This appeal poses the following question: In a claim under G. L. c. 258 (the Massachusetts Tort Claims Act) against the district attorney for the Suffolk District, who is the proper person to receive presentment of the claim as required by § 4 of G. L. c. 258 — the district attorney or the Attorney General? A judge of the Superior Court determined that the Attorney General is the proper person for presentment. Because the plaintiff had made presentment to the district attorney, the judge concluded that the plaintiff’s suit against the district attorney should be dismissed. We affirm.
On August 17, 1983, the plaintiff, Lodge, filed a complaint in the Superior Court asserting claims against the district attorney for the Suffolk District and the Commonwealth’s Executive Office of Human Services, respectively. The claims alleged
The plaintiff’s attorney made presentment of his claims to the presently serving district attorney for the Suffolk District and to the Secretary of Human Services. The Attorney General appeared on behalf of both defendants and moved under Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6),
General Laws c. 258, § 4, as appearing in St. 1978, c. 512, §15, prohibits the institution of a civil claim for damages against a public employer
5
“unless the claimant shall have first presented his claim in writing to the
executive officer of such public employer
within two years after the date upon which the cause of action arose ...” (emphasis supplied). Section 1, as amended through St. 1981, c. 403, defines the term “[e]xecutive officer of a public employer” as “[1] the secretary of an executive office of the commonwealth, or [2] in the case of
The office of the district attorney for the Suffolk District clearly is not part of any of the executive offices of the Commonwealth. The various executive offices are created by G. L. c. 6A, § 2,
6
and other provisions of c. 6A set out the government instrumentalities that fall under the umbrella of certain executive offices.
7
The office of a district attorney is not strictly an instrumentality of county
8
or municipal government, and thus does not fall under either [4] of the definition above, requiring
We think the office of the district attorney for the Suffolk District is more properly denominated a State “agency” for the purpose of presentment under G. L. c. 258, § 4. To be sure, the district attorney is given considerable autonomy within his own district.
9
In general, he manages his office by hiring and supervising personnel, by preparing a budget, by attending to the daily affairs of the office, and by investigating alleged offenses in order to determine whether they ought to be prosecuted. Nevertheless, the predominant functions of the district attorney, to which his other functions are subordinate, are: (1) to “appear for the [C] ommon wealth in the [S]uperior [C]curt in all cases, criminal or civil, in which the [C] ommon wealth is a party or interested . . .,” G. L. c. 12, § 27; (2) to appear for the Commonwealth in jury-of-six cases in the District Courts, G. L. c. 218, § 27A(g); and (3) to appear, in his discretion, for the Commonwealth in other criminal cases in the District Courts. See
Burlington
v.
District Attorney for the No. Dist.,
Moreover, in the exercise of these functions the district attorneys are not “independent public officers free from effective supervision.”
Id.
Rather, the Attorney General is “the chief law officer of the Commonwealth.”
Id.
As such, the Attorney General “may supersede a district attorney as prosecutor, whether in the Superior Court or the District Court.”
Burlington
v.
District Attorney for the No. Dist.,
Finally, designating the Attorney General as the proper person for presentment comports with the purposes of the presentment requirement. Presentment ensures that the responsible public official receives notice of the claim so that that official can investigate to determine whether or not a claim is valid, preclude payment of inflated or nonmeritorious claims, settle valid claims expeditiously, and take steps to ensure that similar claims will not be brought in the future. See
Weaver
v.
Commonwealth,
Presentment is a statutory condition precedent to recovery under c. 258.
Vasys
v.
Metropolitan Dist. Commn.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The plaintiff was originally tried and convicted of the charge and given a suspended sentence. In an unpublished decision (the disposition of the case is reported at
Commonwealth
v.
Lodge,
In his rule 12(b)(6) motion, the Attorney General did not raise as a basis for dismissing the claim against the district attorney the possibility that the conduct of the district attorney claimed to be wrongful might be protected by the broad State law immunity that covers actions of district attorneys in the discharge of their official duties. See
Chicopee Lions Club
v.
District Attorney for the Hampden Dist.,
We note also that there appears to be no dispute that the plaintiff made proper presentment to the Secretary of Human Services with respect to the claim against that defendant.
We think that the judge’s certification under rule 54(b) permitting early entry of judgment is justifiable despite the plaintiff’s still pending claim against the Executive Office of Human Services. The question of who is the proper party for presentment under G. L. c. 258, §4, in various situations has caused a considerable amount of litigation: This case raises yet another unresolved issue in connection with the presentment requirement. Resolving the question will help alleviate uncertainty and confusion, and may eliminate some future litigation. See and compare
Wellesley College
v.
Attorney Gen.,
Section 1 of G. L. c. 258, as amended through St. 1981, c. 403, defined the term “public employer” as “the commonwealth and any county, city, town or district, including any public health district or joint district or regional health district or regional health board established pursuant to the provisions of [G. L. c. 111, §§ 27A or 27B], and any department, office, commission, committee, council, board, division, bureau, institution, agency or authority thereof which exercises direction and control over the public employee, but not a private contractor with any such public employer, the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, the Massachusetts Port Authority, the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority, or any other independent body politic and corporate. With respect to public employees of a school committee or a city or town, the public employer for the purposes of this chapter shall be deemed to be said respective city or town.”
General Laws c. 6A, § 2, as appearing in St. 1982, c. 668, § 2, read as follows: “There are hereby established the following executive officers, each of which shall serve directly under the Governor: communities and development, consumer affairs, energy resources, environmental affairs, human services, elder affairs, manpower affairs, labor, public safety and transportation and construction.”
As of August, 1983, the agencies within seven of the executive offices were set out in the following sections of G. L. c. 6A: communities and development, § 8; consumer affairs, § 9; human services, § 16; manpower affairs, § 17; labor, § 17B; public safety, § 18; transportation and construction, § 19.
By G. L. c. 12, § 13, as appearing in St. 1980, c. 231, § 1, eleven districts to be headed by district attorneys are created by the Legislature “[f]or the administration of the criminal law, or for the defense of civil actions brought pursuant to [G. L. c. 258].” Several of these districts combine different counties or municipalities, i.e., the Cape and Islands District, which encompasses Barnstable, Nantucket and Dukes counties; the Middle District, which includes Worcester county but excludes the town of Athol; and the Northwestern District, which encompasses Franklin and Hampshire counties as well as the town of Athol.
Nothing can turn on the fact that under G. L. c. 54, § 154, the district attorney is elected by the voters of the Suffolk District. The definitions of “public employer,” “public employee,” and “executive officer of a public employer” attach no significance to the difference between elected and appointed public officers and employees. See
Pruner
v.
Clerk of the Superior Court in the County of Norfolk,
General Laws c. 12, § 6A, as amended by St. 1954, c. 654, provides, in part, that the Attorney General “may from time to time, and as often as occasion may require, call into conference the district attorneys ... for the purpose of discussing the duties of [the district attorneys’] offices with a view to the uniform and adequate enforcement of the laws of the [C]ommonwealth.”
Here we can distinguish the principal case relied upon by the plaintiff. We do not agree with the plaintiff that the reference in
Attorney Gen.
v.
Tufts,
See G. L. c. 12, §§ 15 & 16, 19-20A, & 22.
See G. L. c. 12, §§ 23-25A & 29.
See, e.g., St. 1984, c. 234.
The
Weaver
case,
supra,
also refers (at 47-48) to the person for presentment being “that officer charged with the overall financial and budgetary responsibility for the agency or department whose employees’ actions allegedly gave rise to the plaintiff’s claim. . . . The highest officer of an executive department, . . . [can] make provision, during the budgetary process, for the payment of valid claims . . . .” This statement was made in the context of claims against agencies falling within the Executive Office of Human Services. In that context, the Secretary of Human Services would have over-all financial and budgetary responsibility over agencies and de
In reaching this conclusion, we express no opinion on whether the last clause in the definition of “[ejxecutive officer” (see [7] in the definition above, at 280) might apply, in some circumstances, to officers of the government of the Commonwealth.
Nor do we imply that the district attorney may be the agent of the Commonwealth for purposes of making the latter liable for his actions. Our holding is strictly limited to the question of identifying the proper party for presentment in a claim under c. 258 against a district attorney.
The plaintiff does not argue that the defendant did anything which caused him to believe that he had made proper presentment or which would give reason to bar the defendant from raising the issue of presentment. See Vasys v. Metropolitan Dist. Commn., supra at 56-57. There are none of the unusual circumstances present in this case which were present in White v. Metropolitan Dist. Commn., ante 106, 109 (1985), which caused this court to bar the defendant from raising the issue of presentment because “during the critical two-year period, the plaintiffs . . . were lulled into believing that proper presentment of their claim under G. L. c. 258, § 4, would not be an issue in the case.” Id. at 110. In this case, the acts giving rise to the claim occurred on December 4, 1980, presentment to the district attorney was made on December 8, 1981, and the lawsuit was filed on August 17, 1983. The time for making proper presentment ended on December 4, 1982. The Attorney General filed his motion to dismiss promptly after the complaint was filed.
