Stone v. Irasburg, Town of

2014 VT 43, 98 A.3d 769, 196 Vt. 356, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedApril 25, 2014
Docket2013-125
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 2014 VT 43 (Stone v. Irasburg, Town of) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. Irasburg, Town of, 2014 VT 43, 98 A.3d 769, 196 Vt. 356, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 38 (Vt. 2014).

Opinion

Crawford, J.

¶ 1. Plaintiff Linda Stone sued the Town of Irasburg alleging that the selectboard had acted unlawfully in ordering her, as town treasurer, to raise her bond to $1,000,000. *361 Following plaintiffs inability to obtain the bond and her removal from office by the selectboard, she claimed the Town improperly raised her bond and prevented her from obtaining the bond. She sought monetary damages based on common law defamation, tortious interference with office, violation of the Vermont Constitution, and deprivation of due process. She also asserted that the Town was obligated to pay her attorney’s fees pursuant to statute. In several different orders, the trial court granted the Town summary judgment on all counts. Plaintiff appealed. We affirm in part, and reverse and remand in part.

¶ 2. The record reveals the following facts. On March 2, 2010, plaintiff was elected treasurer of the Town of Irasburg at town meeting. The positions of town clerk and treasurer had previously been held by Barbara Lawson for twenty years. Lawson’s granddaughter Danielle Ingalls held the position of assistant town clerk. After Lawson retired as clerk, the selectboard appointed Ingalls to the position pending the election.

¶ 3. At town meeting, plaintiff and Ingalls ran for both positions. Ingalls was elected town clerk; plaintiff was elected treasurer.

¶ 4. Tension between the selectboard and plaintiff developed almost immediately. On March 22, 2010, a member of the selectboard proposed that the Town’s auditors perform .an audit every two weeks for the first two months and every month thereafter. On March 30, 2010, the auditors complained to the selectboard that they were unable to balance the Town’s books due to mistakes in the reports they received from the treasurer. The errors included changes in the amounts of payment orders, bills written for wrong amounts, transposition of figures, and mistakes in some budget categories.

¶ 5. The minutes of the April 5, 2010 selectboard meeting describe Ingalls’ decision to obtain legal advice from the town attorney Duncan Kilmartin about what to do if the auditors could not balance the books. Kilmartin advised increasing the treasurer’s bond limit from $500,000 to $1,000,000 if plaintiff could not satisfy the auditors. The minutes note that “Randy [Wells] made a motion to follow Duncan [Kilmartin]’s advice, Roger [Gagnon] seconded, approved.”

¶ 6. In a subsequent undated letter, the selectboard gave plaintiff until April 19 to “settle and reconcile [her] accounts to the satisfaction of the auditors.” The letter stated that the selectboard had notified the current bonding company of the *362 dispute and warned of the potential need for increased bonding limits and the appointment of an assistant treasurer.

¶ 7. The minutes of the April, May and June meetings describe continuing tension over plaintiff’s performance. Plaintiff advised that she felt “set up” by the auditors and the town clerk. She admitted that she had made some mistakes and was seeking additional training for her position. During this period plaintiff sought to increase her bond limit to $1,000,000 by seeking the higher coverage from the Poulos Insurance Agency in Newport. The Poulos agent forwarded her request to the Cincinnati Insurance Co., which provided the required application forms, including a form for a statement from plaintiff’s employer.

¶ 8. The dispute between plaintiff and the selectboard came to a head after a dispute arose concerning an envelope containing $200 which was received at the town offices as partial payment of property taxes for a particular taxpayer. The details remain contested but in broad strokes, the envelope containing the bills was received and placed overnight in the treasurer’s safe. When plaintiff next looked at the envelope, it bore a taxpayer’s name in handwriting. Since she believed that the envelope was unmarked when it went into the safe, she concluded that a member of the selectboard had opened her safe in her absence. One selectboard member had installed the safe and thus had access to the combination. The matter was discussed at the June 28, 2010 selectboard meeting.

¶ 9. The selectboard member suspected of opening the safe abstained from any decision, and the two remaining members of the selectboard responded to plaintiff’s allegations in writing on July 1, 2010. In their fevered five-page letter, the board members made accusations of their own, stating that plaintiff had made “false accusations” against town officials, presented “false evidence,” repeated the accusations when she was told they were false, and continued in her accusations “after acknowledging that [her] own ‘supporters’ doubt [her] honesty.” The letter questioned plaintiff’s truthfulness, honesty, reliability, and ability to perform the duties of Irasburg Town Treasurer. The letter stated that plaintiff had written the name on the envelope herself and then falsely accused the board member of opening the safe and writing the name. It accused her of “deliberate and malicious fabrication of evidence” and lying. It stated that her “pattern from the beginning [of her term as treasurer] has been to accuse others of being responsible for [her] failures.”

*363 ¶ 10. The letter required plaintiff to increase her bonding limit from $500,000 to $1,000,000. The selectboard sent copies of the letter to the Vermont League of City and Towns (VLCT), which provided the bond then in effect. The letter explained that:

It is your responsibility to obtain the bond, not ours. You will have to deal directly with VLCT and the bonding company. We are simply notifying them of the reasons for our order to you to increase your bond, and providing them with the evidence which you provided to us, so that they can make appropriate underwriting investigations and determinations.

The letter gave plaintiff ten days to obtain the bond, and stated that if she failed to comply, her position would be declared vacant.

¶ 11. During July, plaintiff renewed her efforts to obtain the higher bond from Cincinnati as well as other insurers. Cincinnati repeated its request for the employer statement which “tells [the bond company] about the job she will be doing and all the controls in place for the funds she will be overseeing.”

¶ 12. In response, town attorney Kilmartin sent the insurer an email declining to fill out the statement on the ground that the selectboard was not plaintiff’s employer and “lacks the most fundamental form of control over the person who collects and disburses tax monies.” Kilmartin suggested that plaintiff presented an “underwriting risk which both Poulos and Cincinnati would want to evaluate.” The selectboard wrote to plaintiff at the same time to tell her they were unwilling to fill out the employer’s portion of the application. Despite her efforts, plaintiff was unable to obtain the higher bonding limit.

¶ 13. At the next meeting of the selectboard on July 12, 2010, the selectboard extended the deadline for the increased bonding limit to July 22, 2010. Plaintiff appeared at the meeting and attempted to defend her performance as treasurer.

¶ 14. On July 12, 2010, plaintiff filed suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 VT 43, 98 A.3d 769, 196 Vt. 356, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-irasburg-town-of-vt-2014.