We transferred this case to this court on our own motion to consider arguments made by the school committee of Brockton (school committee) alleging error in a decision of the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination (commission). The commission accepted the decision of a hearing commissioner,
The background of the case is as follows. On August 17, 1979, the Brockton Education Association (union)
On 114 occasions while the Zettlemoyer complaint was pending, public school teachers in Brockton requested to apply their accrued sick leave to the period of their pregnancy-related disabilities. The requests were denied.
During 1973, 1974, and the first ten and one-half months of 1975, the school committee responded to pregnant teachers’ requests for sick leave benefits with letters which were worded in different ways, some of which stated that the teacher’s ultimate eligibility for the requested benefits would depend on the outcome of a court case on the issue. In some cases which arose as early as January 22, 1975, and in all cases which arose after October 15, 1975, the school committee responded to the teachers’ requests with a form letter stating that “[s]ince the question of sick leave for maternity has yet to be resolved in a test case, it is not possible to grant your request for this.” It is undisputed that the test case
Shortly after our decision in the Brockton decision, the union requested payment from the school committee of accrued sick leave benefits for the pregnant teachers who had requested, but been denied, benefits during the pendency of the Zettlemoyer complaint. In a letter sent on April 25, 1979, the school committee denied the union’s request, stating that it would not grant retroactive benefits under the Brockton decision, unless the teacher claiming benefits had filed a complaint with the commission on the denial of her request. The union proceeded to file the present class action complaint.
The school committee recognizes that teachers in the same position as Zettlemoyer have suffered discrimination, a conclusion established by the Brockton decision. The school committee, however, makes a variety of arguments, which we next discuss, on why the commission’s decision nevertheless should be set aside.
1. Statute of limitations. General Laws c. 151B, § 5 (1994 ed.), requires that a charge of discrimination be filed with the commission within six months of the occurrence of the discriminatory act. The school committee asserts that the discriminatory acts against the class members occurred between 1973 and 1978, when the teachers initially were denied accrued sick leave for pregnancy-related disabilities. The school committee concludes that, since the complaint was not filed within six months of these initial denials, it is barred by § 5.
The commission upheld the hearing commissioner’s findings that the denial notifications received by the teachers between 1973 and 1978 were conditional denials, with the final decision on benefits reserved until after the conclusion of the Brockton decision; that the school committee did not make a final, unconditional decision to deny benefits until it sent its
The commission accepts facts found by the hearing commissioner if they are supported by substantial evidence, 804 Code Mass. Regs. § 1.16(8) (1986), and a reviewing court gives similar acceptance to the commission’s determinations. Lynn Teachers Union, Local 1037 v. Massachusetts Comm’n Against Discrimination,
There was substantial evidence before the hearing commissioner that the school committee’s initial letters denying the teachers’ requests to use accrued sick leave were tentative and conditional in nature and, reasonably interpreted, that the letters expressed an intent not to make a final determination on benefits until the Brockton decision had been decided. For example, many of the letters sent by the school committee to teachers before October, 1975, and all the letters sent afterwards, expressly made reference to a test case on using accrued sick leave for pregnancy-related disability, and suggested that a final decision as to eligibility for benefits would rest on the outcome of that case. The recommendations of the superintendent to the school committee followed a similar Une.
Based on this and other evidence, the commission properly accepted the hearing commissioner’s findings that the statute of limitations began to run on April 25, 1979, when the school committee communicated its final, unconditional decision to deny the requested benefits. See Wheatley v. American Tel & Tel Co.,
2. Laches. The school committee argues that delay in the
This case was pending before the commission for over eleven years before a final decision was reached. The delay is regrettable, but we see no basis for assigning any blame for the delay to the union or the teachers seeking benefits. Rather, the delay appears to be attributable, in part, to the school committee’s choosing to litigate every important facet of the case. The school committee, of course, had a right to do so, but delay caused by the school committee’s intense litigation tactics should not be held against the union and the teachers. The backlog of cases pending at the commission, and the commission’s lack of resources, also appear to have contributed to the delay. That situation, while unfortunate, also cannot bar the union’s and the teachers’ claims.
3. Remaining issues, (a) The investigating commissioner denied the school committee’s motion to join the union as a party-respondent because the commission has no rule allowing for third-party practice. The school committee argues that the commission’s lack of a formal third-party practice rule deprived it of due process by preventing it from bringing a claim for contribution against the union.
Without expressly addressing the issue of a third-party practice rule, the hearing commissioner concluded that the school committee had no right to seek contribution from the union because there was “no showing that the union participated in the discriminatory acts.” The hearing commissioner’s findings of fact on which this conclusion is based are supported by substantial evidence which demonstrates that the union had consistently acted on behalf of, and in favor of, the teachers.
(b) The school committee argues that the union was not a proper class representative of the teachers, that class certification therefore should have been withdrawn, and, once withdrawn, that the school committee’s motion to dismiss the complaint should have been allowed.
There is substantial evidence to support the hearing commissioner’s findings (which led her to confirm the union as a class representative for any prospective relief) that (1) there was no conflict in the union representing the class vis-a-vis the rest of its membership; (2) the union can, and has, satisfactorily represented the interests of the class; and (3) the union is an ideal representative of the class for any award of prospective relief.
There is no indication (beyond the school committee’s speculation) that a conflict existed between the affected teachers and the union membership at large. See Social Servs. Union, Local 535 v. County of Santa Clara,
The hearing commissioner appropriately found that the same findings of fact, which supported her affirmation of the dismissal of the motion to join the union as a party-respondent, supported a finding that the union was a proper
(c) The hearing commissioner assessed damages for a majority of the individual teachers predominantly by relying on letters from the physicians who cared for the women during their pregnancies, which indicated the period of disability attributable to each pregnancy. The letters were hearsay which the school committee maintained should not have been admitted or given probative weight by the hearing commissioner. The argument lacks merit: The letters provided substantial evidence upon which , the hearing commissioner could determine length of disability to be used for assessing and awarding damages.
In administrative proceedings, hearsay evidence can be received and may constitute substantial evidence if it contains sufficient indicia of reliability and probative value. Embers of Salisbury, Inc. v. Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm’n,
The physicians’ letters contained sufficient indicia of reliability and probative value to constitute substantial evidence. The hearing commissioner reasonably could have found that the letters were reliable and probative because: (1) each was prepared by a physician who had treated the teacher in question personally, see Richardson v. Perales,
Finally, it is not a problem that the letters were written in contemplation of litigation. The hearing commissioner did not find any basis to believe the physicians would lie in the letters and, as has been stated, the school committee had the opportunity to examine the physicians and test their credibility.
(d) While the case was pending before the full commission, G. L. c. 151B, § 5, was amended by St. 1989, c. 722, § 27, to allow a complainant who prevails before the commission to be awarded attorney’s fees. Contrary to the school committee’s argument, the commission correctly gave retroactive effect to the attorney’s fees amendment. In Fontaine v. Ebtec Corp.,
The decision of the commission is affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
The complaint at issue first had been presented to an investigating commissioner.
At all relevant times, the union was the exclusive collective bargaining representative for all teachers and other nonexempt professional employees in the Brockton public schools.
The class did not include four teachers who had filed individual complaints of discrimination, or grievances, concerning the disposition of their requests.
Some teachers made the request for two separate pregnancies.
For example, minutes from the school committee meeting held in September, 1974, stated that the superintendent recommended that “no award for sick leave payments should be made in view of the fact that there are test cases before the courts, but [a teacher requesting leave] would not be prohibited from seeking it should there be a clarification of maternity sick leave benefits by the courts in the future. ... [A teacher’s request for sick leave benefits should] be denied without prejudice.”
During the pendency of the Zettlemoyer complaint, the union and the school committee negotiated collective bargaining agreements. The collective bargaining agreement in effect during this period stated: “[M]atemity leave of up to three (3) years will be granted without pay or increment.” The union did not propose changing this provision to allow teachers to use their sick leave benefits for pregnancy-related disability until 1979, even though the Massachusetts Teachers Association had advised its local affiliates to do so as early as 1975.
The principle expressed in Federal case law that “[t]he proper focus [for determining when a statute of limitations period commences] is upon the time of the discriminatory acts, not upon the time at which the consequences of the acts became most painful,” Delaware State College v. Ricks,
Our conclusion that the hearing commissioner properly decided that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until April 25, 1979, renders it unnecessary to consider the hearing commissioner’s other ground for concluding that the complaint had been filed in a timely manner, namely, that the school committee’s conduct served to toll the running of the statute of limitations until April 25, 1979.
The Federal case law cited by the school committee does not support its argument that we should apply the doctrine of loches based on delay caused by the commission. The cases the school committee refers to concern the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which is empowered to commence its own actions against employers in Federal court. While Federal courts have applied the doctrine of loches to the EEOC where the EEOC delayed inordinately in filing an action against an employer, see, e.g., EEOC v. Dresser Indus., Inc.,
The school committee also asserts that the commission’s lack of a formal third-party practice rule encourages collusive suits between a union and aggrieved members to hold an employer totally liable for discrimination, without consideration of union culpability.
There was evidence that the union consistently lobbied the school committee to permit the use of sick time during maternity leaves, counselled its membership on how to assert and protect their rights with respect to the use of sick time, and interceded with the school committee on behalf of the teachers seeking benefits. Even though the union did not enter into collective bargaining to end the discriminatory practice at issue until 1979, this does not mean it participated in the discrimination. While the collective bargaining agreement allowed the school committee to deny the use of sick days during maternity leave, no provision of the agreement actually compelled denial. No class member has alleged that the union participated with the school committee in its discriminatory acts. Furthermore, procedural mechanisms exist which protect against collusion. The commission may amend a complaint, sua sponte, to add a union as a party-respondent where
The commission accepted the hearing commissioner’s finding that the union was a proper class representative for any prospective relief. It also accepted the hearing commissioner’s finding that the union lacked standing to seek lost wages on behalf of the class, and her order, therefore, that the class appoint one or more new class representatives with standing to assert the claim for lost wages, as well as for prospective relief. As to the latter issue, the school committee, without citing any authority, argues the commissioner was not empowered to have the class select new class representatives to seek damages, since the class already had been certified, and instead should have dismissed the class action. This is not correct. Cf. Social Servs. Union, Local 535 v. County of Santa Clara,
Moreover, the hearing commissioner properly found that the union’s involvement in the negotiation of the provision in the collective bargaining agreement which called for unpaid maternity leave did not create a conflict of -interest. See, e.g., Social Servs. Union, Local 535 v. County of Santa Clara, supra at 947-948 (evidence showing union consistently acted in the best interests of its members precluded any inference that allegedly discriminatory terms of employment in a collective bargaining agreement demonstrated union could not fairly and adequately protect the interests of the class). As discussed above, there is substantial evidence that the union consistently acted in the best interests of its members.
In its brief, the school committee does not appear to contest the hearing commissioner’s award of two weeks of disability pay to the teachers without physicians’ letters, based on the hearing commissioner taking administrative notice of the fact that women are disabled invariably for some period of time after giving birth.
