Atchison & Keller, Inc. v. District Unemployment Compensation Board, Melvin C. Keller

435 F.2d 411, 140 U.S. App. D.C. 339, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8283
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 8, 1970
Docket23356_1
StatusPublished

This text of 435 F.2d 411 (Atchison & Keller, Inc. v. District Unemployment Compensation Board, Melvin C. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atchison & Keller, Inc. v. District Unemployment Compensation Board, Melvin C. Keller, 435 F.2d 411, 140 U.S. App. D.C. 339, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8283 (D.C. Cir. 1970).

Opinion

LEVENTHAL, Circuit Judge:

The issue before us is whether appellant-employer is barred, for lack of timely application, from obtaining an administrative review of the initial determination of the District Unemployment Compensation Board that one of appellant’s former employees is entitled to receive benefits.

The Board determined, after a hearing before its Appeals Examiner that the employer’s application for review was untimely. The employer’s action for review in the District Court under D. C.Code § 46-312 was dismissed on motion of the Board and this appeal followed. We reverse. The notices on which the Board relies as notification of its initial determination of eligibility are inadequate as a matter of law; consequently they were ineffective to start the running of the ten day period within which an application for review must be filed.

Appellant-employer is a corporation in the plumbing business. Appellee Keller was a vice-president and a minority stockholder. On September 6, 1968, Keller sold his interest in the corpora *413 tion to the other principals pursuant to a buy-sell agreement executed some weeks earlier and resigned his position as vice-president. On September 18, 1968 Keller submitted his application for unemployment benefits. It appears that he indicated that he had been bought out by his partners. Appellant-employer was furnished a Separation Information Form which as filled out by its secretary-treasurer on September 20, 1968 and returned to the Board, stated that Keller “could not get along with other partners, Given a chance to buy us out. He couldn’t, therefore, we bought him out.”

The Appeals Examiner found, and we will assume, 1 that on October 1, 1968 an agent of the Board mailed to appellant a “Notice to Base Period Employer,” and on October 2, 1968, the claim examiner sent appellant a “Notice to Last Employer.” On October 2 the claims examiner made the following entry in Keller’s file:

Findings of Fact: Claimant was involuntarily separated from his last job. He couldn’t buy out and was bought out.
Decision: No misconduct alleged. No disqualification imposed. Held eligible as of [illegible].

On November 7, 1968, appellant received a notice, as base period employer, of a payment made to Keller. On November 20, 1968, appellant wrote to the Board challenging Keller’s claim on the ground, inter alia, that Keller was not unemployed within the meaning of the Act.

On December 18, 1968, a hearing was held on the employer’s appeal. The Examiner concluded that the employer’s November 20 notice of appeal was untimely. He therefore found it unnecessary to consider the merit of the employer’s contentions that Keller was ineligible for unemployment compensation benefits.

1. Requirements for Giving Notice of Initial Determination of Eligibility and Timely Appeal Therefrom

The procedures for the determination of claims are specified in D.C.Code § 46-311. The Act requires that after a claim has been filed, an initial determination of eligibility shall be made together with an initial determination of the amount, duration and commencement date of benefit payments. The Act specifies that “The claimant and other parties to the proceedings shall be notified promptly of the initial determination or any amended determination and the reasons therefore.” With respect to review of initial determinations, the Act creates appeals tribunals and provides that, “The claimant or any party to the determination may file an appeal from such initial determination or from a reconsideration of such determination within ten days after notification thereof, or after the date such notification was mailed to his last known address.”

2. Issue of Delay Following Sending of Notice to Base Period Employer

The Board argues that the November 20 appeal came more than 10 days after the October 1 Notice to Base Period Employer.

This notice informed appellant that Keller had filed a claim, and it specified the “monetary determination of this claim” payable “provided claimant meets all requirements.”

In District Unemployment Compensation Board v. William Hahn & Co., 130 U.S.App.D.C. 254, 399 F.2d 987 (1968), we resolved a number of the points on which the instant appeal turns. We noted that “The statute makes clear that the ten-day notice period does not begin to run until the interested parties have been notified that the claimant is eligible for payments.” It was the Board’s contention in Hahn that its Notice to *414 Base Period Employer then in use was an adequate notice of eligibility. We rejected this contention and held that a notice of appeal was timely though filed more than ten days after the Notice to Base Period Employer had been mailed.

The Notice to Base Period Employer on which the Board seeks to rely in the instant case is a form notice identical to the one rejected in Hahn with the blanks filled in with the information pertinent to Keller’s application. Because the language of the notice is unaltered, it remains defective in that it is merely a notice of monetary determination and not a notice of initial determination of eligibility. Indeed, as in Hahn, the Base Period Employer’s Notice was mailed before the initial determination of eligibility had been made.

In Hahn we made it abundantly clear that it is the base period employer who is particularly entitled to notice of the initial determination since it is he who must make contributions to the unemployment fund proportionate to the withdrawals of his former employees. D.C.Code § 46-303(c) (2).

We see no basis for concluding that the Notice to Base Period Employer held inadequate in Hahn should be sustained here as triggering the 10-day appeal period. Our decision in Hahn was issued more than two months prior to the Board’s mailing of the Notices on which it relies in the instant appeal. We understand that after the instant notice was mailed, the Board abandoned the objectionable form and substituted a “Notice of Initial Determination to Base Period Employer” which affirmatively states that “Benefits are payable in the amount shown above. * * * ” 2 But this can not serve to justify either the mailing of the form before the initial determination of eligibility had been made or the failure to mark the old form with some appropriate overprint pending the preparation and printing of the revised notice forms.

Notice to Last Employer

This case differs from Hahn in that appellant is both the base period employer and the last employer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
435 F.2d 411, 140 U.S. App. D.C. 339, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atchison-keller-inc-v-district-unemployment-compensation-board-melvin-cadc-1970.