233 Mass. 186 | Mass. | 1919
The petitioner was removed' from his employment as assistant engineer at the Boston State Hospital after hearing had in conformity to the civil service law. Thereafter he filed a petition in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston under St. 1918, c. 247, § 3. It there is enacted that a person removed from such employment may file a petition praying that the action of the officer or board in making such removal may be reviewed by the court, and that after appropriate notice the court shall “review such action, hear the witnesses, and shall affirm said order unless it shall appear that it was made without proper cause or in bad faith, in which case said order shall be reversed and the petitioner be reinstated. . . .” The return shows that the judge who heard the petition among other matters
The case turns upon the interpretation of the crucial part of the statute, which has already been quoted. The correct meaning must be gathered from the words used and the end apparently aimed at by the General Court in passing the statute. The requirement, that the court shall “review” the action of the officer or board making the removal, must be construed in connection with the further mandate that, after hearing the witnesses, he “shall affirm said order unless it shall appear that it was made without proper cause or in bad faith.” Treating these provisions in relation to each other, they are not equivalent to common provisions of law respeqting hearings on appeal, where the whole matter is reopened and tried again regardless of the initial decision. The
He ruled correctly that the burden of proof of establishing the essential statutory facts rested upon the petitioner. That also is involved in the words of the statute.
Cases relating to the course of procedure upon writs of review are not controlling in this connection, because it there is expressly provided that the case shall be tried anew.
It follows that as matter of law the entry must be
Petition dismissed.