The plaintiff school committee is appealing from a judgment of the Superior Court confirming an arbitration award ordering the committee to recall the grievant teacher, Jean MacKay, to serve as school adjustment counselor and to pay her damages equal to the pay and associated benefits of that job for the academic year 1981-1982. Because G. L. c. 71, § 38 (1984 ed.),
1
provides school committees with exclusive authority to determine the qualifications of teachers, the committee argues that the arbitrator exceeded his powers in ordering MacKay’s recall as school adjustment counselor. We agree. However, we recognize that the award of compensation is “separable from his unauthorized determination” that MacKay was entitled to the job,
School Comm. of Braintree
v.
Raymond,
We summarize the facts as taken from the arbitrator’s findings. For economic reasons, the school committee laid off a number of teachers, including MacKay, in the spring of 1981. She had been working as a physical education teacher and was also certified by the State board of education as a guidance counselor, although she had no prior experience in this position.
In July, 1981, the job of school adjustment counselor became available for the 1981-1982 school year. MacKay and two other laid-off teachers were considered for this position although none had the requisite approval from the Commissioner of Youth Services pursuant to G. L. c. 71, § 46G (1984 ed.). 2 All three were certified as guidance counselors. Beatrice Autry, a teacher with less seniority than MacKay, who had previously worked with handicapped children, was chosen to serve as school adjustment counselor.
The arbitrator concluded that the school committee had violated the contract by offering the job to Autry rather than to MacKay. He found, and the school committee has admitted, that the practice under Article 28 has been to fill vacancies and new positions by recalling laid-off employees in order of their seniority to positions for which they have been certified. Since none of the three candidates were approved as adjustment counselors but all were certified as guidance counselors, the arbitrator ruled that MacKay’s higher seniority entitled her to the job and to damages equal to the pay and associated benefits she would have earned as school adjustment counselor for the academic year 1981-1982.* *
3
Although noting that MacKay was
1. The Order to Recall the Teacher.
Our review of an arbitrator’s award is limited in scope. “We do not, and cannot, pass on an arbitrator’s alleged errors of law and, absent fraud, we have no business overruling an arbitrator because we give a contract a different interpretation.”
Concerned Minority Educators
v.
School Comm. of Worcester,
In determining the exclusive, nondelegable functions of a school committee “there is no escape from proceeding ‘on a case by case basis.’”
School Comm. of Boston
v.
Boston Teachers Local 66,
The association argues that the issue presented here is one of job security and is therefore governed by our decisions enforcing lay-off procedures. We do not share this view. There are no allegations of failure by the school committee to follow appropriate procedures with respect to MacKay’s layoff or
“[A]n award of damages ‘is separable’ from an arbitrator’s mistaken conclusion that a particular decision by a school committee is arbitrable.”
School Comm. of Boston
v.
Boston Teachers Local 66, ante
232, 235 (1985). See
School Committee of Braintree
v.
Raymond, supra
at 691 (arbitrator’s award of compensation “separable from his unauthorized determination that the employee should be reinstated”);
School Comm. of Lynnfield
v.
Trachtman,
In this case the arbitrator found that the school committee had violated the recall provisions of its collective bargaining agreement by failing to offer MacKay the job of school adjustment counselor. “The decision of the arbitrator on such a question of [contract] interpretation will be final and not subject to review.”
School Comm. of Danvers
v.
Tyman,
3. Conclusion.
It follows from all of the foregoing that there was no error in the order of the Superior Court judge in so far as the order confirmed the award of damages to the teacher. The judgment of the Superior Court affirming the arbitration award is modified by striking therefrom the provision that the school committee recall MacKay to the position of school adjustment counselor, and as so modified the judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 71, § 38 (1984 ed.), states in relevant part: “It [the school committee] shall elect and contract with the teachers of the public schools, shall require full and satisfactory evidence of their moral character, and shall ascertain their qualifications for teaching and their capacity for the government of schools.”
General Laws c. 71, § 46G, states, in part, that: “Each such school adjustment counsellor shall be responsible for
(a)
counselling and helping children in the primary, elementary and secondary grades who are neglected,
Any unemployment compensation received by MacKay was to be subtracted from the damage award. Following the arbitration decision, MacKay informed the superintendent of schools in Holbrook that she would not accept the position of school adjustment counselor for the 1982-1983 school year.
The school committee argues that because none of the candidates were approved as school adjustment counselors, they were not “qualified” for the job for purposes of Article 28 and in this circumstance the committee was free to choose the best qualified applicant based on an examination of all relevant experience.
There is no claim here that the school committee lacked available funds to satisfy the award of lost compensation. Cf.
School Comm. of Boston
v.
