Ashdown v. State of California Department of Employment

287 P.2d 176, 135 Cal. App. 2d 291, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1359
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 1955
DocketCiv. 20625
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 287 P.2d 176 (Ashdown v. State of California Department of Employment) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashdown v. State of California Department of Employment, 287 P.2d 176, 135 Cal. App. 2d 291, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1359 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), Acting P. J.

Nadene P. Ashdown, aged 8 years, by her guardian ad Utern (her mother) sought a writ of mandate in the superior court commanding the Department of Employment to grant unemployment benefits to her. She appeals from the judgment denying a peremptory writ of mandate.

On August 15, 1953, Nadene (the petitioner herein) filed a claim for unemployment benefits. On September 11 a claims interviewer representing the Department of Employment made a determination that the child was ineligible for such benefits for the period beginning August 15, on the ground that she was not available for work. Petitioner (child) appealed from that determination. At the hearing on appeal before a referee of the department, the mother of the child testified that: the child had been engaged for the past three years in entertainment work in motion pictures, television and radio; she had sung and danced in theaters; she had done modeling work; the work was obtained for her by her agent and the witness (mother); last year she had been free-lancing and obtained work from two or three agents; in 1951 she earned about $3,000; in 1952 she earned $2,089.60; in 1953, prior to filing her claim, she earned about $819.75; she earned more money in motion pictures than she earned in other kinds of entertainment; her work in pictures was “acting” and “All spoken parts”; “She had done no pictures unless there was spoken parts”; she did no “extra work”; the witness did not register the child with Central Casting Corporation (which places extra workers in motion pictures); she did not have to register the child there—Central Casting registers children “if they have done nothing else but extra work”; she would have permitted the child to do extra work “if they wanted to pay her price”; she (child) established a price at “three, fifty, and the first check was $75”; she probably would have taken $18.50, which is the standard daily price, “if there was no other work to be had, but they never *295 called her on that,” and usually “they” do not call children who have done featured parts; as to making an effort to get extra work for the child, she would have taken any work “that would have come my (her) way”; on one occasion the child did an extra part in television.

The referee affirmed the determination of the interviewer, deciding that the child was ineligible for benefits from August 15, 1953, on the ground that she was not available for work within the meaning of section 57, subdivision (e), of the Unemployment Insurance Act. The referee found that the child was not registered with Central Casting whose primary function is placing individuals in extra work in the motion picture industry; the facilities of Central Casting are available for child actors if the child is registered there; the child has always taken a part and has never worked as an extra; there is little prospect of her obtaining full time employment. The referee stated, as reasons for the decision, that under section 57, subdivision (c), the individual in order to be eligible for benefits must be able to work and available for work; that the appeals board (in certain other eases) had held that motion picture extra workers who would accept extra work only at the higher rate of pay were unavailable for work within the meaning of section 57, subdivision (e), of the act, and that where claimant excluded a segment of suitable work wherein she had prospects of securing employment she rendered herself unavailable for work; in the present ease, the claimant had confined her efforts to securing employment as an actress, and had not made any effort to secure work as an extra.

The mother, representing the child, appealed from the decision of the referee to the appeals board (of the department). The board affirmed the decision of the referee.

Thereafter the petition herein for a writ of mandamus was filed in the superior court, wherein the petitioner asked the court to direct the Department of Employment (1) to reverse the determination of the interviewer, the decision of the referee, and the decision of the appeals board; and (2) to direct the department to make a determination that the child was entitled to unemployment insurance benefits. The Director of Employment and the appeals board made a return to the petition by way of answer. Republic Productions, Inc., and Samuel Goldwyn Productions, Inc., as real parties in interest and as interveners, filed a demurrer, and filed a return by way of answer. The demurrer was overruled.

*296 The court found, in part, that the child was a “featured” child actress only in the sense that she has had only speaking parts; the entertainment field has offered the child intermittent daily employment at wages of $70 to $100 a day; the child’s employers have provided her with teacher welfare workers as prescribed by Los Angeles school regulations; petitioner (child) did not make any application to the appeals board to introduce additional evidence; the allegations of petition that the decisions of the referee and the appeals board were prejudicial abuses of discretion are not true; it is not true, as alleged in the petition, that the weight of the evidence presented by petitioner to the referee established that petitioner was available for work; the child was not registered with Central Casting Corporation; she worked as an actress in motion pictures, radio and television, and had one part in television as an extra; the mother would not have refused extra work for the child if extra work were offered to the child; the mother placed no restrictions on the amount of wages she was to receive for the child’s services; the allegation of the petition that the findings of the referee are not supported by the evidence is not true; it is not true, as alleged in the petition, that by reason of the omission in the findings of the referee “of the evidence” set forth in “this petition,” the petitioner has been denied a fair trial; no attempts were made by petitioner or on her behalf prior to August 15, 1953, to secure extra work in the motion picture industry by application for registration at Central Casting Corporation or by application at specific studios or through any other means; children are called for extra work in the motion picture industry, and such work is suitable for petitioner; during, the “period 1951 to August 15, 1953,” petitioner sought work primarily in the motion picture, radio and television industries; her employment was only for isolated single days or for a few days at a time; she was not genuinely attached to the labor market.

Under the designation of conclusions of law, the court stated that the evidence presented by petitioner at the claims interview and before the referee was not sufficient to sustain the burden of proving that petitioner was able to work, available for work, and seeking work; the determination of the claims interviewer and the decision of the referee were proper according to daw, and that determination or that decision did not constitute a prejudicial abuse of discretion; work as an extra in the motion picture industry is suitable *297

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Bluebook (online)
287 P.2d 176, 135 Cal. App. 2d 291, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashdown-v-state-of-california-department-of-employment-calctapp-1955.