49 Mass. App. Ct. 119 | Mass. App. Ct. | 2000
This appeal concerns the applicability of G. L. c. 39, §§ 23A and 23B, the open meeting law, to a nonpublic meeting attended by the chairman of the board of selectmen of Longmeadow, officials of the city of Springfield, and others. A judge of the Superior Court, after a jury-waived trial, held that there was no violation of c. 39 by reason of the chairman’s attendance. We affirm the judgment.
The facts found by the trial judge, supplemented in minor details by uncontroverted testimony, are as follows. In the spring of 1996, the city announced plans to reopen a part of Forest Park known as the King Philip Stockade (Stockade). Before its
Instead, a nonpublic meeting was held.
Following the May 22, 1996 meeting, an open community meeting, announced by fliers, was held on May 28 to discuss the suggestion made by the mayor. Fifty to sixty residents attended the meeting, including the two Western Drive residents who had been present at the May 22 meeting. Also present were one of the plaintiffs and one of the defendant selectmen. There appeared to be very little opposition to the plan.
On May 30, 1996, the full board met, discussed, and voted on the proposed agreement which had been drafted in the interim by counsel for Springfield and Longmeadow. At least one handwritten change was made to the agreement at the board’s meeting.
Thereafter, one of the plaintiffs sought an opinion from the Hampden County district attorney’s office that the open meeting law had been violated by the May 22 meeting. The district attorney concluded otherwise,
Relying on Nigro v. Conservation Commn. of Canton, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 433 (1984), the plaintiffs claimed to the trial court, and now argue on appeal, that the chairman was a subcommittee of the board, that he participated in discussing the terms of the proposal presented to the board, and that he, therefore, recommended the proposal. He did not merely receive a proposal for delivery to the board, but rather an agreement was negotiated with discussion between the parties. The Nigro court held that when a quorum of the subcommittee of the Canton conservation commission engaged in making findings of fact or formulating recommendations, and such findings and recommendations were to be submitted to the commission, the subcommittee was required to comply with the open meeting law. Id. at 435 n.4 & 436. In Nigro, as in the case at bar, the
The trial judge thought otherwise. After referring to the definitions of “meeting” and “deliberation” as contained in § 23A, which, together with the other relevant portions of the statute, are set forth in the margin,
In view of the wide-ranging discussions at the May 22 meeting participated in by the chairman, as reflected in the “meeting notes” taken by the executive secretary of the board,
We turn to the statute and its two central provisions which appear in § 23B. See note 7, supra. These provide that “[a]ll meetings of a governmental body shall be open to the public” and that “[n]o quorum of a governmental body shall meet in private for the purpose of deciding on or deliberating toward a
The “plain and ordinary meaning” of the language of §§ 23A and 23B, looked at as a whole, see Johnson’s Case, 318 Mass. 741, 747 (1945), dictates otherwise. Thus, “deliberation” is defined as “a verbal exchange between a quorum of members of a governmental body”; “meeting” is defined as “any corporal convening and deliberation of a governmental body for which a quorum is required . . .”; and “quorum” is defined as “a simple majority of a governmental body unless otherwise defined . . .” (emphasis supplied). That the first sentence in § 23B is immediately followed by the second sentence which states that no quorum of a governmental body shall meet in private, reinforces the conclusion that a meeting of a “subcommittee” of a governmental body as defined in § 23A does not include a subcommittee of one.
The definition of the term “quorum” and its use in the definitions of “meeting” and of “deliberation” indicate that the term is meant to signify group action. This meaning is borne out by dictionary definition and is suggested by case law. See, e.g., Webster’s Third New Intl. Dictionary 1868 (1993), defining “quorum” as “the number of members of an organized body of persons (as a legislature, court, or board of directors) that when duly assembled is legally competent to transact business in the absence of the other members.” See also Advertiser Co. v. Wallis, 493 So. 2d 1365, 1368-1370 (Ala. 1986) (where Sunshine Law applied to “any . . . ‘body, board or commission’ which disburses public funds,” it is applicable only to “those [entities] governed by a group of individuals who sit as a deliberative body to set policy regarding the public matters with which the entity is entrusted”; it does not apply to the public corporation known as the Department of Mental Health and Mental Retarda
Although we decide there was no violation of the open meeting law by reason of the attendance of the chairman of the board at the May 22 meeting, we are in accord with the opinion of the Hampden County district attorney’s office that, had there been a violation, it would have been cured by the independent deliberative action taken at the meeting of the full board on May 30, 1996. Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks, Lodge No. 65 v. City Council of Lawrence, 403 Mass. 563, 566 & n.6 (1988).
The plaintiffs’ remaining contentions are that the telephone cancellation of the scheduled open meeting and attendant decision to have the chairman be present at a nonpublic meeting were in violation of the open meeting law. The trial judge found that these decisions were made by the chairman in consultation with others. Even assuming that they were made by a majority of the board, to require such ministerial acts as scheduling or canceling meetings to be decided in open meetings not only would be impractical but also would put burdens on public servants not imposed by or within the purpose of the statute. While the decision to have the chairman alone attend the meeting has some aspects of public policy (see definition of meeting in note 7, supra), in the circumstances here, where a full board
Judgment affirmed.
The judge found: “The purpose of the meeting was to allow [the mayor of Springfield] to present a proposal regarding the controversy to [the chairman of the board, the two residents and the executive secretary of the board], who would then convey the proposal to the full board. [The chairman], along with other board members, believed that to avoid a confrontational exchange between Springfield and Longmeadow, the best course of action was to allow the Mayor to present his proposal to one member of the Board. Further as a negotiation tactic, the Board provided only one Board member so that no decision could be made at the meeting. [The chairman] was not given any authority to act on behalf of the Board nor to bind the Board in any manner.”
These two residents had been appointed to serve on an advisory committee created by the board to represent Western Drive residents’ concerns on the Stockade issue. The record indicates that a selectman, not the chairman, was also a member of that advisory committee. The plaintiffs do not claim that the presence of two members of the advisory committee at the May 22 meeting constituted a violation of the open meeting law, and we do not consider that question.
“Meeting Notes” of the meeting were taken by the board’s executive secretary.
After investigation, the district attorney’s office concluded that although the chairman was in essence a subcommittee of the board, the meeting was an informational or fact-gathering session in which no commitment was made by the chairman that would constitute a decision. “Because no votes were taken, and no decisions were made during the conversations between [the chairman] and [the mayor] on May 22, there were no ‘deliberations.’ ... As opposed to the informational meeting on May 22, the actual deliberations and decisions regarding the Western Avenue entrance to the King Philip’s Stockade took place on May 30.”
The opinion also stated that, had there been a violation on May 22, “the May 30 meeting corrected any prior error.”
The plaintiffs rely particularly on the following language of Nigro, 17 Mass. App. Ct. at 436: “We think it axiomatic that any report of facts which the subcommittee may make to the full commission after conducting whatever investigation may be appropriate in the circumstances is necessarily grounded on one or more decisions as to what the facts are. And, of course, the subcommittee cannot formulate a recommendation without deciding what it should be.”
The relevant portions of c. 39, §§ 23A and 23B, are as follows:
Ҥ 23A. Definitions.
“The following terms as used in sections twenty-three B and twenty-three C shall have the following meanings: —
“ ‘Deliberation’, a verbal exchange between a quorum of members of a governmental body attempting to arrive at a decision on any public business within its jurisdiction [emphasis added], . . .
“ ‘Governmental body’, every board, commission, committee or subcommittee of any district, city, region or town, however elected, appointed or otherwise constituted, and the governing board of a local housing, redevelopment or similar authority; provided, however, that this definition shall not include a town meeting. . . .
“ ‘Meeting’, any corporal convening and deliberation of a governmental body for which a quorum is required in order to make a decision at which any public business or public policy matter over which the governmental body has supervision, control, jurisdiction or advisory power is discussed or considered; but shall not include any on-site inspection of any project or program.
“ ‘Quorum’, a simple majority of a governmental body unless otherwise defined by constitution, charter, rule or law applicable to such governing body.”
Ҥ 23B. Open meetings of governmental bodies.
“All meetings of a governmental body shall be open to the public and any person shall be permitted to attend any meeting except as otherwise provided by this section.
“No quorum of a governmental body shall meet in private for the purpose of deciding on or deliberating toward a decision on any matter except as provided by this section.”
Section 23B also provides for executive sessions but, quite rightly, no argument is made that those provisions apply.
Among other matters, the meeting notes, the accuracy of which are not challenged, indicated the following. The chairman not only traced the chronology of events and communications with regard to the reopening of the Stockade, but emphasized Longmeadow’s position that a Western Drive access was not an option. He stated Longmeadow’s legal position, contested by the mayor, that Longmeadow owned the treebelt at the Western Drive entrance. He also suggested “what he considered to be the minimal disruptive solution. This would be for Springfield to obtain the funds, fix the Route 5 entrance [an alternative entrance] and then open the Stockade.” A written agreement was discussed and it was agreed that counsel for the two municipalities would draft an agreement. “The Mayor suggested that a public statement be issued noting that there was an agreed upon Action Plan between the City of Springfield representatives and the Town of Longmeadow representatives subject to further input from the other members of the Board of Selectmen and discussion with Western Drive area residents.”
We also note that the open community meeting of May 28, albeit not held by the board, “helped to accomplish the purpose of the open meeting law.” Benevolent & Protective Order of Elks, Lodge No. 65 v. Planning Bd. of Lawrence, 403 Mass. 531, 558 (1988).
We do not suggest that every procedural matter is immune from the open meeting law.