324 Mass. 144 | Mass. | 1949
This is a petition for a writ of certiorari filed by the mayor of the city of Everett and the city of Everett to quash a decision made by a judge, of the Superior Court revoking an order made by the mayor removing the three license commissioners of that city upon a petition for review filed by them under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 138, § 5, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 376, § 2. The mayor and the city appealed from the judgment entered by order of a single justice of this court dismissing the petition.
Upon the refusal of the license commissioners to resign, the mayor preferred charges against them, which with the specifications alleged that the commissioners were guilty of nonfeasance in that they had failed to inspect the premises of certain common victuallers, and had permitted eight common victuallers who also sold alcoholic liquors to conduct their business without being supplied with food for sale to those who resorted thereto, and three of them without having the necessary equipment for the preparation and serving of meals; all of the proprietors of these places having been licensed by the commissioners to be common victuallers and also having been licensed by them to sell intoxicating liquors to be drunk on the premises. After a public hearing before the mayor he ordered their removal from office.
The judge of the Superior Court who heard the petition for review of the proceedings had before the mayor found that hearsay evidence which was prejudicial to the commissioners was introduced at the hearing before the mayor;
Proceedings in the Superior Court were governed by the statute, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 138, § 5, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 376, § 2, which in so far as material provides that a member of the licensing board who has been ordered removed may “apply to the superior court for a review of the charges, of the evidence submitted thereunder, and of the findings thereon by the mayor. . . . The court, after a hearing, shall affirm or revoke the order of the mayor removing such member . . ..” This statute measures and defines the jurisdiction of the Superior Court. It can only review the proceedings already had before the mayor. The scope of inquiry is limited to an examination of the charges, the evidence introduced at the hearing, and the findings. The question for the judge of the Superior Court was not what conclusion he would reach in weighing the evidence submitted to the mayor if the matter came before him in the first instance, uncontrolled by any findings of the mayor, but the question before him was to decide whether the findings of the mayor were supported,by reasonable evidence and, if they were, to affirm the order of removal, otherwise to revoke the order. Unless one acting reasonably upon that evidence could not have come to the conclusion the mayor did, then the order of ouster is to stand. Swan v. Justices of the Superior Court, 222 Mass. 542, 546-547. Mayor of Somerville v. District Court of Somerville, 317 Mass. 106, 109. Sullivan v. Municipal Court of the Boxbury District, 322 Mass. 566, 573.
The charges accused the commissioners of delinquency in the performance of their official duties and were, if proved, sufficient cause for their removal. Gaw v. Ashley, 195 Mass. 173, 177. Dunn v. Mayor of Taunton, 200 Mass. 252, 258. McKenna v. White, 287 Mass. 495, 497. Bell v. District Court of Holyoke, 314 Mass. 622. This left open for review in the Superior Court the adequacy of the evidence when examined and considered from every reasonable point of view to support the charges. Murray v. Justices of the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, 233 Mass. 186, 189. Board of Public Works of Arlington v. Third District Court of Eastern Middlesex, 319 Mass. 638, 639. Sullivan v. Municipal Court of the Boxbury District, 322 Mass. 566, 573.
The evidence before the mayor given by police officers and the proprietors of the establishments in question, supplemented by- photographs of each of these places, furnishes strong and persuasive evidence that certain of these places had for a long period neglected to have the necessary facilities ready and available for use in the preparation^ cooking and serving of food. In some, the equipment had long been discarded and abandoned, and in others there was an entire absence of any equipment. In another, the room where food had once been cooked had been closed for a year or more. The lack of food in the establishments named in the charges was also substantiated by the evidence introduced at the hearing before the mayor. Indeed, the evidence left little dispute as to the lack of equipment and food. The testimony of the commissioners as to their visits to these cafés and the testimony of the proprietors
The hearing before the mayor was unnecessarily protracted due in a large degree to remarks of the mayor, frequently of a personal nature, directed to counsel for the commissioners and the replies made by counsel. The hearing was also marked by statements manifesting ill feeling and animosities between the parties. During the hearing the mayor in four instances, over the objection of the commissioners, admitted hearsay evidence of • statements made by bartenders, who appeared to be in charge of their places of business, with reference to the lack of food and equipment for serving food. Counsel for the mayor in his opening remarks stated that obvious hearsay evidence would not be admitted. The parties made no stipulation relative to the admission of such evidence. The mayor, a layman, in the conduct of the hearing was acting in a quasi judicial capacity, but he was not bound to a strict observance of the rules of law governing the acceptance or rejection of evidence which prevail in trials before a court; and unless the admission of the evidence resulted in a denial to them of substantial justice, the commissioners have no complaint adequate in law to nullify the findings of the mayor. McCarthy v. Emerson, 202 Mass. 352, 354. Stiles v. Municipal Council of Lowell, 233 Mass. 174, 181. Higgins v. License Commissioners of Quincy, 308 Mass. 142, 146. Sullivan v. Municipal Court of the Roxbury District, 322 Mass. 566, 577. Proof of the lack of food and equipment did not depend
It was found in the Superior Court that the action of the mayor in ordering the liquor and vice squad to report violations of law by common victuallers to him and not to the commissioners, in engaging photographers, and in preparing the evidence to be submitted to him at the hearing was not consistent with an open and unprejudiced mind; and that the charges were not made in good faith but were made as a part of a plan to carry out the mayor’s determination to remove the commissioners. If we assume that the good faith of the mayor was open upon the petition for review, the findings of the judge would not warrant the revoking of the order of removal.
The evidence introduced before the mayor and submitted to the judge of the Superior Court indicates that few if any travellers resorted to any of these establishments for a meal and that there was no real demand for food by the patrons of any of these places. Nevertheless their proprietors, apparently seeking the advantages that they would gain by the grant of a liquor license to them under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 138, § 12, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 376, § 2, as amended, by virtue of having a common victualler’s license rather than by the grant of a liquor license under this same section to them as merely keepers of a tavern, seemed to have followed a general pattern in their applications for liquor
/ Even if the mayor was biased or prejudiced against the commissioners, that fact would not disqualify him from preferring charges, conducting a hearing, and ordering the removal of the commissioners if the evidence was sufficient to support his action. The Legislature conferred upon the mayor the power to remove the commissioners, and it made no provision that any other officer could act in case the mayor was disqualified by reason of bias and prejudice. G. L, (Ter. Ed.) c. 138, § 5, as appearing in St. 1933, c. 376, .§ 2. , The commissioners were appointed and accepted their offices- under this statute, and must have known that they were subject to removal by the mayor for cause and in the manner designated therein. It would be strange if officers shown, to be remiss in the performance of their duties could enjoy immunity from a termination of their services simply
It follows that there was error in the decision of the Superior Court in ordering the revocation of the order of removal made by the mayor; the judgment entered by order of the single justice dismissing the petition is reversed; and judgment is to be entered quashing the order of the Superior Court.
So ordered.