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Paul C. NORDBERG vs.
MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION & others. [FN1]
No. 08-P-2113.
November 5, 2009. - January 29, 2010.
Practice, Civil, Motion to dismiss.
Massachusetts
Tort Claims Act. Governmental Immunity. Commonwealth, Education.
Education
Reform Act. Waiver.
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on August 28, 2007.
A motion to dismiss was heard by
Peter
W. Agnes, Jr., J.
Paul C. Nordberg, pro se.
Margaret J. Hurley, Assistant
Attorney General, for the defendants.
Present: Trainor, Brown, & Wolohojian, JJ.
BROWN, J.
The pro se plaintiff, Paul C. Nordberg, is certified by the Department of
Education (DOE or department) as a school business administrator. The
Education Reform Act of 1993 (the Act) provides that school districts may
hire only "certified" school business administrators. See G.L. c.
71, § 38G, as amended through St.1993, c. 495, § 26. The DOE commissioner,
however, may grant one-year waivers of the certification requirement if a
school district has established, "in the opinion of the
commissioner," that compliance would be a "great hardship."
Nordberg's detailed amended complaint, filed against the DOE, the DOE
commissioner in his individual capacity (commissioner), and the
Commonwealth,
alleged numerous specific instances in
which he applied for particular positions that later went to uncertified
applicants after a department waiver.
[FN2]
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss the amended complaint, which was
allowed. The motion judge ruled the Commonwealth and the DOE were immune
from suit, because claims asserted against both were based on a
discretionary function, and, as such, were barred by the Tort Claims Act.
See G.L. c. 258, § 10(
b ). The
judge also ruled that the commissioner, as a public employee acting within
the scope of his employment, was immune from personal liability pursuant to
G.L. c. 258, § 2. [FN3] Nordberg has appealed from the judgment dismissing
his complaint.
1.
Discretionary function exception.
On appeal, the government defendants maintain that the commissioner has
complete discretion under the Act to determine whether compliance with the
certification requirements would "constitute a great hardship."
G.L. c. 71, § 38G. [FN4] They also argue that the Act and the regulations
leave it entirely to the commissioner's discretion to determine whether a
school district has demonstrated "a good-faith effort to hire licensed
or certified personnel, and has been unable to find them." 603 Code
Mass. Regs. § 7.14(13) (2007).
Nordberg avers, however, that the waiver process is automatic. According to
his complaint, all that a school district needs to do to obtain a waiver is
to submit a request, electronically, that certifies as to
"hardship," and that all such requests are granted, again
electronically, with no evaluation or review being conducted by the
commissioner or by anyone else in the department.
The question, then, is whether such a process amounts to the exercise of
discretion. We conclude that it does not. The Legislature has determined
that the public is best served if school districts hire only school business
administrators who have satisfied the requirements to become
"certified." A school district may obtain a one-year waiver only
if, "in the
opinion of the
commissioner" (emphasis added), compliance would be a "great
hardship." G.L. c. 71, § 38G.
The defendants contend that they are entitled to discretionary immunity.
Although such immunity is broad, it is not so broad as to include
nondiscretionary functions. Here, accepting as true the allegations in
Nordberg's well-pleaded complaint [FN5] for purposes of this rule 12(b)(6)
motion, see
Nader v. Citron, 372
Mass. 96 (1977), the commissioner--contrary to the mandate of the
Legislature--divested himself of the discretion he was
statutorily
required to exercise in order to form an
opinion
as to whether to grant or deny a waiver. Discretion was neither exercised
nor abused; it was extracted entirely from the process and set aside. In
these circumstances, discretionary immunity does not apply because, at
bottom, no discretion was involved. See, e.g.,
United
States v. Gaubert, 499 U.S. 315, 325 (1991) ( "[a] discretionary
act is one that involves choice or judgment"). If, as Nordberg avers,
all waiver requests were automatically granted electronically, we fail to
see how such actions "involved the kind of policy judgment that the
discretionary function exception was designed to shield."
Id.
at 332. The discretion that ought to be involved in deciding waivers entails
"weighing alternatives and making choices with respect to public policy
and planning," as opposed to conduct that consists of "the
carrying out of previously established policies or plans."
Harry
Stoller & Co. v. Lowell, 412 Mass. 139, 142 (1992), quoting from
Whitney
v. Worcester, 373 Mass. 208, 218 (1977).
[FN6]
2.
Constitutional claims. Nordberg's
complaint also alleged due process and equal protection violations. The
motion judge did not rule on these claims. Nordberg alleged that, in some
instances, the licensing statute was circumvented in order that friends or
benefactors of the appointing authorities could be rewarded. If the Act was
systematically undermined for this purpose,
such actions
would represent an abuse of power that would "shock[ ] the
conscience," see
Rochin v. California,
342 U.S. 165, 172 (1952), and would be actionable. Compare
Coyne
v. Somerville, 972 F.2d 440 (1st Cir.1992). Cf.
Kennie
v. Natural Resource Dept. of Dennis, 451 Mass. 754, 761-762 & nn.
14 & 15 (2008). [FN7]
Conclusion. It was error to dismiss
the plaintiff's complaint under the Tort Claims Act, based on the state of
the pleadings in this action. Accepting the plaintiff's allegations as true,
as is required by rule 12(b)(6), his complaint fairly states a claim upon
which relief may be granted. [FN8], [FN9] As to the constitutional claims,
the matter must be remanded for consideration by the motion judge in the
first instance. Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and the matter is
remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
So ordered.
FN1. Commonwealth of Massachusetts and David Driscoll, in his individual
capacity.
FN2. The plaintiff's amended complaint identifies some twenty-nine
applications that he had submitted to various local and regional school
districts for a school business administrator position.
FN3. For all that appears, the department's motion was under the
provisions of Mass.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), 365 Mass. 754 (1974).
FN4. The pertinent language of § 38G provides: "[A] superintendent
may upon request be exempt by the commissioner for any one school year
from the requirement ... to employ certified personnel when compliance
therewith would in the opinion of the commissioner constitute a great
hardship in securing teachers for that school district."
FN5. The motion judge rejected one ground of the defendants' motion to
dismiss, concluding the plaintiff's amended complaint was
"sufficient" within the meaning of Mass.R.Civ.P. 8, 365 Mass.
749 (1974).
FN6. We note in passing that if an administrator could permissibly
delegate his authority to exercise discretion to a computer such a
scenario would call for, upon review, a showing that the computer was
capable of exercising the discretion with which it was vested, either
rightly or wrongly; i.e., had the capacity or ability to make
"choices," which is the essence of discretion.
See United States v. Gaubert, 499
U.S. at 325.
FN7. These allegations are also pertinent to consideration of Nordberg's
complaint against Driscoll in his individual capacity. Cf. Parker
v. Chief Justice for Admn. & Mgmt. of the Trial Ct., 67
Mass.App.Ct. 174, 180 (2006).
FN8. The defendants' claim that the DOE and commissioner had no
recognizable duty or power with respect to the internal hiring decisions
of the school districts misses the mark.
FN9. Review of this entire process gets "curiouser and curiouser"
and brings to mind Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, ch.
2, first par. (1865), in that, pursuant to the Act, the department
requires prospective applicants to pursue a challenging regimen in order
to attain certification, while it routinely waives that requirement for
persons without a certification. It is well to remember that "a good
democratic government must be protected from within, as well as watched
from without." Lovell v.
Superintendent, N. Cent. Correctional Inst., 26 Mass.App.Ct. 35, 41
(1988) (Brown, J., concurring).
END OF DOCUMENT