We hold, affirming a judgment of the Superior Court, that the Brookline rent control board (board) may reopen its adjudicatory proceedings, which had resulted in decisions permitting the plaintiff Aronson to sell his housing units as condominiums, in order to determine whether he procured those decisions by misrepresentation or fraud.
By force of a by-law of the town of Brookline, authorized by St. 1970, c. 843,
2
the board is empowered to regulate the
At dates between July, 1982, and April, 1983, the board granted the plaintiff Aronson, as owner, a permit with respect to one unit at 1080 Beacon Street, and exemptions covering eleven other units in the same building. It appears that the board made these decisions entirely, or at least in material part, on the basis of submissions by the plaintiff consisting of his testifying on oath and producing purchase and sale agreements.
By May 31, 1983, the board, evidently aided by a staff investigation, had come to suspect that there might have been misrepresentation or fraud in the plaintiff’s submissions on which it had acted; and on that date it voted to reopen the removal hearings on all twelve units “in order to determine,” as it stated in its notice to the plaintiff and others, “whether the subject units were, in fact, sold to existing tenants.” By a board subpoena of June 23, 1983, the plaintiff was directed to appear on June 27 to give evidence on this matter
6
and pro
On July 6, 1983, the plaintiff commenced the present action seeking, in substance, a declaration and an injunction forbidding the board to reopen its proceedings. After the board filed its answer, the plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the pleadings. The judge denied the motion; and, upon the pleadings with their annexed exhibits, and after “trial” consisting of statements and arguments of counsel which supplied some additional material, the judge made findings, rulings, and an order for judgment. The essential facts, as outlined above, may be drawn from the findings with some references to the record. Judgment entered on January 18, 1984, “granting] authority” to the board (more properly, confirming the board’s authority) “to re-open its ‘removal hearings’ with respect to the housing units ... for the sole purpose of determining whether or not fraud or misrepresentation was perpetrated upon the board in the granting of removal permits or exemptions . . . . ” This judgment is here on review, and, with it, a previous protective order in the action allowing the board’s motion to strike the plaintiff’s interrogatories. 7
1. While the plaintiff challenges the “jurisdiction” of the board to reopen its hearings, there is a more immediate question of the authority of the Superior Court to entertain the present action. By St. 1970, c. 843, §
4,
the State Administrative Procedure Act, G. L. c. 30A, is made applicable to the board “as if said rent board were an agency of the commonwealth,” including expressly “those provisions relating to judicial review of an agency order.” By § 14 of c. 30A, inserted by St. 1973, c. 1114, § 3, it is “any person. . . aggrieved by a final decision of any agency in an adjudicatory proceeding” who “shall be entitled to a judicial review thereof.” But there has been no final agency decision in these adjudicatory proceedings; it
Nevertheless, within cautious limits, an original action may lie to test whether an agency has exceeded its powers or “jurisdiction” or is aiming to do so, and to this extent the “final decision” or “exhaustion” principle may be pushed aside. Caution is indeed called for, as the history of administrative law shows, because attacks, mounted ostensibly under the banner of “jurisdiction,” have on occasion been used to delay, if not to abort, legitimate agency undertakings. Decisions in this Commonwealth have allowed the rather anomalous original action in some situations where there was a credible claim that an agency was going beyond its bounds, the question appeared to be a general one whose settlement might be of value to many in addition to the immediate parties, and the case involved no or little fact finding (as where it reduced to statutory interpretation on agreed facts). See
Massachusetts Bay Transp. Authy.
v.
Labor Relations Commn.,
2. There is no express provision for reconsideration of a board decision in the statute, by-law, or regulation, nor is there any provision on this matter in c. 30A.
8
Yet, where the board
To be sharply distinguished are questions of agency power to reconsider an adjudicatory decision in order to apply fresh judgment or an altered substantive policy to an otherwise closed
It is not in the least astonishing that courts have found many times that a power to reopen proceedings on grounds of fraud is inherent in the administrative process and needs no specific authorization by statute or regulation.
See Baggett Transp. Co.
v.
United States,
Assuming that reopening by the board is available in cases of suspected fraud, the plaintiff says it should be initiated within ten days of the ruling to be reexamined, this period corresponding to the time limited by c. 30A, § 14, for initiating judicial review of a final decision of an agency. We do not see a convincing connection: as well might one argue that the rule 60(b) period should correspond with the period for taking an appeal.
19
The plaintiff’s suggested period would be unfortu
Last, the plaintiff urges that the undoing of removals earlier allowed could involve prejudice to interests innocently acquired and relied on. Neither the record nor the arguments of counsel give us an insight into the legal or practical consequences of a finding of fraud; such questions must abide the event.
We observe, in conclusion, that the board has been scrupulous to say that, short of reopening and continuing the adjudicatory proceedings, it has no adequate basis for an opinion whether the plaintiff was in fact guilty of any misconduct. If misconduct should be found, the final decision of the board concluding the reopened adjudicatory proceeding will be subject to judicial review on the part of the present plaintiff.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed. Since the action fails, the protective order striking the plaintiff’s interrogatories is also affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
Amended in a respect not here relevant by St. 1971, c. 673.
By-law 38, § 9A(c), (d), (g).
Regulation 29, § 6(f)(1). The preference has since been eliminated.
Prior to February 24, 1983, “existing tenant” was defined as the last tenant who had lived in the unit for at least one year; after that date, as a tenant who had lived in the unit for two years or more and had moved into it without an option or agreement to purchase it or an intention to do so. By-law 38, § 3(h)(1) & n.8. Regulation 29, § 1(c), (d).
Specifically, “to give evidence of what you know relating to the sales of [the particular units], and the past and present occupants of said units and the length of their occupancy.”
Upon the plaintiff’s motion for an injunction pending appeal, the judge entered an order permitting the board to hold the hearings, but forbidding it to take action therein — including releasing any decision — during the pendency of the appeal. (The plaintiff then unsuccessfully petitioned a single justice of this court to stay that order and the underlying judgment.)
By G. L. c. 30A, § 9, inserted by St. 1978, c. 60, the Commissioner of Administration may promulgate standard rules of adjudicatory procedure
The statute, St. 1970, c. 843, § 2, authorizes the board to regulate rents, housing standards, and evictions of tenants, and to exercise “all powers necessary or convenient to perform its functions.” By-law 38, § 4(d), empowers the board to “make such studies and investigations, conduct such hearings, and obtain such information as is deemed necessary” to its regulatory, administrative, or enforcement functions; § 4(e) adds the power to issue orders and promulgate regulations. With a few enumerated exceptions, the board’s discretion in removal permit proceedings is wide, as long as it considers the benefits and detriments to the persons it is charged to protect, particularly families of low and moderate income and elderly people on fixed incomes. See by-law 38, § 9A(b), (c), (d), (g), (h); regulation 29, § 6.
We center our discussion on reopenings on account of suspected fraud, but we do not mean to imply that that is the only basis on which the board or comparable agencies may initiate reconsiderations. Compare authorities cited in notes 12-13, infra.
Changes in policy or judgment:
United States
v.
Seatrain Lines, Inc.,
See generally
Spanish Intl. Bdcst. Co.
v.
FCC,
For the effects of varying statutory arrangements on reopenings for reasons other than fraud or the like, see
Magma Copper Co.
v.
Arizona State
Compare his fuller discussion in Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 18.09, at 606-611 (1958).
As an example of a situation in which institutional haste in the original hearing warrants reconsideration, Professor Davis refers to the operations of the New York City rent commission just following its creation, in which there was pressure from a heavy caseload of applications, a limited staff had to make quick decisions, and the agency had to depend on information tendered by interested parties. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 18.09, at 608 (1958).
The plaintiff’s claim to protection on grounds of res judicata is misplaced. It has not been supposed that rule 60(b) offends against principles of res judicata. See 11 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedures §§ 2852, at 143-144, & 2857 (1973).
See in this connection the reference to the board’s'power to “conduct such hearings, and obtain such information as is deemed necessary ... in administering and enforcing” its orders. By-law 38, § 4(d), mentioned also at note 9,
supra.
See also
Modine Mfg. Co.
v.
Pollution Control Bd.,
40 M. App. 3d at 501. Cf.
Best
v.
Humboldt Placer Mining Co.,
The plaintiff suggests in argument that this is not a case of reopening on suspicion of fraud (although that is how the board and the judge see it) because “at most” an owner had to represent that the purchaser named in the purchase and sale agreement was a tenant at the time. The plaintiff seems to intimate that it would not matter what the owner knew or could surmise about whether the named purchaser intended to remain in occupancy, was a stand-in for an outsider who was the real, beneficial purchaser, etc. These are matters for submission to the board at the renewed hearing, not a basis for aborting the hearing.
Compare
CAB
v.
Delta Air Lines,
See
Dawson
v.
Merit Sys. Protection Bd.,
Rule 60(b)(3) speaks of “fraud,” etc., “or other misconduct of an adverse party” and sets a “reasonable time” but not more than one year for the motion to reopen. It is noteworthy, however, that “[t]his rule does not limit the power of a court to entertain an independent action ... to set aside a judgment for fraud upon the court.” In the latter case, there is no definite limit of time; equitable notions of loches or the like would control. See 7 Moore’s Federal Practice par. 60.33 (2d ed. 1983).
