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* Privacy Policy
Hearings and Conferences
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Pre-Hearing Conference.
The Presiding Officer may initiate or upon the application of any Party, may
call upon the Parties to appear for a conference to consider;
1. the simplification or clarification of the issues;
2. the possibility of obtaining stipulations,
admissions, agreements on matters already of record, or similar agreements
which will reduce or eliminate the need of proof;
3. the limitation of the number of expert witnesses,
or avoidance of cumulative evidence, if the case is to be heard;
4. the possibility of an agreement disposing of any
or all issues in dispute; and
5. such other matters as may aid in the disposition
of the Adjudicatory Proceeding.
Those matters agreed upon by the
Parties shall be reduced to writing and signed by them, and the signed writing
shall constitute a part of the record. The scheduling of a pre-hearing
conference shall be according to Agency rule or, in the absence of rules, solely
within the discretion of the Presiding Officer.
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Stipulations. In the
discretion of the Presiding Officer, the Parties may, by written stipulation
filed with the Presiding Officer at any stage of the proceeding, or by oral
stipulation made at a hearing, agree as to the truth of any fact pertinent to
the proceeding. The Presiding Officer may require parties to propose
stipulations. In making findings, the Presiding Officer need not be bound by a
stipulation which is in contravention of law or erroneous on its face.
- Submission Without a Hearing
.
Unless otherwise prohibited in statute, any Party may elect to waive a hearing
and submit his case upon written submissions. Submission of a case without a
hearing does not relieve the Parties from the necessity of proving the facts
supporting their allegations or defenses on which a Party has the burden of
proof.
- Conduct of Hearing
.
- Decorum
. All
Parties, their Authorized Representatives, witnesses and other Persons present
at a hearing shall conduct themselves in a manner consistent with the
standards of decorum commonly observed in any court. Where such decorum is not
observed, the Presiding Officer may take appropriate action. Appropriate
action may include refusal to allow a disruptive Person to remain in the
hearing room and, if such Person is a Party, to allow participation by
representative only.
- Duties of Presiding Officer.
The Presiding Officer shall conduct the hearing, administering an oath or
affirmation to all witnesses, making all decisions on the admission or
exclusion of evidence and resolving questions of procedure. The Presiding
Officer shall file a decision or tentative decision with the Agency within a
reasonable time after the close of the hearing.
(e) Order of Proceedings.
- Opening
. In the
usual case, except as otherwise required by law, in hearings resulting from a
notice of claim of an adjudicatory proceeding, the Party filing the claim
shall open and first present evidence; in hearings resulting from orders to
show cause, the Agency issuing the order shall open and first present
evidence.
- Order of Presentation.
The Party taking the position contrary to that of the Party opening shall have
the right to present his position upon completion of the opening Party's
case.
- Closing.
The
Party opening shall argue last in summation.
- Discretion of the Presiding Officer
.
The Presiding Officer may, when the evidence is peculiarly within the
knowledge of one Party, or when there are multiple Petitioners, or when he or
she otherwise determines appropriate, direct who shall open and may otherwise
determine the order of presentation.
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Presentation of Evidence.
All Parties shall have the right to present documentary and oral evidence, to
cross-examine adverse or hostile witnesses, to interpose objections, to make
motions and oral arguments. Cross-examination is to follow the direct testimony
of a witness. Whenever appropriate, the Presiding Officer shall permit
reasonable redirect and recross-examination and allow a Party an adequate
opportunity to submit rebuttal evidence. Except as otherwise provided, evidence
of the Respondent shall be presented after the presentation of the Petitioner's
case in chief. The Respondent shall first argue in summation.
- Oath
. A
witness's testimony shall be under oath or affirmation.
- Offer of Proof
.
An offer of proof made in connection with a ruling of the Presiding Officer
rejecting or excluding proffered testimony shall consist of a statement of the
substance of the evidence which the Party contends would be adduced by the
testimony. If the excluded evidence consists of evidence in documentary or
written form, it shall be filed and marked for identification and shall
constitute the offer of proof.
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Subpoenas. The Agency or
Presiding Officer may issue, vacate or modify subpoenas, in accordance with the
provisions of G.L. c. 30A, § 12.
(h) Administrative Notice. The
Presiding Officer may take notice of fact(s), pursuant to the requirements of
G.L. c. 30A, § 11(5).
(i) Transcript of Proceedings.
- Stenographic or Recorded Records and Transcripts
.
Except where a Party elects to provide a public stenographer as provided
herein, the testimony and argument at the hearing shall be recorded either
stenographically or by Electronic Medium. The Presiding Officer shall arrange
for verbatim transcripts of the proceedings to be supplied at cost to any
Party upon request, at the Party's own expense. The Agency may elect to supply
a copy of the tape, disc or other audio-visual preserving medium employed at
the proceeding to record its events in lieu of a verbatim transcript. Any
Party, upon motion, may be allowed to provide a public stenographer to
transcribe the proceedings at the Party's own expense upon terms ordered by
the Presiding Officer. In this event, a verbatim transcript shall be supplied
to the Presiding Officer at no expense to the Agency.
- Correction of Transcript
.
Corrections of the official hearing transcript may be made only to make it
conform to the evidence presented at the hearing. Transcript corrections,
agreed to by opposing Parties, may be incorporated into the record, if and
when approved by the Presiding Officer. If opposing Parties cannot agree on
transcript corrections, any Party may report the fact to the Presiding
Officer, who may call for the submission of proposed corrections and shall
determine what corrections, if any, are to be made with reliance on his own
notes.
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Hearing Briefs. At the
close of the taking of testimony and prior to his rendering a decision, the
Presiding Officer may in his discretion call for and fix the terms of the filing
of written summaries and arguments on the evidence and/or proposed findings of
fact and conclusions of law.
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Settling the Record.
- Contents of Record
.
The record of the proceeding shall consist of the following items: notices of
all proceedings; all motions, pleadings, briefs, memoranda, petitions,
objections, requests and rulings; evidence received, including deposition
transcripts, and offers of proof with the arguments; statements of matters
officially noticed if not otherwise documented; interrogatories and the
answers; all findings, decisions and orders presented whether tentative or
final; transcripts of the hearing testimony, argument, comments or discussions
of record or the tape, disc or preserving medium; and any other item the
Presiding Officer has specifically designated be made a part of the record.
The record shall at all reasonable times be available at the offices of the
Agency or other designated location for inspection by the Parties.
- Evidence after Record Closed
.
No evidence shall be admitted after the close of the record unless the
Presiding Officer reopens the record to admit newly discovered evidence or for
other good cause.
- Exceptions
.
Formal exceptions to rulings on evidence and procedure are unnecessary. It is
sufficient that a Party, at the time that a ruling is made or sought, makes
known his objection to and grounds for any action taken. If a Party does not
have an opportunity to object to a ruling at the time it is made, or to
request a particular ruling at an appropriate time, the Party may submit a
written statement of his specific objections and grounds within three (3) days
of notification of action taken or refused. Oral or written objections to
evidentiary rulings shall be part of the record.
 
Division
of Administrative Law Appeals 133 Portland Street, 3rd floor
Boston, MA 02114
Telephone (617) 727-7060 Fax (617) 727-7248
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