Ainoa v. Unemployment Compensation Appeals Division

614 P.2d 380, 62 Haw. 286, 1980 Haw. LEXIS 173
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1980
DocketNO. 6478
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 614 P.2d 380 (Ainoa v. Unemployment Compensation Appeals Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ainoa v. Unemployment Compensation Appeals Division, 614 P.2d 380, 62 Haw. 286, 1980 Haw. LEXIS 173 (haw 1980).

Opinion

*287 OPINION OF THE COURT BY LUM,

CIRCUIT JUDGE

This is a consolidated appeal 1 from the circuit court upholding the decisions of referees for Unemployment Compensation Appeals (hereinafter “referees”) of the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations (hereinafter “Department”) in denying unemployment insurance benefits under chapter 383, Hawaii Employment Security Law, to appellants, David P. Ainoa, Ronald. G. Nolan and Garret J. Dressier.

Appellants are. claimants 2 who individually applied for unemployment insurance benefits during 1975 with the Department. Upon application, they were given informal interviews with the Department’s claims examiners; 3 they were declared to be ineligible for the claimed benefits as each was determined to be not “available. for work” under Hawaii Revised Statutes (hereinafter “HRS”) § 383-29(a)(3) 4 and, accordingly, their claims were denied by the claims examiners.

*288 Each decision was upheld on appeal by the referees following de novo hearings. 5 Appellants then appealed to the circuit court for judicial review, 6 and the circuit court affirmed the findings of the referees.

The pertinent facts and circumstances for disposition of this appeal are undisputed.

Appellants’ claims before the referees presented an identical issue. Based upon the varying circumstances peculiar to each claim, the referees were required to determine the crucial question of whether appellants were “available for work” as required under § 383-29(a)(3). Following appellants’ de novo hearings, this issue was resolved against all appellants.

In all instances, the resolution of the crucial issue by the referees 7 was accomplished by the referees’ reliance on the following statements for their interpretation of the statutory language “available for work”:

Available means that an individual is ready, willing, and able to accept suitable work in a labor market where there is an adequate demand for his services and without undue restrictions on acceptable work either self-imposed or created by force of circumstances.
To be ready for work you must show that you are immediately referable and can accept suitable work without delay.
Willing to work is a state of mind which can be inferred or determined from your statements, attitude, and behavior. It is usually demonstrated by a reasonable search for work.
Able to work is the physical and mental ability to do some work for which you are reasonably fitted in a potential labor market or employment field.

These statements were prepared, printed and furnished to all referees by the Department. The record is not clear *289 when the statements first became available to the Department’s referees. However, in our case, it is undeniable that during appellants’ hearings, the referees had access to the statements, which were kept in their notebooks, and relied on them to make their decisions; the referees’ decisions in fact recited verbatim the language of the statements. Appellants were never furnished copies of these statements before their hearings.

Appellants in their briefs denominate these statements as “statewide policies”; the Department, in contrast, calls them “descriptive words and phrases.”

Appellants argue that these “statewide policies” are rules 8 which were adopted by the Department without complying with the rule-making provisions of HAPA; and the Department, without formally adopting 9 and publishing 10 such rules, cannot thereafter use them to determine appellants’ claims. 11 By violating the procedural safeguards as set out in HAPA, appellants were denied their due process rights.

The Department, on the other hand, argues that these “descriptive words and phrases” used by the referees to define the statutory term “available for work” are not rules within HAPA. The Department submits that the “descriptive words and phrases” are mere recitations of judicial construction of the term “available for work,” and the Department is not required by chapter 383, HRS, to promulgate definitions of statutory terms. On oral argument, the Department amplified its position on what it meant by judicial construction. It argued it was merely reiterating or parroting judicial decisions.

For reasons set out below, we reverse.

*290 I. WHETHER THE DEPARTMENT’S STATEMENTS INTERPRETING THE STATUTORY LANGUAGE “AVAILABLE FOR WORK” AS REQUIRED UNDER HRS § 383-29(aX3) ARE RULES.

There is no dispute that HAPA is binding upon the Department. See Town v. Land Use Commission, 55 Haw. 538, 524 P.2d 84 (1974), reh. denied, 55 Haw. 677 (1974), in which this court held that, in the absence of a statutory exemption, a State agency “must conform to the requirements of HAPA when acting in either a rule making capacity (quasi-legislative), or in the adjudication of a contested case (quasi-judicial).” Id. at 545, 524 P.2d at 89.

The Department emphasizes it is parroting judicial decisions and is primarily relying on Fujisaki v. Commission of Labor and Industrial Relations, Civil No. 3860 (Territory of Hawaii, 1st Cir., January 23, 1959) and Reinecke v. Commission of Labor and Industrial Relations, Special Proceedings No. 2700 (Territory of Hawaii, 1st Cir., August9,1954),for its judicial construction appearing in its statements of “descriptive words and phrases,” as both decisions had previously defined “available for work.”

In Reinecke the court stated:

Numerous attempts to define the elements constituting availability have been made by the courts of other jurisdictions. In Fleiszig v. Board of Review, Ill., 104 N.E.2d 818, the court stated:

“ . . . the phrase ‘available for work’ is designed to test his continued and current attachment to the labor force. ’ ’

In Roukey v. Ripley [sic], N.H.,

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Bluebook (online)
614 P.2d 380, 62 Haw. 286, 1980 Haw. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ainoa-v-unemployment-compensation-appeals-division-haw-1980.