Source: http://masscases.com/cases/sjc/304/304mass86.html
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 12:44:12+00:00

Document:
THOMAS F. DALEY vs. DISTRICT COURT OF WESTERN HAMPDEN.
Present: FIELD, C.J., DONAHUE, LUMMUS, QUA, JJ.
The police commission of the city of Westfield, and not the mayor, under the charter and ordinances in effect in 1936 had authority to remove the chief of police from office for cause.
A police officer, by proceeding by a petition for review under G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42B, of an order removing him, instead of by a petition for a writ of mandamus which he could have maintained on the ground that the notice given him under Section 42A was merely of a hearing respecting his suspension and did not justify his removal, waived his right to contend that the order of removal was for that reason unlawful.
A finding by a judge, reviewing under G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42B, an order removing a police officer, that the statement of reasons set out under Section 42A for contemplated action were adequate, showed no error.
An order of removal of a police officer "on charges of neglect of duty, of conduct unbecoming an officer and for acts contrary to the good order or discipline of the service and for insubordination, as more fully set forth in" a notice previously given him under G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42A, which contained the date of each offence charged, complied with the requirements of the statute.
A notice to a police officer of his removal after hearing of charges, received by him on the fourth day after the hearing, a Sunday having intervened, complied with the requirements of G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42A, of a notice within three days.
Evidence before a judge reviewing under G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42B, the removal of a police officer by a police commission, did not require a conclusion that the commission's refusal of a request by the officer for a second continuance of the hearing held by it under Section 42A was wrong as a matter of law.
Testimony that a police officer smelled of "liquor on his breath" and that he walked "very unsteadily" and in that condition entered an automobile and drove it upon a public way, warranted a finding by a commission, and its affirmance by a reviewing judge under G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42B, that the officer was guilty of conduct unbecoming an officer, and justified his removal, although he was not in uniform or performing the duties of his office when such conduct occurred.
PETITION, filed in the Supreme Judicial Court for the county of Hampden on February 17, 1937, for a writ of certiorari.
The petition was heard and was dismissed by order of Pierce, J.
H. B. Putnam, City Solicitor, for the respondent.
DONAHUE, J. The petitioner was removed from the position of chief of police of Westfield by the police commission of that city after a hearing on thirty-five charges of alleged misconduct preferred by the commission. He seasonably filed a petition in the District Court for a review of the action of the commission in removing him. G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42B. The commission found him guilty on all the charges. The judge in the District Court found that as to thirty-four of the charges the action of the commission was not justified. He found, however, that the action of the commission was justified as to one charge -- of conduct unbecoming an officer on a single occasion.
The petitioner has brought a petition for a writ of certiorari to obtain a review of the decision of the judge in the District Court and his reinstatement as chief of police. A single justice of this court dismissed the petition. The case is here on exceptions to the refusal of the single justice to give certain requests of the petitioner for rulings of law. The substance of these requests for rulings may be stated as follows: (1) that as matter of law the power to remove the petitioner was vested in the mayor of Westfield with the approval of the city council and not in the police commission; (2) that the petitioner was not lawfully removed in accordance with the provisions of G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42A; (3) that as matter of law the act of the police commission in refusing to grant the petitioner a continuance of the hearing before it, because of his inability to be present on account of illness, was erroneous and prejudicial to the petitioner; and (4) that as matter of law the evidence submitted in support of the only charge sustained by the judge in the District Court, even if believed, did not justify the removal of the petitioner.
The petitioner, on November 23, 1936, received from the police commission two letters bearing that date. One letter notified him to appear for a hearing before the commission to be held on the twenty-eighth day of November on his "suspension as Chief of Police because of neglect of duty, more specifically for neglect of duty" on sixteen different days, "for conduct unbecoming an officer" on two occasions, "for acts contrary to the good order or discipline of the service" on one occasion, and "for insubordination" on sixteen different occasions, the date in each instance being specified. The other letter stated that the petitioner was relieved of his duties as chief of police pending a hearing on the charges preferred against him. On November 28, the day set for the hearing by the notice, the petitioner appeared before the commission and pleaded not guilty to the charges made. At his request a continuance of the hearing to December 5 was granted. The petitioner was not present at the hearing on December 5. The request of his counsel for a further continuance was denied. Following the hearing the commission made an order removing the petitioner.
1. The petitioner contends that the police commission was not vested with the power to remove him as chief of police.
The city of Westfield was incorporated by St. 1920, c. 294. Section 5 of said c. 294 provides that "All heads of departments and members of municipal boards" (with exceptions not here material) "shall be appointed by the mayor except as otherwise provided herein, subject to confirmation by the city council," and Section 7 provides that "The mayor may, with the approval of a majority of the members of the city council, remove any head of a department or member of a board," with certain exceptions here immaterial. The power given by the city charter, in the sections above quoted, to appoint and to remove officers of the city, is in terms limited to the appointment and removal of heads of departments and members of municipal boards. It is the contention of the petitioner that as chief of police he was the head of a department of the city and therefore removable only by the mayor with the approval of the city council.
But the language of the charter makes it plain that the head of the police department in the city of Westfield is not the chief of police but the police commission. Section 8 of the charter provides that "There shall be the following departments, boards and officers in the city . . ." including "The police department, under the charge of a commission, which shall consist of the mayor, who shall be the chairman, and two members who shall be appointed by him subject to confirmation by the city council . . . ." As a chief of police of the city is not the "head of a department or member of a board," he is not removable by "The mayor . . . with the approval of a majority of the members of the city council" under the provisions of Section 7 above quoted.
relating to the Police Department and to the rules and regulations of the department."
The judge of the District Court rightly ruled that the city council, in the exercise of its legislative powers, by the enactment of the ordinance delegated the power of appointment and removal of all police officers, including the chief of police, to the police commission.
2. The petitioner contends that the police commission in removing him from office did not comply with the requirements of the applicable civil service statute, G.L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 31, Section 42A. The statute provides that a police officer "shall not be removed, nor . . . suspended or . . . transferred . . . nor . . . lowered in rank or compensation, nor shall his office be abolished, except after a full hearing of which he shall have at least seventy-two hours' written notice, with a statement of the reasons for the contemplated removal, suspension, transfer, lowering in rank or compensation, or abolition of office, and except upon a written order stating fully and specifically the causes therefor made after a hearing . . . and signed by the board or officer before whom the hearing is held." The statute further provides that such "police officer shall be notified in writing, within three days after the hearing, of the decision at such hearing."
the board, requires that the particular action or actions contemplated be specified in such notice. Such a specification is an initial and a fundamental requirement in the proceedings of a board. By it, the board defines and limits the action which it may take after a hearing. A police officer when notified at the beginning of the proceeding of a contemplated transfer or suspension need not thereafter anticipate that the action of the board might be abolition of the office he holds, or removal. We think that a police officer against whom proceedings have been brought under Section 42A has a right to insist that the action which such a board takes against him in its order, made after a hearing, shall only be the particular action specified in the notice of hearing. The action contemplated against the petitioner, as set out in the notice of the hearing, was "suspension" and the action in fact taken by the board was "removal."
When, after the hearing, the petitioner received a copy of the order of the board and learned that he had been removed (although the notice of the hearing had stated suspension as the only action contemplated), he was not obliged to seek relief through a petition for review in the District Court under Section 42B. The issue on such a petition would be: "whether or not upon all the evidence such action was justified." Irrespective of a decision of that question the petitioner was entitled to assert his right that, after notice of a hearing, only on the matter of his suspension, no other more harmful action should be taken against him by the board than the action of suspension. This right he could have asserted by a petition for writ of mandamus. See Peckham v. Mayor of Fall River, 253 Mass. 590, 592; Bois v. Mayor of Fall River, 257 Mass. 471; Nevins v. Board of Public Welfare of Everett, 301 Mass. 502, 504; Lowry v. Commissioner of Agriculture, 302 Mass. 111, 115.
of Section 42A. Under Section 42A notice to a police officer of a hearing on his contemplated removal is a prerequisite to his removal. As such a notice was not here given to the petitioner, this requirement of Section 42A was not met. The requirements as to notice were, however, inserted in the statute for the benefit of police officers against whom action is contemplated,and such requirements may be waived by a police officer. If a police officer waives the statutory requirements as to notice of a hearing he cannot thereafter take advantage of deficiencies in the notice. Compare Whalen v. City Forester of Waltham, 279 Mass. 287, 292.
We think there was here such a waiver by the petitioner. The deficiency in the notice first appeared when the commissioners notified the petitioner that he had been removed. He could then, if he had so desired, by a petition for writ of mandamus have secured reinstatement in office because of insufficiency of the notice. His removal could then be sought by the commissioners only by starting a new proceeding under Section 42A with a proper notice and hearing. The petitioner did not choose that course. He adopted the alternative course of a petition under Section 42B for a judicial review in the District Court of the action of the commission. Such a review is available only where there has been a hearing before the commission in accordance with the fundamental requirement of Section 42A that notice of a contemplated removal is a necessary basis for an order of removal. We think it must be held that when the petitioner, instead of bringing a petition for writ of mandamus based on insufficiency of the notice, as he might have done, sought a judicial review of the action of the commission he thereby admitted that there had been such a hearing before the commission as to entitle him to a review, and that he thereby waived the deficiency in the notice.
of the hearing charges the petitioner with "neglect of duty . . . conduct unbecoming an officer . . . acts contrary to the good order or discipline of the service . . . and . . . insubordination." It stated the dates of each of the derelictions charged. It described the character and gave the time of the occurrence of each of the different kinds of misconduct of which the petitioner was accused. A request for further specifications as to some of the charges might well have been made by the petitioner and granted by the police commission. But the petitioner or his counsel at no time requested further specifications and made no contention before the commission that the statement of the reasons for the contemplated removal was obscure or inadequate. In the circumstances appearing, the reviewing judge rightly ruled that the statement of reasons was adequate. Mayor of Medford v. Judge of the First District Court of Eastern Middlesex, 249 Mass. 465, 471. McAuliffe v. Mayor Aldermen of New Bedford, 155 Mass. 216, 221.
The order of removal stated that, at the hearing on December 5, "on charges of neglect of duty, of conduct unbecoming an officer and for acts contrary to the good order or discipline of the service and for insubordination, as more fully set forth in notice to you of hearing, dated November 23, 1936, the said Commissioners find you guilty of the charges as preferred, and remove you from office as Chief of Police . . . ." The notice referred to in the order contained the date of each of the offences charged. We think that the order of removal complied with the statutory requirement of a statement of the causes of the removal, and the reviewing judge so ruled. Whitney v. Judge of the District Court of Northern Berkshire, 271 Mass. 448. See McKenna v. White, 287 Mass. 495, 498.
members of the police commission. It was sent to the petitioner by registered mail. He received it on December 9, the fourth day after the day on which the decision was made. It is the general rule that where time is to be computed from a particular day or from the day of a specified act, such day is excluded and the last day of the period is included in the computation. In computing the time within which an act may be done, if the period of time is less than one week, a Sunday is excluded. Sweeney v. Morey & Co. Inc. 279 Mass. 495, 502, 503. Corey v. National Ben Franklin Fire Ins. Co. 284 Mass. 283, 286. Stevenson v. Donnelly, 221 Mass. 161, 63, and cases cited. There was evidence that December 6 was a Sunday. Therefore, on a proper computation of time, the petitioner was notified of the decision within the period required by the statute.
to examine the charges and the witnesses who were called were cross-examined by him. At the close of the evidence he did not ask the opportunity to rebut the testimony given.
It was an implied condition of the exercise of the power of removal, vested under the charter and the ordinance in the police commission, that the hearing in the matter of the petitioner's removal from office should be fairly conducted. Mayor of Medford v. Judge of the First District Court of Eastern Middlesex, 249 Mass. 465, 471. The petitioner contends that the hearing was not thus conducted in that the commission refused at the hearing on December 5 the request of the petitioner's counsel for a further continuance. He in effect complains that there was an abuse of discretion by the commission in its denial of a continuance. A hearing held under the civil service statutes by a removing board is in the nature of a judicial investigation, Selectmen of Milton v. Justice of the District Court of East Norfolk, 286 Mass. 1, 5, and whether in proceedings of a judicial character a request for the continuance of a hearing ought to be granted ordinarily rests in the discretion of the trial tribunal. Noble v. Mead-Morrison Manuf. Co. 237 Mass. 5, 16. Blankenburg v. Commonwealth, 260 Mass. 369, 378. Commonwealth v. Soaris, 275 Mass. 291, 297. Ott v. Board of Registration in Medicine, 276 Mass. 566, 574. Under the applicable statute, however, (G.L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 31, Section 42B) the petitioner was entitled to have a judge in the District Court "review" the entire action of the police commission in removing him from office, and not a part of such action only, and decide whether in its entirety the action of the commission was "justified." Selectmen of Wakefield v. Judge of the First District Court of Eastern Middlesex, 262 Mass. 477, 482. Mayor of Lynn v. Judge of the District Court of Southern Essex, 263 Mass. 596, 598, 599. This included a review of the action of the commission refusing the request for a continuance.
on the request and the refusal. The commission convened at the time set on December 5 prepared to hold the hearing, with no reason to believe that the petitioner would not be present and ready to go on with the hearing. He was not present and counsel representing him asked for a continuance on the grounds that counsel had not had an opportunity to prepare a defence and that the condition of the petitioner was such that he was unable to be present. Counsel did not assert as of his own knowledge such to be the petitioner's condition. It is not contended that the continuance of the hearing for one week to December 5 did not afford adequate time for preparation for the hearing; and the circumstances under which counsel earlier employed had withdrawn did not appear. No evidence as to the petitioner's condition was offered at the hearing on December 5. No certificate of a physician as to his condition was presented. Counsel stated he expected but had not then received a certificate from a physician in New York, under whose treatment the petitioner was, to the effect that the petitioner was unable to attend the hearing. A certificate from the New York physician was received two days after the removal of the petitioner and was in evidence at the hearing before the District Court judge. It stated, not that the petitioner was unable to attend the hearing, but that he would "not be able to continue work until January 1st, 1937." So far as appears, nothing was shown at the hearing before the commission or at the hearing before the reviewing judge as to the type or character of any ailment or illness of the petitioner. There is nothing in the record to indicate an illness of such severity that the petitioner, prior to December 5, could not seasonably have arranged for the presentation to the commission of a request for a continuance, fortified by an adequate certificate of a physician.
might have been avoided if the petitioner had exercised due diligence. The petitioner in effect charges the commission with bad faith in the denial of the requested continuance. This was a question of fact open to the petitioner at the hearing before the judge in the District Court. Walsh v. District Court of Springfield, 297 Mass. 472, 474-475. The judge did not find such bad faith. In view of all the circumstances connected with the denial of the request for a continuance, it cannot be said that as matter of law the denial was wrong.
highways of his city by a chief of police while under the influence of intoxicating liquor, in violation of the statute, is not an adequate ground for his removal. Mayor of Lynn v. Judge of the District Court of Southern Essex, 263 Mass. 596, 509. See Duggan v. Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex, 298 Mass. 274; Hogan v. Collins, 183 Mass. 43, 46. This is so even though it does not appear that he was, at the time, in uniform or performing the duties of his office. Mayor of Lynn v. Judge of the District Court of Southern Essex, 263 Mass. 596. See Sander v. Somerville, 241 Mass. 305, 308.
5. The petitioner's requests for rulings of law were rightly denied by the single justice. We reach the conclusion that the petition was rightly ordered dismissed by him without resort to the principle that the issuance of a writ of certiorari rests in the sound judicial discretion of the single Justice hearing the petition. McCabe v. Judge of the District Court of Lowell, 277 Mass. 55.

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