9 Mass. App. Ct. 62 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1980
The defendants have appealed from a summary judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, a former Metropolitan District police officer, in this action for declaratory judgment. G. L. c. 231A.
On February 19, 1977, the plaintiff was injured in the performance of his duty as a police officer. On the following day he applied to the Metropolitan District Police Line of Duty Board (L.O.D. Board) to be placed on line-of-duty
The plaintiff initiated this action on April 12, 1978, seeking a declaration that the L.O.D. Board was required to continue line-of-duty payments until the S.B.R. should act on his request for retirement.
The plaintiff would have us hold that the Metropolitan District Commission (commission), acting through the L.O.D. Board, was not authorized to terminate his line-of-duty status by finding that his incapacity was permanent after it had initially found that it was temporary. The defendants contend that the plain words of the statute authorized the commission to find that the plaintiff’s incapacity was no longer temporary and, consequently, that his line-of-duty status should be terminated. We agree with the defendants’ analysis.
Section 63B is silent as to who should evaluate the temporary incapacity for service of an officer injured in the line of duty. It does, however, expressly limit the commission’s authority to make payments to an officer to that period during which he is temporarily incapacitated from injuries suffered in the line of duty. We are of the opinion that the commission as the employing agency necessarily has the authority under § 63B to determine whether an officer is so incapacitated. The plaintiff does not question the commission’s power in that respect but contends that the power to determine permanent incapacity resides only in the S.B.R. Section 63B is silent as to any authority to make a determination of permanent incapacity. We conclude, however, that a necessary corollary of the power to make an initial finding of temporary incapacity is that the commission is also empowered to reevaluate a given case and determine
We note that G. L. c. 41, § 11 IF, as amended through St. 1977, c. 646, § 2, provides a system of compensation for city or town police officers and firefighters such as that which the plaintiff urges us to read into § 63B. That is, once an officer is found to be temporarily disabled, he is granted leave with pay, which continues until he is certified fit or until he is “retired or pensioned in accordance with law.” This procedure closes any hiatus between payments under leave with pay and payments under a retirement system. No such procedure is included in the plan enacted in § 63B. Had the Legislature intended to include such a procedure in § 63B, it could easily have done so, as it did when it later enacted § 11 IF.
The plaintiff’s basic argument is that we should construe § 63B and G. L. c. 32, § 7, as parts of a common scheme so that the payments under § 63B must continue until the S.B.R. determines an officer’s incapacity to be permanent and retires him. Although § 7 does restrict the grant of accidental disability retirement to cases where the disabling injury was sustained in the performance of duty, as does § 63B, the plaintiff’s contention flies in the face of the retro-activity provisions in § 7.
The judgment is reversed, and a new judgment is to enter declaring that the commission had the power to find the plaintiff’s disability to be permanent and to discontinue payments under § 63B.
So ordered.
The relevant part of § 63B, inserted by St. 1948, c. 653, reads: “The commission shall, subject to appropriation, indemnify a metropolitan district police officer ... for expenses or damages sustained by him while acting as a police officer . . .; and such damages shall include loss of pay by reason of absence from duty on the part of such officer because of temporary incapacity caused by injury suffered through no fault of his own while in the actual performance of duty . . . .” The commission’s responsibilities under this section have been delegated to a “ Line of Duty Board ” created in 1972.
The S.B.R. granted the plaintiff an accidental disability pension on September 28, 1978. Retirement payments were made retroactive to April 8,1978, pursuant to G. L. c. 32, § 7(2), thus meshing its determination under c. 32, § 7, with the L.O.D. Board’s determination under § 63B. The plaintiff is entitled to no more.
The relevant legislative history consists of notations in the journals of the Senate and House of Representatives charting the progress of 1948 House Docs. No. 421, 2249 and 2332, through the process of enactment, in the course of which the only amendment of the part of § 63R quoted in note 2 was the addition of the words “subject to appropriation.” See 1948 House Journal at 103, 659, 704-705, 1325, 1447, 1501-1502, 1564, 1658, 1737,1764,1773,1827 and 1845; 1948 Senate Journal at 117,1136,1177, 1193, 1250, 1269-1270, 1311 and 1321.
A bill was filed in the House in 1973 (Doc. No. 1083) which sought to accomplish this. That bill was referred to the Joint Committee on Public Service from which it emerged as Senate Doc. No. 1526. It was reported to the Senate Ways and Means Committee, which reported it out as part of a study order (Doc. No. 1784). That order failed to pass, and the entire package of bills died on prorogation.
The provisions of G. L. c. 32, § 7 (as amended through St. 1978, c. 487, § 6), on retirement payments for permanent disability are “effective on the date the injury was sustained, or the hazard on account of which he is being retired was undergone, or on the date six months prior to the filing of the written application . . . or on the date for which he last received regular compensation for his employment in the public service, whichever date last occurs.” See note 3, supra.