CITY OF REVERE & others vs. MASSACHUSETTS GAMING COMMISSION.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
Suffolk. December 5, 2016. - March 10, 2017.
476 Mass. 591 (2017)
Present: GANTS, C.J., BOTSFORD, LENK, HINES, GAZIANO, LOWY, & BUDD, JJ.
Gaming. License. Administrative Law, Judicial review, Intervention. Practice, Civil, Action in nature of certiorari, Review of administrative action, Intervention, Interlocutory appeal. Jurisdiction, Judicial review of administrative action.
In a civil action brought against the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (commission) by, inter alia, an unsuccessful applicant for a gaming license that had intervened as a plaintiff, the judge, in denying the commission‘s motion to dismiss the intervener‘s complaint, properly concluded that certiorari review of the commission‘s licensing decision was available, and the commission could not show that it had been prejudiced by the timing of the unsuccessful applicant‘s motion to intervene; further, this court concluded that the doctrine of present execution did not permit the commission to bring an immediate interlocutory appeal of the conclusion that certiorari review was available; finally, this court concluded that the unsuccessful applicant satisfied the necessary conditions to entitle it to certiorari review (i.e., the licensing hearing was a quasi judicial proceeding, from which there was no other reasonably adequate remedy, and from which a substantial injury or injustice arose from the proceeding under review), which perforce would be extremely deferential to the commission. [597-606]
In a civil action brought against the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (commission) by, inter alia, an unsuccessful applicant for a gaming license, the1
In a civil action brought against the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (commission) by, inter alia, the city that would have hosted an unsuccessful applicant for a gaming license and a labor union, alleging numerous defects in the commission‘s process for awarding the license, the judge properly dismissed a claim seeking certiorari review, as well as a claim seeking a declaratory judgment, where the city and the union lacked standing to bring such claims, in that neither fell within the zone of interests protected by the act expanding gaming in the Commonwealth. [607-609]
In a civil action brought against the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (commission) by, inter alia, individual citizens, the judge erred in dismissing the claim that the commission, in its process for awarding the license, violated the open meeting law, where calendar entries suggested that a quorum of the commission engaged in nonpublic deliberations. [609-612]
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on October 16, 2014.
A motion to dismiss the intervener‘s complaint and a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ second amended complaint were heard by Janet L. Sanders, J.
The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for direct appellate review, and following the order by Sanders, J., for entry of final judgment, the Supreme Judicial Court granted a second application for direct appellate review.
Kenneth S. Leonetti & Christopher E. Hart (Michael Hoven also present) for the intervener.
Patricia L. Davidson for city of Revere.
David S. Mackey (Mina S. Makarious & Melissa C. Allison also present) for the defendant.
BOTSFORD, J. This case concerns the process by which the Massachusetts Gaming Commission (commission) awarded a gaming license in late 2014 to Wynn MA, LLC (Wynn). The plaintiffs — an unsuccessful applicant for the license, the city that would have hosted the unsuccessful applicant, a labor union, and individual citizens — filed two complaints in the Superior Court that alleged numerous defects in the commission‘s process for awarding the license to Wynn. The commission filed motions to dismiss both complaints. A judge in the Superior Court allowed the motions on all but one count of one of the complaints, permitting only the unsuccessful applicant‘s claim for certiorari review to survive. The parties now appeal various aspects of the judge‘s decision.
Background. 1. Gaming in Massachusetts. In November, 2011, the Legislature enacted St. 2011, c. 194, An Act establishing expanded gaming in the Commonwealth (act).2 Section 16 of the act created the commission and set forth standards under which applicants could obtain a license from the commission to operate a gaming establishment. See
The license application process relevant to this case unfolded in two phases, as contemplated by the commission‘s regulations. See
Ultimately, the license application process challenged in this case came down to a choice between two applicants — Wynn, which proposed a casino in Everett, and Mohegan Sun Massachusetts, LLC (Mohegan Sun), which proposed a casino in Revere. In September, 2014, the commission awarded the license to Wynn. In November, 2014, the commission issued a thirty-six-page written determination, with accompanying exhibits, explaining its evaluation of the competing applications. This determina-
2. Alleged defects in the licensing process. In October, 2014, the city of Revere (city), the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 103 (union), and four union members (individual plaintiffs) brought suit in the Superior Court against the commission. In early 2015, these plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint. At around the same time, Mohegan Sun filed a motion to intervene and a complaint in intervention. The motion to intervene was allowed without opposition.
The second amended complaint and Mohegan Sun‘s complaint in intervention contain four virtually identical counts. In the first two counts, Mohegan Sun, the city, and the union seek review and reversal of the commission‘s award of the gaming license to Wynn under
In count III of the respective complaints, Mohegan Sun, the city, and the union seek a declaratory judgment pursuant to
3. Procedural history. In July, 2015, the commission moved to dismiss both complaints. In December, 2015, the motion judge allowed the motion to dismiss the second amended complaint. The judge ruled that counts I through IV of that complaint must be dismissed under
With respect to Mohegan Sun‘s complaint in intervention, the motion judge allowed the motion to dismiss count I, ruling that
The commission filed a notice of appeal with respect to Mohegan Sun‘s surviving count II, claiming that the doctrine of present execution authorizes interlocutory review. After entry of final judgment the plaintiffs filed their own notice of appeal. This court allowed applications for direct appellate review of both the commission‘s and the plaintiffs’ appeals.
Standard of review. This court reviews orders on motions to dismiss de novo. Shapiro v. Worcester, 464 Mass. 261, 266 (2013). For purposes of that review, we accept as true the facts alleged in the plaintiffs’ complaints and any exhibits attached thereto, drawing all reasonable inferences in the plaintiffs’ favor. Burbank Apartments Tenant Ass‘n v. Kargman, 474 Mass. 107, 116 (2016).
Discussion. The parties’ appeals raise several issues, which we address in the following order. First, we consider the claims raised by Mohegan Sun and the commission concerning the
1. Claims of Mohegan Sun and the commission. a. Judicial review under
The motion judge concluded that Mohegan Sun‘s claim for relief under
Mohegan Sun‘s main argument to the contrary hinges on the phrase in
More importantly, we consider the language of
b. Availability of certiorari review. Given our interpretation of
Here, there are four issues related to certiorari review: (1) whether Mohegan Sun‘s complaint in intervention was timely; (2) whether the doctrine of present execution allowed the commission to bring an immediate, interlocutory appeal from the motion judge‘s decision that certiorari review is available to Mohegan Sun; (3) whether Mohegan Sun satisfies the necessary conditions to entitle it to certiorari review; and (4) if so, what is the nature and scope of certiorari review of a licensing decision by the commission.
i. Timeliness. The commission argues that Mohegan Sun‘s certiorari claim is jurisdictionally time barred because the complaint was not filed within the sixty-day limitations period in
“Whether a party should be allowed to intervene is a matter that is largely left to the discretion of the judge below.” Corcoran v. Wigglesworth Mach. Co., 389 Mass. 1002, 1003 (1983), citing
Furthermore, we agree with the motion judge that, at least in this case, there is little functional difference between Mohegan Sun filing a complaint in intervention and Mohegan Sun being added as a new plaintiff to the original plaintiffs’ second amended complaint under
ii. Doctrine of present execution. The denial of the commission‘s motion to dismiss Mohegan Sun‘s certiorari review claim is an interlocutory ruling. The doctrine of present execution provides a narrow exception to the general rule prohibiting interlocutory appeals, provided two conditions are met: (1) the matter is collateral to the merits of the controversy, and (2) the interlocutory ruling will interfere with rights in a way that cannot be remedied on appeal from the final judgment. See Marcus v. Newton, 462 Mass. 148, 151-152 (2012). Generally, orders denying motions to dismiss based on immunity from suit satisfy both criteria. Shapiro, 464 Mass. at 264-265, and cases cited.
Given these requirements, the commission‘s attempt to invoke the doctrine hinges on its position that
iii. Prerequisites for certiorari review. In general, a plaintiff is only entitled to certiorari review of an administrative decision if it can demonstrate the presence of three elements: “(1) a judicial or quasi judicial proceeding, (2) from which there is no other reasonably adequate remedy, and (3) a substantial injury or injustice arising from the proceeding under review.” Indeck, 450 Mass. at 385. The commission argues that Mohegan Sun, as an applicant for a gaming license, does not have a justiciable right to vindicate through certiorari review and that, even if it does, the proceedings appealed from are not judicial or quasi judicial. We agree with the motion judge that Mohegan Sun meets the prerequisites for certiorari review in this case.
When distinguishing a quasi judicial agency proceeding from a legislative or purely administrative one, we have looked generally to the form of the proceeding and examined the extent to which it resembles judicial action. See Hoffer v. Board of Registration in Med., 461 Mass. 451, 457 (2012). However, the line beyond which an agency proceeding becomes quasi judicial is rarely a bright one. Instead, courts have looked to a number of factors in deciding the question: (1) whether the proceeding is preceded by specific charges, see School Comm. of Hudson v. Board of Educ., 448 Mass. 565, 576 (2007); (2) whether the proceeding involves sworn testimony by witnesses subject to cross-examination, see id., or a party attesting to certain facts, see Frawley v. Police Comm‘r of Cambridge, 473 Mass. 716, 727 (2016), as opposed to unsworn statements by interested persons advocating for or against a proposed new policy, see School Comm. of Hudson, 448 Mass. at 576; (3) whether the agency conducts an investigation into the veracity of attested-to facts, see Frawley, supra; (4) whether the proceeding culminates in an individualized determination of a party‘s entitlement to some benefit, see id., or an
Applying those factors here, we observe, on the one hand, that the licensing hearing was not preceded by specific charges, was not adversarial in the typical judicial sense, and provided no opportunity for cross-examination. See
On the other hand, applicants were required to present information to the commission “truthfully, fully and under oath.”
We conclude that, on balance, the category of quasi judicial proceedings is flexible enough to include the commission‘s licensing hearing at issue here. Accordingly, Mohegan Sun has satisfied the first element for certiorari review.
Mohegan Sun also satisfies the second element for certiorari review, demonstrating that it has available to it no other adequate remedy. See Indeck, 450 Mass. at 385. The commission does not contest this point. To the contrary, it argues that its licensing decisions generally are not subject to any judicial review whatsoever; it further contends that such preclusion of review is both commonplace and constitutional. However, the point at which ordinary avenues of review vanish (e.g.,
At oral argument, the commission pointed out other areas of the law that might allow judicial review of certain commission decisions. For instance, it mentioned
Additionally, the commission directed us to certain Federal cases where the courts upheld a general statutory bar to judicial
In these circumstances, Mohegan Sun has sufficiently demonstrated a lack of adequate alternative relief such that it satisfies the second element for certiorari review.
Finally, Mohegan Sun has satisfied the third element for certiorari review by alleging that the proceeding under review has worked a substantial injury or injustice. See Indeck, 450 Mass. at 385. As the motion judge observed, the commission relies heavily on Abdow, supra, and Caesars Mass. Mgt. Co. v. Crosby, 778 F.3d 327 (1st Cir. 2015) (Caesars), to support its position that Mohegan Sun does not have a justiciable right that was injured such that certiorari review may proceed. The commission overstates the value of these cases to its position. It is true that, in Abdow, supra at 495, this court said that the act “provides applicants with no enforceable legal rights and contains strong language suggesting that the Legislature intended to give them none.” Similarly, in Caesars, supra at 334, the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, drawing on our opinion in Abdow, said that Massachusetts law does not recognize a gaming license application as “a source of expectable value sufficiently reliable to be protected as property.” But these remarks, in context, were supporting a narrower holding: that license applicants do not have a constitutionally protected interest in a gaming license. See Abdow, supra at 487, 493, 495-496; Caesars, supra at 334-335.
A constitutionally protected right and a “justiciable right” for purposes of certiorari review are two different creatures. In most cases, the former is a subset of the latter. For instance, in the Hoffer case, this court rejected the plaintiff‘s argument that she
We recognize that, in the Hoffer and Saxon cases, for example, the parties sought certiorari review while attempting to restore a license that had been taken away from them, whereas here, Mohegan Sun seeks certiorari review despite not having been awarded a license in the first place and where the statute makes clear that “[a]pplicants shall have no legal right or privilege to a gaming license.”
iv. Nature and scope of certiorari review. Generally, the standard of review for a certiorari action is calibrated to the nature of the action for which review is sought. See, e.g., Frawley, 473 Mass. at 728, and cases cited. “Ordinarily, where the action being reviewed is a decision made in an adjudicatory proceeding where evidence is presented and due process protections are afforded, a court applies the ‘substantial evidence’ standard.” Figgs v. Boston Hous. Auth., 469 Mass. 354, 361-362 (2014). On the other hand, “where the decision under review was not made in an adjudicatory proceeding,” but rather “entails matters committed to or implicating a board‘s exercise of administrative discretion, the court applies the ‘arbitrary or capricious’ standard” (citation omitted). Id. at 362 n.14. Further, in order to best tailor the scope of review to the nature of the administrative decision at issue, it is sometimes necessary to analyze separately the component parts of the underlying decision. See Yerardi‘s, 19 Mass. App. Ct. at 300. In other words, some components of an administrative decision may be unreviewably discretionary, while others will be “submissible to the test of elementary justice that is invoked by the words ‘arbitrary or capricious.’ ” Id. at 301.
The Legislature intended
Accordingly, the standard of review for a certiorari action should be extremely deferential to the commission. In essence, the act places a number of “unreviewable policy considerations,” Casa Loma, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm‘n, 377 Mass. 231, 234 (1979), squarely in the hands of the commission. See, e.g.,
On the other hand, Mohegan Sun alleges, for example, that the commission, in awarding the license to Wynn, violated certain requirements of the act, ignored specific statutory criteria, and
c. Declaratory judgment. Mohegan Sun also seeks a declaratory judgment regarding the constitutionality of the act and the commission‘s regulations. However, it concedes that the motion judge properly ruled that because it has met the prerequisites to obtain certiorari review, its constitutional claims, which are premised on the absence of any available avenue of judicial review, are moot. Therefore, these claims were properly dismissed.
2. Claims of the city and the union. The city and the union assert substantially the same claims against the commission as does Mohegan Sun, seeking review under both
At the outset, we note that the city and the union cannot be within the “zone of interests” protected by the act for purposes of review under
With respect to the certiorari and declaratory judgment claims of the city and the union, “[w]e treat standing as an issue of subject matter jurisdiction.” Ginther v. Commissioner of Ins., 427 Mass. 319, 322 (1998). “A party has standing when it can allege an injury within the area of concern of the statute or regulatory scheme under which the injurious action has occurred.” School Comm. of Hudson, 448 Mass. at 579, quoting Massachusetts Ass‘n of Indep. Ins. Agents & Brokers, Inc. v. Commissioner of Ins., 373 Mass. 290, 293 (1977). Whether a plaintiff‘s injury falls within the so-called “zone of interests” of a statute or regulatory scheme depends upon a number of factors, including “[1] the language of the statute in issue; [2] the Legislature‘s intent and purpose in enacting the statute; [3] the nature of the administrative scheme; [4] decisions on standing; [5] any adverse effects that might occur, if standing is recognized; and [6] the availability of other, more definite, remedies to the plaintiffs.” Enos v. Secretary of Envtl. Affairs, 432 Mass. 132, 135-136 (2000).5 In weighing these factors, “we pay special attention to the requirement that standing usually is not present unless the governmental official or agency can be found to owe a duty directly to the plaintiffs.” Id. at 136.
We now apply these factors to the city and the union.
a. The city‘s standing for certiorari and declaratory judgment claims. The city argues that the act ensures that the licensing
Although
With respect to the fourth Enos factor, we are aware of no other decisions concerning standing that are particularly instructive here. Regarding the fifth and sixth factors, we acknowledge that our opinion today effectively leaves the city with no avenue to challenge the commission‘s licensing decision. On the other hand, the city understates the adverse effect of protracted litigation that would result if the statute conferred standing on municipalities to challenge the grant of a gaming license. This factor deserves particular weight given our understanding that the Legislature intended
In light of all of these factors, we concur with the motion judge that the city does not have standing to pursue its certiorari and declaratory judgment claims.
The reasons discussed with respect to the city apply with equal, if not greater, force to defeat the union‘s argument, where the harm it claims to have suffered is even more remote than that claimed by the city. In essence, the potential benefits that the union claims to have lost do not suffice to confer standing in the face of forceful statutory language limiting judicial review of commission licensing decisions. We do not read the act to bestow any right or interest upon the union, nor to create any duty between the commission and it. We agree with the motion judge that, if the act did either of those things in a way that was sufficient to confer standing, virtually any resident who could have been employed by Mohegan Sun would also have standing to challenge the commission‘s award of the license to Wynn. Thus, in addition to the delay discussed in connection with the city, conferring standing upon the union could have the drawback of exposing the commission to a flood of lawsuits, all despite the language in
3. The individual plaintiffs’ open meeting law claim. The individual plaintiffs allege the commission violated the open meeting law,
A complaint only survives a motion to dismiss if it includes enough factual heft “to raise a right to relief above the speculative level.” Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co., 451 Mass. 623, 636
Although the statute was substantially revised and reorganized in 2009, see St. 2009, c. 28, §§ 17, 18, we conclude that the new statutory language and structure do not require us to abandon wholesale our existing open meeting law jurisprudence. In particular, we interpret the open meeting law as continuing to be a statute “designed to eliminate much of the secrecy surrounding the deliberations and decisions on which public policy is based.” Ghiglione v. School Comm. of Southbridge, 376 Mass. 70, 72 (1978). And the new version of the statute does not alter our belief that “[i]t is essential to a democratic form of government that the public have broad access to the decisions made by its elected officials and to the way in which the decisions are reached.” Foudy v. Amherst-Pelham Regional Sch. Comm., 402 Mass. 179, 184 (1988).
With this framework in mind, we agree with the motion judge‘s decision except insofar as she dismissed the plaintiffs’ claim
Contrary to the commission‘s argument on appeal, a letter to the commission from the Attorney General, dated December 23, 2015, entitled “Open Meeting Law Review,” demonstrates why dismissal was inappropriate at this stage in the litigation.11 The letter describes the Attorney General‘s investigation into the commission‘s meeting practices and concludes that, despite “broad compliance” with the open meeting law, the commission did violate the law on some occasions. At least some of the commissioners’ meetings determined by the Attorney General to have violated the law appear to be reflected in the plaintiffs’ summary chart. Thus, the letter illustrates that sorting out which of the plaintiffs’ allegations can be substantiated and which cannot requires some degree of investigation, and therefore is a task for the discovery process.
Finally, the individual plaintiffs argue that the motion judge effectively carved out a new exception to the open meeting law for public bodies, like the commission, whose members are also full-time employees of the agency. We need not decide whether the motion judge indeed did carve out such an exception by her ruling. In any event, no such exception exists. The fact that the commissioners are full-time employees of the commission, see
In sum, we conclude that the individual plaintiffs have plausibly stated a claim for relief under the open meeting law. Accordingly, we reverse that portion of the judge‘s decision.
Conclusion. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part, and reverse in part, the judge‘s allowance of the defendant‘s motion to
So ordered.
MARGOT BOTSFORD
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE
