440 Mass. 1017 | Mass. | 2003
The employee’s claim, pursued by his estate, is that he was terminated without just cause in violation of G. L. c. 35, § 51,
This court has stated that “actions seeking the vindication of personal rights, in the absence of a statute, do not survive while those seeking redress for damage to property rights do survive.” Sheldone v. Marino, 398 Mass. 817, 819 (1986). This principle is often summarized by stating that contract actions survive, while tort claims do not, with some exceptions. See, e.g., McStowe v. Bornstein, 377 Mass. 804, 806-807 (1979). What constitutes a contract claim has not been rigidly defined. Id. at 808. As the McStowe court stated, “[w]e have looked with disfavor on rigid procedural distinctions between contract and tort and are more concerned today with substance than with form.” Id.
In substance, the claim in this case is contractual, or quasi contractual. The
Judgment affirmed.
General Laws c. 35, § 51, provides in pertinent part: “Any employee . . . who has completed at least five years of service may not be discharged from such employment except for just cause and for reasons specifically given him in writing by the appointing authority . . . .”
See also Walter v. Board of Educ. of Quincy Sch. Dist. No. 172, 93 Ill. 2d 101, 107 (1982) (in mandamus proceeding by tenured teacher seeking reinstatement and damages, “damages which amount to a claim for back salary are not a mere incident to the complaint for reinstatement but constitute a separate claim” that survives plaintiff’s death).
See also Sliski v. Krol, 361 Mass. 313, 315 (1972), quoting Drewen v. Bank of Manhattan Co., 31 N.J. 110, 118 (1959) (cause of action by son for breach of oral agreement to compensate him for providing services to father during his lifetime survived son’s death; general rule is “a right of action founded upon a contract survives the person entitled in his lifetime to sue, so that the right passes upon his death to his personal representative”); Lovejoy v. Bailey, 214 Mass. 134, 154 (1913) (partner’s breach of fiduciary duty claim survived his death; “the act complained of is not a mere tort, but it is a breach of a quasi contract, the claim being founded on the breach of a fiduciary relation, and the law implying a contract that a man wiH faithfuUy perform duties which he has undertaken ... the plaintiffs are really seeking to follow trust property or its avails procured by fraud and still held as part of the estate of the fraudulent party” [citations omitted]).
On appeal, the defendants also challenge an order of the District Court judge who heard the employee’s petition for judicial review. The judge had remanded the case for rehearing by the board based on the board’s failure to produce a transcript of the original hearing. Because the defendants did not raise this issue before the single justice, we do not consider it. Kartell v. Commonwealth, 437 Mass. 1027, 1028 (2002). Milton v. Boston, 427 Mass. 1016, 1017 (1998).