Town of Topsham v. Local S/89 Dist. Lodge 4
This text of Town of Topsham v. Local S/89 Dist. Lodge 4 (Town of Topsham v. Local S/89 Dist. Lodge 4) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT
CIVIL ACTION KENNEBEC, ss. DOCKET NO. AP-02-68 SkS~ KEN 3/20 / ROO,
TOWN OF TOPSHAM,
Plaintiff
y. : DECISION AND ORDER
LOCAL $/89 DISTRICT LODGE #4, INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MACHINISTS AND AEROSPACE WORKERS and MAINE LABOR RELATIONS BOARD,
Defendants
This matter comes before the court on appeal from the determination of the Maine Labor Relations Board (“MLRB”) that the Town Clerk and Tax Collector for the Town of Topsham are not department heads and must remain in a bargaining unit of supervisors represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.
‘Background
The Municipal Public Employees Labor Relations Law, 26 M.R.S.A. § 961 et seq. (“MPELRL”) grants certain municipal employees the right to unionize and engage in collective bargaining. However, the MPELRL excludes any person, “who is a department or division head appointed to. office pursuant to statute, ordinance or resolution for an unspecified term by the executive head or body of the public employer.” 26M.RS.A. § 962(6)(D).
In 1991, the Town of Topsham (1 Town’ adopted the Maine Town Manager Plan,
30-a M.R.S.A. § 2636 (“Plan”). Under the Plan, the Town’s Board of Selectmen and
Bada dl bad Town Manager share the executive authority. The Plan provides that the town Manager, “shall appoint, subject to 5 confirmation by the selectmen, supervise and control the heads of departments u under the control of the selectmen when the department is not headed by the town manager. ” 30-A M.R.S.A. § 2636(5).
On March 4, 2001, the Town filed an Amended Petition for Unit Clarification with the MLRB seeking a determination that the positions of Town Clerk, Tax Collector, Planning Director and Fire Chief could not be included in a unit of supervisors represented by the union because these positions were department head positions. On May 9, 2002, after a hearing, the hearing examiner issued an extensive opinion in which he excluded the Fire Chief from the supervisory unit, but left in that unit the Town Clerk, Tax Collector and Planning | Director because the evidence failed to show that
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they were “department heads. To antve at this conclusion, the hearing examiner found that the “executive head or body” referred to in the statute is comprised of the Board of Selectmen, not the Town Manager, and therefore, in the absence of evidence that the Board of Selectmen confirmed 3 any of the three present individuals in their positions, the Town’s application must fail.
The Town filed a timely appeal to the MLRB, which modified the hearing examiner's decision. The MLRB found the Town Manager, pursuant to the plan, was the “executive head” of the Town, while the Board of Selectmen was the “executive body” for purposes of appointment. Thus, pursuant to the Plan, the Board of Selectmen must confirm the Town Manager’s appointments Although the MLRB’s interpretation of the statute was slightly different from that of the hearing examiner, the Town’s argument failed because of the same failure ofe evidence, i.e., that there was no evidence
of the Board of Selectmen confirming the appointment of any of the three individuals.
The Town now appeals the MLRB decision to this court. : Discussion
As a preliminary matter, the decisions of both the hearing examiner and the MLRB ultimately rested on their finding that there had been a failure in the evidence with regard to appointment of the Town Clerk and Tax Collector. Following the hearing examiner’s decision, but prior t to ) presentation to the Board, the Town offered to provide new explicit evidence of the Selectmen’s confirmation of these positions. The MLRB declined to accept the evidence and declined to reopen the hearing to take additional evidence. The Town now alleges that the MLRB’s refusal to consider the additional evidence is an abuse of discrétion and that this matter should be remanded
with an order to the Board to take that additional evidence into consideration.
However, section 30(1) of the Board’ own rales states “the appellate proceeding is not
a hearing de novo. On appeal, the. Board n reviews the decision of the hearing examiner
on the basis of the evidence presented to the: examiner.” Nothing in the MLRB’s rules
or the MPELRL mandate authorize a hearing de novo in order to accept additional
evidence. The MLRB’s adherence to their own administrative rules is not an abuse of discretion. * - - EOIN de
The Town also argues that the MLRB committed an error of law when it
concluded that the Town Clerk and Tax Collector were not department heads because
they were not appointed pursuant to. statute, ordinance or resolution. The MLRB ruled
that “pursuant to statute” in this case means that the Town must appoint department
heads pursuant to the Plan, which in turn "provides for appointment by the Town Manager subject to confirmation by the Board of Selectmen. In review of this type, courts grant great deference to an agency’ s interpretation of a statute it administers and
upholds the interpretation unless the statute plainly compels a contrary result. Maritime
Energy v. Fund Insurance Review Board, 2001 ME 45 { 7, 767 A.2d 812. This deference,
3 though not conclusive, is especially applicable in the present case given the richness and depth of the MLRB’s written precedents; as witnessed by the citations in both the hearing examiner’s and Board’s decisions. The MLRB’s interpretation that the Plan requires appointment by the Town “Manage: and confirmation by the Board of Selectmen is consistent with the language of the statutes and there is nothing in the statute which plainly compels a contrary result. The Board’s decision presents no error of law.
Although the MLRB’s findings ¢ of fact are final, the Town raises evidentiary arguments. Essentially, the Town argues. that since there was no evidence that the
2h,
Selectmen did not confirm the appointment of the Town Clerk and the Tax Collector,
the MLRB should have assumed that the confirmations took place. The evidence of
record might have allowed the Board ¢ to make such a reasonable inference, but the
evidence is not so overwhelming | that it compels such an inference. Again, the court
finds no error.
Considering the finality of the MLRB's factual findings, their internal rules regarding evidentiary burdens and the nature of appeals, and due deference to the MLRB’s interpretation of their rules sand the statutes they implement, the Town has not met its burden in showing that the MERE made an error of law in determining the Town Clerk and Tax Collector are not department heads. Nor have they established that the MLRB abused its discretion by. refusing to reopen the evidence or in any other way.
The entry will be:
Appeal DENIED; REMANDED to the Maine Labor Relations Board.
'Dated: March Zo , 2003
§ Kirk Studstrup Justice, Superior Court
Date Filed 9/13/02 Kennebec
Docket No. AP02-68
County Aetion SPE J. STUDSTRUP Town of Topsham Local $/89 District Lodge #4, Interational Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers AND vs Maine Labor Relations Board Plaintiff’s Attorney Defendant’s Attorney Linda McGill, Esq. Lisa Copenhaver, Esq. (Me Labor Board) PO Box 7250 90 State House Station
Portland ME 04112-7250 Augusta, Maine 04333-0090
Matthew Tatasevich, Esq.
Date of Entry 9/16/02 | Petition for Review, filed. s/L. McGill, Esq. (filed 9/13/02) Case file notice issued to L. McGill, Esq. -9/20/02 Letter entering appearance, filed. s/Copenhaver, Esq. (filed 9/19/02) —-----— Complete record, filed. s/Copenhaver, Esq. (in vault) 9/23/02 Notice of briefing schedule mailed to attys of record.
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