Schulte v. Director of the Division of Employment Security

337 N.E.2d 677, 369 Mass. 74, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 779
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1975
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 337 N.E.2d 677 (Schulte v. Director of the Division of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schulte v. Director of the Division of Employment Security, 337 N.E.2d 677, 369 Mass. 74, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 779 (Mass. 1975).

Opinion

Kaplan, J.

The petitioner Aaron Schulte was denied certain benefits by the board of review of the Division of Employment Security. He entered a petition in a District Court for judicial review of the board’s decision. There he was met by a motion on the part of the Director of the division to dismiss the petition because he had failed to follow the procedure for judicial review prescribed by G. L. c. 151A, § 42, as amended through St. 1971, c. 957, § 3 (the text is reproduced in the margin). 2 A judge of the District Court allowed the motion, *76 and the case is here on report, in which the facts and the question presented are set out succinctly.

The procedure for review of board decisions in the District Courts, as far as immediately relevant, is stated in § 42 thus: “[A]ny interested person aggrieved by any decision in any proceeding before the board of review may obtain judicial review of such decision by filing, within twenty days of the date of mailing of such decision, a petition for review thereof in the district court . . . [of appropriate venue], and in such proceeding every other party to the proceeding before the board shall be made a party respondent. . . . Upon the filing of a petition for review by an aggrieved party . . . the clerk of *77 the district court within seven days thereafter shall issue an order of notice. Said order of notice and a copy of the petition shall be served by the petitioner upon the director by registered mail within seven days of the date of the order, fourteen days at least before the return day, and shall be returnable at the election of the petitioner at any return day which occurs after the expiration of twenty-eight days from and within sixty days after the date of the filing of the petition.”

In the present case the board’s decision was mailed to the petitioner on April 18, 1974. The petitioner mailed his petition to the clerk of the District Court on April 22 and the clerk received and docketed it on April 23. The filing satisfied the statute as being within twenty days of the mailing of the board’s decision. Order of notice with a return day of May 20, a date selected by the clerk, 3 was promptly issued, and the order with copy of the petition was served on the Director on April 25. Issuance of the order was thus within seven days of petition filed, and service was within seven days of the date of the order and more than fourteen days before the return day. The return day was within sixty days of the filing of the petition. The one deviation from the statutory procedure pointed to by the Director was that the return day did not fall after the expiration of twenty-eight days from the date of the filing of the petition; the Director figured the interval as only twenty-seven days. On this basis the Director moved on May 18 to dismiss the petition as matter of law and the judge allowed the motion on May 30. So the petitioner lost his chance to challenge the correctness of the board’s decision.

The petitioner (appellant here) contends, first, that he complied with the statute. If the date of mailing the petition, April 22, is taken as tantamount to the date of filing it, and is included in the count, then the return *78 day, May 20, is twenty-nine days after filing. But it is hard (although perhaps not impossible, cf. Survey & Research Serv. Inc. v. Director of the Div. of Employment Security, 352 Mass. 475, 477 [1967]) to assimilate mailing to filing, and there is the further difficulty that the day from which a period begins to run is ordinarily excluded from the count. See Mass. R. Civ. P. 6 (a), 365 Mass. 747 (1974); Mass. R. A. P. 14 (a), 365 Mass. 859 (1974). An alternative argument is that such mistake as may have occurred was the clerks doing, for which the petitioner is not responsible. There are cases under statutes providing for appellate review, including a case under § 42, which have absolved the appealing parties of errors committed by clerks in carrying out duties assigned to them. See Richardson v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Framingham, 351 Mass. 375, 377-378 (1966); Bogdanowicz v. Director of the Div. of Employment Security, 341 Mass. 331, 332 (1960); Home Owners’ Loan Corp. v. Sweeney, 309 Mass. 26, 29 (1941). The trouble here is that the statute speaks of the petitioner’s electing the return day, which suggests that the task and thus the responsibility of picking a proper date are on him.

It seems best to accept and deal with the proposition that the petitioner departed from the statute in the single respect mentioned. The Director (appellee here) argues as if a failure in any particular to follow a statute concerned with appellate review deprives the reviewing court of “jurisdiction,” that is, results necessarily in dismissal of the appeal. One can cite statements capable of interpretation in that sense (see, e.g., Del Grosso v. Board of Appeal of Revere, 330 Mass. 29, 32 [1953]), as well as some decisions that visit seemingly inconsequential breaches of the statutes with forfeitures of appeals. See Del Grosso v. Board of Appeal of Revere, supra (acknowledging, 330 Mass, at 32 & n.l, the harshness of *79 the results of certain decisions); Famigletti v. Neviackas, 324 Mass. 70 (1949). 4

In recent years, the problem has come up in a series of our cases and we think a coherent rationale has emerged consonant with a modern view of the functions of litigative procedure. See Richardson v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Framingham, 351 Mass. 375 (1966); Greeley v. Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Framingham, 350 Mass. 549 (1966); Staman v. Assessors of Chatham, 350 Mass. 100 (1966); Opie v. Board of Appeals of Groton, 349 Mass. 730 (1965); Halko v. Board of Appeals of Billerica, 349 Mass. 465 (1965); Cohen v. Board of Registration in Pharmacy, 347 Mass. 96 (1964). Sloppiness in following a prescribed procedure for appeal is not encouraged or condoned, but at the same time a distinction is taken between serious missteps and relatively innocuous ones. Some errors or omissions are seen on their face to be so repugnant to the procedural scheme, so destructive of its purposes, as to call for dismissal of the appeal. A prime example is attempted institution of an appeal seeking judicial review of an administrative decision after expiration of the period limited by a statute or rule. The result in such cases is understandable and acceptable: it is comparable in some respects to the dismissal of an original claim brought to a court after the running of an applicable statute of limitations. See, on the dismissal of late appeals, such decisions as O’Day v. School Comm. of W. Brookfield, 343 Mass. 122 (1961), Mayor of Revere v.

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Bluebook (online)
337 N.E.2d 677, 369 Mass. 74, 1975 Mass. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schulte-v-director-of-the-division-of-employment-security-mass-1975.