21 Mass. App. Ct. 106 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1985
Summary judgment entered for the defendant, the Metropolitan District Commission (MDC), because of the plaintiffs’ failure to make adequate presentment of their per
The pertinent uncontested facts insofar as the MDC is concerned
On October 15, 1984, the MDC filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion was based upon the failure of the plaintiffs to present their claim within two years of the accident to the appropriate official in accordance with G. L. c. 258, § 4. Ruling that notice had not been given to the appropriate official and that the MDC had taken no action “which lulled the plaintiffs into believing that it was waiving presentment,” the judge allowed the MDC’s motion for summary judgment. A motion to alter and amend the memorandum of decision and the judgment was later denied.
Proper presentment of a claim under G. L. c. 258, § 4, is a condition precedent to recovery under the statute. Weaver v. Commonwealth, 387 Mass. 43, 45-48 (1982). Holahan v. Medford, 394 Mass. 186 (1985). Concededly, the specific requirements of that section were not met. A public employer may be barred from raising the issue of proper presentment, however, if the circumstances are such that the public employer has not been prejudiced by a plaintiff’s failure to comply with the presentment requirement and that during the two years following the accident the plaintiff was lulled into believing that proper presentment was not going to be an issue in the case. Vasys v. Metropolitan Dist. Commn., 387 Mass. at 56-57. See also Moran v. Mashpee, 17 Mass. App. Ct. 679 (1984). Such a situation would arise, according to Vasys, supra at 56, if a plaintiff avers proper presentment in his complaint and the public employer, within the critical two-year period following the accident, files an answer which fails to deny that averment specifically and with particularity.
The particular circumstances of this case which, in our view, justify an exception to the strict construction of the presentment requirement concern the adjudication of the motion to dismiss. The stated basis for the motion filed by the MDC was that the suit was premature under G. L. c. 258. Clearly, if c. 258 applied, the suit was premature because, under § 4, suit may not be filed until the executive officer to whom a claim is presented has had six months to settle, arbitrate, compromise or deny the claim. The complaint in the instant case was filed just two months after the accident. The plaintiffs took the position with respect to the motion to dismiss that their complaint was proper, not under c. 258, but under G. L. c. 92, § 36 (liability of the MDC for defects in public ways). The judge implicitly accepted the plaintiffs’ argument when he denied the motion to dismiss. It was not until 1984, long after the expiration of the two-year period during which the plaintiffs could have cured the inadequacy of their presentment, that this court, in Rogers v. Metropolitan Dist. Commn., 18 Mass. App. Ct. 337 (1984), removed the uncertainty as to which of the two statutes was applicable during the period in question here. In that case we held that during the period subsequent to the enactment of St. 1978, c. 512, § 18, and prior to the enactment of St. 1983, c. 392, it was G. L. c. 258, and not G. L. c. 92, § 36, which governed claims against the MDC
That the MDC had received some timely notification of the claim and conducted an investigation of the accident is deemed admitted. Mass.R.Civ.P. 36(a), 365 Mass. 795 (1974). The defective presentment, therefore, caused no actual prejudice.
Accordingly, the summary judgment is vacated and the case shall stand for trial.
Judgment reversed.
The complaint also alleged negligence on the part of the city of Everett. Summary judgment also entered in favor of Everett, but that aspect of the case is not a subject of the appeal.