In a suit for a declaration of rights and an injunction, the Superior Court made a declaration in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiffs appeal.
In March, 1971, the defendant school committee of the city of Boston (school committee) appropriated 1 $82,744,779 for general school purposes for the fiscal year (January through December, 1971), of which $2,656,910 was allocated for temporary teachers, i.e. daily substitutes and long-term substitutes. 2 At the same time the school committee formally requested the mayor to recommend to the city council the appropriation of an additional $13,485,076 for the same period, of which $544,190 was intended for the salaries of temporary teachers. In this attempt to secure additional funds the school committee was substantially disappointed ; it received from the mayor and city council only $8,000,000. A number of suggestions were generated and put before the school committee to accomplish the necessary savings, and some were approved. One was a suggestion to “[rjeduce the use of temporary teachers to replace absent teachers.” This was aimed at saving some $450,000 during the fiscal year. It was adopted by a vote of three to two on May 25 to go into effect on June l. 3 By this time not much was left of the school year: generally in the system the year was to end on June 24; for high school seniors it had already ended on May 14.
The school committee did not issue any directive in terms restricting the use of temporary teachers. Rather
The situation in high schools after June 1 was evidently alleviated by the fact that the seniors had departed, releasing some teacher-time to cover absences. As to the other schools, it appears from the evidence regarding the short interval from June 1 to June 3, the date when the present suit was tried, that the new procedure had the effect of reducing considerably, but not eliminating, the use of daily substitutes.
On May 28, 1971, a few days before the new procedure was to become effective, the plaintiffs as representatives of Boston Teachers Union, Local 66, American Federation of Teachers, A.F.L.-C.I.O., brought this suit against the school committee and the city of Boston. The bill charged that for the school committee to “discontinue” (the word was not quite accurate) the hiring of substitutes would constitute a breach of its collective bargaining agreement with the union then in force and extending to August 31, 1971. Specifically the union pointed to article III H (4) (b) of the agreement which stated that “It is the policy of the Committee that substitutes shall be hired to cover classes of regularly assigned teachers when they are absent.” It pointed also to article III A which recognized that “it is desirable to attempt to reach” (that is, not to exceed) certain class size maxima for the 1970-1971 school year which were then set out; and to article III B setting out a “basic
The suit was promptly tried on June 3, and the judge entered his findings, rulings, and order for decree on June 9. He found the facts on the lines of our narrative above. He thought the school committee’s duty as to hiring substitutes was not an absolute one, having been expressed only as a “policy”; and the provisions as to maximum class size and teachers’ workloads were apparently to be read with a similar qualification. The contract “must be interpreted in view of the political and economic facts of life,” including the “fact that the School Committee . . . does not have ultimate fiscal autonomy.” Considering the emergency conditions and the short time span involved, the procedure adopted could not be said to be “a material or significant violation of the ‘Policy’ ... as that term is used in the contract . . ..” Accordingly, the judge declared that the school committee was entitled to continue the new practice regarding the hiring of substitutes during the remaining period of the collective bargaining agreement. This declaration, however, was stated to be without prejudice to the union’s right to resort to the grievance procedure if the hiring practice should result in particular grievances.
A final decree was entered on June 30, 1971. The plaintiffs showed no haste in pressing their appeal. It reached argument in this court in October, 1972. After these many months, coercive relief would be wholly inapposite. This the plaintiffs recognize. Yet they urge us to consider the appeal on the merits and declare the rights and duties of the parties. But a declaration by this court would necessarily be grounded on the facts of
The declaration appealed from expired by its terms on August 31, 1971. That was also the expiration date of the parties’ agreement for 1970-1971, which alone gave the plaintiffs their basis of complaint. Since then another year’s contract has come and gone, 4 and still another is presumably now operative or under negotiation. The course of the collective bargaining process is of course not shown on the record, but the question of substitutes was and will continue to be a legitimate subject of bargaining and could be resolved by bargaining or shown up in varying lights as other issues are settled by bargaining. Even if the terms of the contract and the background on which it operates should remain stationary, a renewed dispute over hiring substitutes would very likely be taken to arbitration under the aegis of new legislation, 5 6 and in that event the declaration here sought on the present record might well prove more an embarrassment than a help to the arbitrators.
Again, the stated period of the hiring procedure adopted by the school committee in June, 1971, ended with the fiscal year on December 31, 1971. This measure of economy was one of a set of responses by the school committee to a particular, exigent situation. It is highly problematical whether a similar complex of facts will present itself in the future, and, if it does, whether the school
Sensing, perhaps, that the total situation is too unstable for a declaration, the plaintiffs intimate that a piece might be carved out more suited to the purpose. Thus they seek to show that the amount of $2,656,910 originally allocated for temporary teachers, plus the $94,000 remaining for temporary teachers from the additional appropriation after effect is given to the projected saving of $450,000, would have been sufficient to cover the cost of temporary teachers who would have been normally requisitioned during the balance of the fiscal year; they suggest that a declaration could be made that on such facts, and presumably with contract provisions like those in force during 1970-1971, the school committee would not be entitled to adopt the restrictive hiring policy. The supposed facts and calculations are seriously disputed by the school committee, and it' would also dispute any assumption that its initial itemizations of funds are frozen to the extent suggested regardless of changing needs or conditions. See
Collins
v.
Boston,
This account of changes in circumstances that have occurred since the declaration below and are yet to be anticipated is, we think, enough to show that a reexamination of that declaration would be fruitless and possibly misleading. The case is thus comparable to the many in
We are, of course, far from intimating that a declaration may never be made that deals with future events subject to contingencies. On the contrary, when the contingencies can be well defined, a declaration may peculiarly serve the purpose of the declaratory procedure “to remove, and to afford relief from, uncertainty and insecurity . . (G. L. c. 231 A, § 9).
See Boston Ins. Co.
v.
Fawcett,
So ordered.
Notes
See St. 1936, c. 224, § 2; St. 1948, c. 334; § 1; St. 1949, c. 117, § 1; St. 1963, c. 786, §§ 2, 3; St. 1966, c. 642, § 13.
“Daily” and “long term” substitutes are occasipnal employees, the former hired on a day to day basis, the latter when absences are expected to last two weeks or longer. (“Permanent” substitutes and “provisional teachers” are regular employees, not involved here.)
Superintendent of Schools Ohrenberger advised against the suggestion. He thought it would violate the contract with the Teachers Union.
During argument counsel volunteered that the agreement for 1971-1972 repeated the provisions referred to above, but in some other respects the text of the agreement differed from the preceding one.
Statute 1972, c. 375, amending G. L. c. 149, § 178K, as previously amended by St. 1970, c. 445, strengthens the arbitral machinery for contracts between municipal employers and employee organizations by importing the provisions of G. L. c. 150C, the chapter governing “Collective Bargaining Agreements to Arbitrate.”
The result should be the same even if such formal precautions are omitted. But see
United States
v.
Munsingwear, Inc.
