Source: http://masscases.com/cases/sjc/400/400mass193.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 12:42:40+00:00

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DEREK ALLEN & others vs. SCHOOL COMMITTEE OF BOSTON.
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court on June 10, 1976. A finding of contempt was entered on March 5, 1986, by Thomas R. Morse, Jr., J.
Marien E. Evans, Special Assistant Corporation Counsel, for the defendant.
Thomas A. Mela (Jane S. Schacter with him) for the plaintiffs.
the Superior Court on March 5, 1986. It also seeks relief from the judge's order that it compensate the plaintiffs, who are parents and guardians of "special needs" students resident in Boston, for out-of-pocket expenses, legal costs, and lost days of school which resulted from a twelve-day strike by school bus drivers in January, 1986. See Allen v. School Comm. of Boston, 396 Mass. 582 (1986) (relating some background of strike by bus drivers). We affirm.
The case comes to us on an agreed record and a summary of proceedings pursuant to Mass. R. A. P. 8 (c), as appearing in 378 Mass. 933 (1979). There is no transcript. The judge's findings of fact will not be disturbed on appeal unless clearly erroneous. Manchester v. Department of Envtl. Quality Eng'g, 381 Mass. 208 , 213 (1980).
Civil contempt is found where there is clear and undoubted disobedience of a clear and unequivocal command. Manchester, supra at 212. In 1976, a consent decree and supplemental consent decree defined the obligations of the school committee to provide services to children within the purview of St. 1972, c. 766. Various orders of implementation have been issued since that time. In 1980, the judge, pursuant to a stipulation, commanded the school committee to provide special needs students "reliable, timely, and substantially uninterrupted transportation." Prior to 1986, the school committee had been adjudicated in contempt as to transportation orders on three occasions. Orders in 1980 and 1981 did not dilute the clarity of the 1980 command, and the school committee had no reasonable basis for doubting that the judge had ordered the school committee to prevent the kind of disruption which inevitably would result during a strike by bus drivers. Nor can it be argued that there was substantial compliance where the judge found that 3,737 students missed at least one day, and 1,550 students missed twelve days of school due to the strike. Because no showing of wilfulness was required, United Factory Outlet, Inc. v. Jay's Stores, Inc., 361 Mass. 35 , 36-37 (1972), the judge did not err in finding clear and undoubted disobedience.
compliance was impossible. See Fortin v. Commissioner of the Mass. Dep't of Pub. Welfare, 692 F.2d 790, 796 (1st Cir. 1982). The defense of impossibility is unavailing where an alleged contemnor is responsible for its inability to comply. United States v. Asay, 614 F.2d 655, 660 (9th Cir. 1980). The judge's factual findings warrant a conclusion that any impossibility of compliance was induced substantially by the school committee's abdication, when it signed management contracts with transport vendors rather than hiring drivers directly, of whatever protections the law might provide. See G. L. c. 150E, Section 9A (a) (1984 ed.); Allen v. School Comm. of Boston, supra.
The judge's award of $20 a student for each day of school missed was proper. [Note 1] In these circumstances, compensatory fines are permissible, Manchester, supra at 215; such awards are similar to damages in tort, Lyon v. Bloomfield, 355 Mass. 738 , 744 (1969); and they are measured only "in some degree" by the pecuniary harm caused by the contemptuous act. Department of Pub. Health v. Cumberland Cattle Co., 361 Mass. 817 , 832 (1972). Because the judge found that it cost the school committee $20 a day to educate each of these students, he was not clearly erroneous in awarding a like sum to compensate the students for lost days. See Darmetko v. Boston Hous. Auth., 378 Mass. 758 , 763 n.7 (1979).
[Note 1] We do not understand the school committee to dispute the propriety, assuming contempt was validly found, of the judge's awards of out-of-pocket expenses or attorney's fees. In any event, both kinds of awards are clearly proper as remedies for civil contempt. See Manchester, supra at 215.

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