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18-P-224                                              Appeals Court

 BARRY BLOOMSTEIN     vs.   DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY1 & others.2


                              No. 18-P-224.

           Suffolk.    March 12, 2019. - October 16, 2019.

                Present:    Rubin, Kinder, & Singh, JJ.


License. State Building Code. Administrative Law, Decision,
     Findings, Proceedings before agency. Moot Question.



     Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
August 19, 2016.

     Motions for judgment on the pleadings were heard by
Rosemary Connolly, J.


     1 The Department of Public Safety no longer houses the board
of building regulations and standards (board). As of 2017, the
board is within the division of professional licensure.
St. 2017, c. 6, §§ 120-123.

     2 Patricia Downey; Board of building regulations and
standards (board); Christopher Popov, individually and in his
capacity as hearing officer and designee of the board; Matt
Carlin, individually and in his capacity as commissioner of the
board; Richard Crowley, individually and in his capacity as
chair of the board; Jennifer Hoyt, individually and in her
capacity as designee of Peter Ostroskey, a member of the board;
and Felix Zemel, John Couture, Kevin Gallagher, Cheryl Lavalley,
Kerry Dietz, and Michael McDowell, individually and in their
capacity as members of the board.
                                                                    2



     James M. McLaughlin for the plaintiff.
     Elizabeth Kaplan, Assistant Attorney General, for
Department of Public Safety & others.


    RUBIN, J.   After a hearing, a hearing officer of the board

of building regulations and standards (board) suspended Barry

Bloomstein's construction supervisor license (license) for

various violations of the State building code in connection with

his supervision of the construction of a house.    These

violations included constructing the house differently from the

plans that had been approved as part of the building permit

application, and various construction errors that resulted in

the work not being performed in a workmanlike and acceptable

manner, such as inconsistent heights of stair risers in an

interior staircase.   The hearing officer suspended Bloomstein's

license for three months and ordered that he retake the

licensing examination before his license would be reinstated.

Bloomstein appealed the hearing officer's decision to the board,

which, after a nonevidentiary hearing, adopted the hearing

officer's findings and conclusions in full, except that it

increased the suspension to twelve months.    Bloomstein appealed

this decision to the Superior Court pursuant to G. L. c. 30A,

§ 14, and a judge affirmed.     For the reasons that follow, we

vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings

consistent with this opinion.
                                                                    3


    Bloomstein's primary argument is that, by increasing his

suspension, the board violated two statutory provisions that

govern agencies' adjudicatory procedures:   G. L. c. 30A, § 11

(7) (subsection 7), and G. L. c. 30A, § 11 (8) (subsection 8).

Subsection 7 provides in relevant part:

    "If a majority of the officials of the agency who are to
    render the final decision have neither heard nor read the
    evidence, such decision, if adverse to any party other than
    the agency, shall be made only after (a) a tentative or
    proposed decision is delivered or mailed to the parties
    containing a statement of reasons and including
    determination of each issue of fact or law necessary to the
    tentative or proposed decision; and (b) an opportunity is
    afforded each party adversely affected to file objections
    and to present argument, either orally or in writing as the
    agency may order, to a majority of the officials who are to
    render the final decision."

    According to Bloomstein, the board violated subsection 7

because a majority of board members did not hear or read the

evidence, and he was provided neither a tentative or proposed

decision nor, by implication, an opportunity to present

objections to one.   The record discloses, and the board

concedes, that the statutory prerequisites for the application

of subsection 7 were met:   a majority of the board did not hear

or read the evidence.   In a filing in the trial court, the board

stated, "[The board] does not dispute that a majority of its

members did not examine the full evidentiary record before

reviewing . . . Bloomstein's case," and stated in its appellate

brief, "Nor is there any dispute that a majority of [b]oard
                                                                     4


members did not examine the full evidentiary record before

discussing Bloomstein's request for review."    This concession is

supported by the transcript of the nonevidentiary hearing, at

which one member stated that she "[j]ust couldn't even imagine

reading through all these exhibits."   It is also clear from the

record that the board neither informed Bloomstein that a

majority of its members had not heard or read the evidence, nor

gave him a copy of what on its face was its "tentative or

proposed decision."   G. L. c. 30A, § 11 (7).

    The board first argues that, because Bloomstein has served

his suspension, the issue is moot.   "Ordinarily, litigation is

considered moot when the party who claimed to be aggrieved

ceases to have a personal stake in its outcome."    Blake v.

Massachusetts Parole Bd., 369 Mass. 701, 703 (1976).     However,

courts will address an issue that might otherwise be dismissed

for mootness if "[t]he issue is one of public importance,

capable of repetition, yet evading review."     Superintendent of

Worcester State Hosp. v. Hagberg, 374 Mass. 271, 274 (1978).

That standard is satisfied here, where the temporary suspension

of a license is likely to expire before the "lengthy appellate

process" can be completed.   Seney v. Morhy, 467 Mass. 58, 61

(2014).   And, contrary to the board's contention at oral

argument, an agency's compliance with statutes governing its

procedures for adjudications that can result in the destruction
                                                                       5


of a person's livelihood is of sufficient public importance to

justify judicial review.3

     On the merits, the board argues that the hearing officer's

decision, a copy of which Bloomstein received, constituted the

board's tentative or proposed decision, and that Bloomstein's

petition for appeal of the hearing officer's decision to the

board under 780 Code Mass. Regs. § 110.R5.2.10 (2010)

constituted his opportunity to object to it.   We disagree.

Subsection 7 gives a party the statutory right to object to a

tentative or proposed decision in only one circumstance:      when a

majority of the board has not heard or read the evidence.

Because a party does not always have a statutory right to file

objections, the statute requires the party to have some

opportunity to know whether he or she has such a right.     But the

issuance by the hearing officer of his or her decision and the

opportunity to appeal it cannot, by themselves, confer this

knowledge, for the board at the time the party files his or her

appeal has not yet had the opportunity to hear or read the

evidence.   Therefore, the hearing officer's decision, without

more, cannot constitute the board's tentative or proposed

decision for purposes of subsection 7.   It follows that the




     3 The board concedes that, because Bloomstein's license has
not been reinstated, the part of its decision requiring him to
retake the licensing examination is not moot.
                                                                    6


party's petition for appeal does not, in and of itself,

constitute the party's opportunity to object or to present

arguments to the board's tentative or proposed decision.4     The

board's procedures therefore violated subsection 7.

     The board argues in the alternative that, even if its

procedures violated subsection 7, Bloomstein was not prejudiced

because he made arguments for reversal in his petition for

appeal, and does not identify any arguments that he would have

made had he been given a tentative or proposed decision and an

opportunity to respond.   See Police Dep't of Boston v.

Kavaleski, 463 Mass. 680, 691 (2012) ("Pursuant to G. L. c. 30A,

§ 14 [7], we also determine whether, as a result of that error,

'the substantial rights of any party may have been

prejudiced'").   We disagree that Bloomstein has not demonstrated

prejudice.   Bloomstein's petition for appeal was cursory,

challenging only two of the hearing officer's sixty-eight

findings of fact and offering only conclusory legal statements,

including that two expert reports relied on by the hearing

officer "should not have been admitted."   The petition for


     4 The board's citation to Clark v. Board of Registration of
Social Workers, 464 Mass. 1008, 1010-1011 (2013), does not
support its position. As relevant here, that case held only
that a party has no statutory or due process right to a hearing
before the board on sanctions after the hearing officer did not
recommend any. The case did not hold that the hearing officer's
decision, without more, constitutes the tentative or proposed
decision of the board. See id.
                                                                   7


appeal does not amount to full briefing.   Indeed, in his brief

here, Bloomstein challenges other findings of fact, such as the

hearing officer's finding regarding stair riser inconsistency,

and makes arguments for why the hearing officer should not have

relied on the expert reports.   Bloomstein also argues to us that

"[s]ome of the alleged errors [in construction] were determined

to be the result of settling or wear and tear, not construction

error."   Under subsection 7, Bloomstein should have been

provided an opportunity to make such arguments to the board by

being given the board's tentative or proposed decision and an

opportunity to respond; he was prejudiced by the board's failure

to give him that opportunity.

    Bloomstein also argues that the board's decision violated

subsection 8.   Subsection 8 provides in relevant part:

    "Every agency decision shall be in writing or stated in the
    record. The decision shall be accompanied by a statement
    of reasons for the decision, including determination of
    each issue of fact or law necessary to the decision, unless
    the General Laws provide that the agency need not prepare
    such statement in the absence of a timely request to do
    so."

Bloomstein argues that the board's decision did not include the

requisite statement of reasons for its decision to increase his

suspension.   The board's decision, apart from boilerplate

language regarding the case's procedural history and an

aggrieved party's right to appeal, states in full:
                                                                   8


    "The [b]oard reviewed the [d]ecision and Bloomstein's
    'Petition for Full Board Review' and a 'Petition for
    Appeal.' At the [b]oard's meeting on July 19, 2016, the
    [b]oard voted unanimously to direct the [h]earings
    [o]fficer to increase the suspension of Bloomstein's
    [license] to a one-year period. In all other respects, the
    [d]ecision stands. Accordingly, the suspension period that
    commenced on May 10, 2016 has been increased to run through
    May 10, 2017."5

    While an agency's adoption of a hearing officer's decision

satisfies the "statement of reasons" requirement of subsection

8, Arthurs v. Board of Registration in Med., 383 Mass. 299, 315-

316 (1981), the board here did something that was not based on

reasons given by the hearing officer:     it increased Bloomstein's

suspension from three to twelve months.    It gave no reason for

this decision.   Therefore, the part of the board's decision that

increased the length of Bloomstein's suspension violated

subsection 8.

    The board argues that statements by individual board

members at the nonevidentiary hearing of reasons why the hearing

officer's penalty was too lenient are enough to satisfy

subsection 8.    Specifically, one board member referred to the

"egregious nature of . . . what happened" and concluded, "I kind

of think that a 90-day suspension was not enough."    A second

board member agreed and stated that she was "horrified as a


    5  The petition for board review was a letter by Bloomstein
to the board that merely clarified that he was appealing to the
board, not to the Superior Court. It made no factual or legal
arguments.
                                                                      9


taxpayer to see that this went into four years . . . over a

matter that should have happened in arbitration or mediation."

She also questioned "[t]he building inspector's role in this."

A third board member also agreed that what happened was

egregious.   And a fourth board member stated that he "would

actually want a greater penalty" because "I've dealt with this

kind of baloney before and . . . it victimizes the public.     It's

terrible. . . . What goes on.   And people come in and they slap

their [license] on the site and then they're never there again."

     We disagree that these statements suffice to satisfy

subsection 8.   Even assuming without deciding that these reasons

might have sufficed to support a longer suspension, the board's

decision does not say that it was adopting those members'

statements as the reason for its decision, and isolated

statements by individual members of the board are not statements

of the board itself.6

     The judgment is vacated and the case is remanded to the

Superior Court for entry of an order requiring the board to hear

Bloomstein's appeal in compliance with the procedures spelled

out in G. L. c. 30A, § 11 (7) & (8).7


     6 The board argues that the subsection 8 argument is moot
for the reasons it argues that the subsection 7 argument is
moot. We reject this argument for the reasons given above.

     7 In light of our disposition, we need not address
Bloomstein's arguments that the board's and the hearing
                                                                10


                                  So ordered.




officer's decisions were arbitrary or capricious, an abuse of
discretion, or not supported by substantial evidence.
