EMBERS OF SALISBURY, INC., & another vs. ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES CONTROL COMMISSION.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Suffolk.
September 10, 1987. - January 14, 1988.
401 Mass. 526
Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., WILKINS, LIACOS, ABRAMS, & LYNCH, JJ.
Suffolk. September 10, 1987. - January 14, 1988. Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., WILKINS, LIACOS, ABRAMS, & LYNCH, JJ.
A transcript of testimony by a defendant (the minor) at her criminal trial, which was corroborated in certain particulars by the stipulated testimony of other persons, constituted substantial evidence warranting a finding by the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission that the minor was served alcoholic beverages at establishments operated by two liquor licensees, notwithstanding contentions of the licensees that the minor had falsified her trial testimony in an attempt to establish that she was intoxicated at the time of her alleged crime, assault with intent to murder, and that her self-serving testimony was inherently unreliable. [528-531]
LYNCH, J., dissenting.
In a proceeding before the Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission culminating in the suspension of two liquor licenses as a penalty for the licensees’ having served alcoholic beverages to a person nineteen years of age (the minor), the commission‘s admission in evidence of a transcript of certain testimony by the minor at her trial on criminal charges did not deprive the licensees of their constitutional and statutory rights to confront and cross-examine the minor, where the licensees did not invoke their right to call the minor as a witness but chose, instead, to rely on the stipulated testimony of other persons. [531]
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on November 15, 1985.
The case was heard by John L. Murphy, Jr., J., on a motion for summary judgment.
The Supreme Judicial Court on its own initiative transferred the case from the Appeals Court.
Charles F. Walker, Assistant Attorney General, for Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission.
HENNESSEY, C.J. As a result of a hearing held on May 28, 1985, the licensing board of Salisbury (board) found that on July 9, 1983, the appellants-licensees1 (licensees) had violated
The evidence relied on by the board and by the ABCC in finding that the licensees had served alcohol to a minor consisted primarily of a transcript of the testimony of Kozec, who testified at her criminal trial that she was nineteen years old on July 9, 1983, and that on that date she had been served alcoholic beverages at the licensees’ establishments. The facts of Kozec‘s case, which are set forth in Commonwealth v. Kozec, 399 Mass. 514, 515-516 (1987), are relevant to this case only in so far as the licensees argue that Kozec, who was on trial for assault with intent to murder, falsified her testimony regarding her consumption of alcohol in an attempt to establish that she was intoxicated at the time of the alleged crime, and that her self-serving testimony is inherently unreliable. Accordingly, they contend that there is not substantial evidence to support the ABCC‘s findings.
On appeal, the licensees contend that the ABCC‘s decision is not supported by substantial evidence; and that they were deprived of the opportunity to confront and to cross-examine Kozec, in violation of the rights guaranteed them by
The standard of review by this court of the ABCC‘s decision to suspend licensees’ liquor licenses is the substantial evidence test. Saxon Coffee Shop, Inc. v. Boston Licensing Bd., 380 Mass. 919, 924 (1980) (revocation case). Olde Towne Liquor Store, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm‘n, 372 Mass. 152, 153 (1977). We may set aside the ABCC‘s decision if it is “[u]nsupported by substantial evidence.”
The ABCC‘s decision is supported by substantial evidence. The transcript of Kozec‘s testimony, admitted without objection from the licensees,4 included testimony to the effect that
The licensees argue, however, that the transcript of Kozec‘s testimony does not constitute substantial evidence to support the ABCC‘s findings, first, because it is inherently unreliable, and second, because uncorroborated hearsay evidence does not constitute substantial evidence under our opinion in Sinclair v. Director of the Div. of Employment Sec., 331 Mass. 101 (1954).
The licensees do not and could not plausibly argue that the ABCC is bound by the rules of admissibility of evidence observed by courts.5 Rather, they say that, because Kozec was trying to establish her intoxication as a defense to a serious
We think that the licensees misconstrue the teaching of Sinclair, supra. Although in that case we said that “[i]f the pertinent evidence is exclusively hearsay, that does not constitute ‘substantial evidence’ even before an administrative tribunal,” Sinclair, supra at 103, the line we were drawing was not between evidence admissible in a court and evidence that is inadmissible because of the rules of evidence observed by courts, but between evidence having indicia of reliability and probative value and that which does not. The United States Supreme Court similarly advanced the broad proposition that “[m]ere uncorroborated hearsay or rumor does not constitute substantial evidence,” Consolidated Edison Co. v. NLRB, 305 U.S. 197, 230 (1938), but later explained that “[t]he contrast the Chief Justice [Hughes] was drawing [in the above quoted language] was not with material that would be deemed formally inadmissible in judicial proceedings but with material ‘without a basis in evidence having rational probative force.’ This was not a blanket rejection by the Court of administrative reliance on hearsay irrespective of reliability and probative value. The opposite was the case.” Richardson v. Perales, 402 U.S. 389, 407-408 (1971), quoting Consolidated Edison Co., supra at 230.
In this case, as in Perales, the hearsay evidence on which the agency relied was available to either party, and the declarant was “subject to subpoena and to the very cross-examination that the claimant asserts he has not enjoyed.” Id. at 407. The transcript of Kozec‘s trial testimony on which the ABCC based its findings, although hearsay, was a record of testimony given by Kozec in open court, under oath, and subject to cross-examination. Although we might reach a different conclusion as to the reliability of Kozec‘s testimony were we to consider the
The licensees contend that the admission of the transcript of Kozec‘s testimony deprived them of the opportunity to confront and cross-examine Kozec in violation of the rights guaranteed them under the Federal and State Constitutions and under
Judgment affirmed.
It is indisputable that administrative agencies need not observe the rules of evidence that pertain in the courts. It does not follow, however, that the power of an agency to accept or reject evidence is totally uncircumscribed and insulated from effective appellate review. The question upon review until now has been whether this is “the kind of evidence on which reasonable persons are accustomed to rely in the conduct of serious affairs.”
The question of the extent to which hearsay evidence might constitute substantial evidence is by no means a new one. Briefly summarized, various jurisdictions have adopted one of three basic approaches designed to ensure the trustworthiness or reliability of the evidentiary basis of agency decisions. The first approach has been to require corroboration regardless of
Both approaches have been criticized by Professor Davis, who delineates the third approach to ensuring the reliability of evidence. “Rejection of the residuum rule does not mean that a reviewing court must refuse to set aside a finding based upon incompetent evidence; it means only that the court may set aside the finding or refuse to do so as it sees fit, in accordance with its own determination of the question whether the evidence supporting the finding should be deemed reliable and substantial in the circumstances” (emphasis added). 4 K.C. Davis, Administrative Law § 16.6 (1980 ed.). Accordingly, courts are reluctant to let stand agency decisions that depend upon evidence that, although arguably admissible under agency practice, lacks a firm basis of reliability. See Credit v. Whitfield, 488 So.2d 1064 (La. Ct. App. 1986) (although hearsay is generally admissible in unemployment compensation proceedings, where employer bears burden of proving employee misconduct, employer may not base entire case on hearsay when claimant offers direct, contradictory evidence); Higley v. Edwards, 67 Or. App. 488 (1984), disapproved on other grounds, Wiggett v. Oregon State Penitentiary, 85 Or. App. 635 (1987) (in administrative hearing on allegations of deputy sheriff‘s misconduct by sexual contact with prisoner, unsworn and uncorroborated written statement of prisoner was inadmissible
The Massachusetts cases decided after adoption of
I disagree with respect to both conclusions. First, the critical evidence of where Kozec became intoxicated is not corroborated except by additional hearsay which I would submit is less reliable than the hearsay of the transcript which was, at least, under oath and subject to some form of cross-examination, albeit not by a party with an interest in the case comparable to the plaintiffs‘. Second, in its reliability analysis the court‘s reliance on Richardson v. Perales, 402 U.S. 389 (1971), is misplaced. The Federal court decisions make it clear that, under the Federal Administrative Procedure Act, courts will evaluate testimony or evidence for indicia of reliability on a case-by-case basis. Factors to be considered include independence or possible bias of the declarant, the type of hearsay materials submitted, whether statements are sworn to, whether statements are contradicted by direct testimony, availability of the declarant, and credibility of the declarant. Calhoun v. Bailar, 626 F.2d 145, 149 (9th Cir. 1980), cert. denied, 452 U.S. 906 (1981). In holding that the hearsay evidence (written med-
Duvall underscores one of the key problems in this case. In assessing the reliability of Kozec‘s testimony one must consider her credibility. Yet neither the ABCC nor the licensing board of Salisbury was in any position to assess her credibility and, therefore, could, at best, make only an abstract determination of the inherent credibility of her testimony in light of the circumstances surrounding that testimony. Although a reviewing court is never in a position to assess credibility, where a reliability determination is affected by the credibility of a witness who has not testified before the agency, the reviewing court‘s independent assessment of reliability should at least discount the agency‘s credibility role. Therefore, to the extent that the court has relied on the traditional credibility assessment of a fact finder, here that reliance is misplaced.
The court further confuses the issue by essentially making dispositive the licensees’ failure to subpoena Kozec for cross-
I, therefore, conclude that uncorroborated hearsay testimony at a criminal trial on an issue not contested at the criminal trial where the witness has a motive to lie and was not subject to cross-examination by a person with the same or similar interests as the person against whom the evidence is being used is not sufficiently reliable to be given probative effect under
