Hubcz v. Waterbury, No. 305-5-14 Wncv (Teachout, J., January 20, 2015)
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STATE OF VERMONT
SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION
Washington Unit Docket No. 305-5-14 Wncv
ADAM HUBACZ,
Plaintiff
v.
THE VILLAGE OF WATERBURY and
WILLIAM SHEPELUK,
Defendants
RULINGS ON MOTIONS
Defendants’ June 30, 2014 Motion to Dismiss
Plaintiff’s July 4, 2014 Motion for a Preliminary Injunction
Plaintiff’s July 21, 2014 Motion to Amend First Amended Complaint
Plaintiff’s January 16, 2015 Emergency Motion for Court Hearing Before January 28, 2015
Plaintiff formerly served as a Waterbury police officer. The Village Trustees terminated
his employment at a hearing in January of 2012, and he sought review in the Federal Court for
the District of Vermont. The case resulted in a Decision of April 15, 2014 in which the Court
granted his petition for Rule 75 Review of Governmental Action, and remanded the case to the
Village Trustees for further proceedings based on its determination that the Trustees did not have
sufficient facts to satisfy the standard in the statute under which the termination proceedings
were pursued.
The Trustees scheduled a remand hearing, which has not yet occurred. It has been
rescheduled pending action in this instant case, which was filed in May of 2014 and has been
removed to Federal Court and remanded to this Court in an Opinion and Order of Judge Sessions
of August 14, 2014 in which the history of the litigation is set forth. At the time of remand, there
were three pending substantive motions: Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, Plaintiff’s Motion for
a Preliminary Injunction, and Plaintiff’s Motion to Amend the First Amended Complaint. All
memos on those pending motions (and others filed in the meantime) were filed as of December
15, 2014.
On January 16, 2015, Plaintiff filed an Emergency Motion requesting that the Court
schedule a hearing on its Motion for a Preliminary Injunction before January 28, 2015 due to the
fact that the Trustees have recently scheduled a remand hearing for that date.
By separate entry orders issued this date, this Court has ruled on a number of procedural
motions that are shown as pending on the docket. Some were addressed by the Federal Court
during the period it had jurisdiction over the case and/or are now moot. Others are ruled on in
the entry orders. There is a pending Motion for Rule 11 Sanctions which will be scheduled for
hearing.
In this Decision, the Court addresses the most fundamental motion, which is Defendants’
Motion to Dismiss. The ruling on that motion determines disposition of the other three pending
motions: the Motion for a Preliminary Injunction, the Emergency Motion to hold a hearing on
the Motion for a Preliminary Injunction, and the Motion to Amend the First Amended
Complaint.
In this case Plaintiff seeks judgment against the Trustees for wages from January 27,
2012 forward, damages for benefits for the same period, damages and other relief for illegal
retaliation, a declaration and order of reinstatement, and an injunction against proceeding with
alleged illegal termination proceedings.1
Motions to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) are not favored and should only be
dismissed when it is beyond doubt that there are no facts or circumstances that would entitle a
plaintiff to relief. In re Girouard, 2014 VT 75.
That standard is met in this case. Judge Sessions specifically remanded the case to the
Trustees for further proceedings to take place following his April 15, 2014 Rule 75 Review
ruling specifying the deficiencies in the termination proceeding conducted by the Trustees. The
Federal Court was aware of its opportunity to affirm, reverse, or modify the Trustees’ decision,
and specifically chose the alternative of remanding to the Trustees “for further proceedings.”
The Court specified that “[a]ny questions with respect to compensation may be presented to the
Village Trustees for their consideration. The Court offers no opinion with respect to Hubacz’s
legal entitlement to back pay, damages, or attorneys’ fees.” The ruling was not appealed and
became the law of the case.
The record suggests that the parties disagree about the effect of the ruling on whether or
not Mr. Hubacz’s status since January of 2012 has been as terminated or not terminated. That
was the exact subject matter of the proceeding that has been remanded to the Trustees for further
proceedings. In his August 14, 2014 Order remanding the case to this Court, Judge Sessions
specified that: “The Court did not intend for its ruling to be used as a basis for Hubacz to claim a
right to immediate reinstatement as an active duty police officer. . .”
It would be premature for this Court to address either Mr. Hubacz’s termination status or
any other issue that depends on that determination before the remand is complete. Plaintiff has
not exhausted remedies through the pending administrative proceedings, and therefore this case
must be dismissed.
As a consequence, the other pending motions must also be dismissed.
1
In Plaintiff’s proposed Second Amended Complaint, he proposes to add two new counts requesting orders
prohibiting the Trustees from the use of certain materials.
2
ORDER
For the foregoing reasons,
Defendants’ June 30, 2014 Motion to Dismiss (Motion #2) is granted;
Plaintiff’s July 4, 2014 Motion for a Preliminary Injunction (Motion #6) is denied;
Plaintiff’s July 21, 2014 Motion to Amend First Amended Complaint (Motion #3) is denied;
Plaintiff’s January 16, 2015 Emergency Motion for Court Hearing Before January 28, 2015
(Motion #10) is denied; and
The case is not yet dismissed due to the pending Motion for Rule 11 Sanctions, which will be
scheduled for hearing.
Dated at Montpelier, Vermont, this 19th day of January, 2015.
________________________
Hon. Mary Miles Teachout
Superior Court Judge
3