act in dismissing Lynch’s complaint, the commissioner asserts that the Act eliminated the statutory basis for the modified order against him because it eliminated the department’s authority to set the number of medallions to be issued. More specifically, the commissioner [776]*776contends that, whereas chapter 280 authorized the department to raise the number of medallions higher “than that fixed by [the] commissioner,” section 20 of the Convention Center Act gives the commissioner “sole discretion” to determine the number of medallions to be issued notwithstanding the provisions of any other statute.

In fact, section 20 of the Convention Center Act, St. 1997, c. 152, provides in pertinent part only as follows:

“Notwithstanding the provisions of any general or special law to the contrary, all [taxicab medallions] then or thereafter available for issue . . . shall be issued by public auction .... Said licenses shall be issued in such numbers, and at such times or prices, ... as [the] commissioner determines in his sole discretion.”

The statute provides, in essence, that all medallions “available for issue” by the commissioner shall be issued by public auction in such numbers, and at such times and prices, as the commissioner shall determine in his sole discretion.

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Bluebook (online)
748 N.E.2d 1002, 51 Mass. App. Ct. 772, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-police-commissioner-massappct-2001.