Babb v. Bullitt

220 S.W.2d 394, 310 Ky. 211, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 879
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 6, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 220 S.W.2d 394 (Babb v. Bullitt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Babb v. Bullitt, 220 S.W.2d 394, 310 Ky. 211, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 879 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Latimer

Affirming.

Tbe question is whether or not, under the provisions of the Unemployment Compensation Act, KBS 341.010 et seq., a claimant may be separated from or may voluntarily leave employment, without good cause, accept employment elsewhere, and force payment out of the reserve account of the previous employer without giving to that previous employer the right to protest such payment.

Claimant was employed by appellees from May 26, 1944, to February 2, 1945. She left that employment which appellees claim to have been voluntarily and without good cause. She secured other employment immed:ately thereafter and worked until November 2, 1945. Her last employer, in making reduction of force, discharged her. She immediately registered for work with *212 the Employment Service and filed a claim for benefits on November 5, 1945. Notice of her claim for benefits was sent to appellees as well as to her most recent employer. Her most recent employer made no protest but appellees, previous employers, filed a protest. Benefits were awarded on the ground that the claimant was separated from her last employment through no fault bf ;her own and that the alleged voluntary leaving of her previous employment with the appellees furnished no basis for disqualification, since KRS 341.370 imposes á disqualification for a voluntary leaving of work only 'with respect to claimant’s “most recent suitable work.” In accordance with this view and the provisions of the statute for proportionate charging, the Employment Compensation Commission charged to the reserve account of appellees 59% of the claimant’s benefits and 41% to that of the employer who had separated her.

Appeal was then made from this determination and was heard by Referee, who found that the claimant was separated from her most recent work through no fault of her own and was not subject to any disqualification and- that “none of the evidence concerning the claimant’s separation from the employ of the appellees is material,” since the statutes provide only for disqualification for voluntary leaving the claimant’s “most recent suitable work.”

Appellees then appealed this decision of the Referee to the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Commission, which affirmed the Referee’s finding.

Appellees then appealed to the Jefferson Circuit Court, contending that the phrase “most recent” in the disqualification provisions should be deleted from the statute by judicial condemnation. The Commission demurred, and the court held the Kentucky statute unconstitutional insofar as it uses the phrase “most recent” in relation to the word work, so as to permit only an employee’s most recent employer to protest a claim for benefits or to invoke penalties or disqualifications against an employee, and as applied to one who is not the most recent employer when a part of the benefits payable would be charged to the reserve account of such previous employer.

*213 From that decision the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Commission prosecutes this appeal.

In explaining its order below, the court stated:

“However, Kentucky is one of some four or five states which in sections similar to that mentioned above in effect prevents any employer, even though benefits may be charged against him by reason of a claim, from protesting the payment of such a claim out of his reserve-account and affords no opportunity for any notice or hearing with respect to such a claim, except to the most recent employer, and in connection with an employee’s most recent work.
“This Act, read and construed literally, permits an employee who has voluntarily quit his job or who has been discharged for theft or other misconduct, by the simple expedient of taking another job for a week, or two, to force the employer whose job he quit, or by whom he was fired, to pay the full benefits of the Act to-the employee, — to pay, that is, by having the employer’s; reserve account charged with the amount of such benefits.
“In such an instance, the taking of the employer’s money has no reasonable or any relationship to- the public weal or to the general welfare, and is in fact and effect the taking of money of one private individual by the legislature under the guise of a tax and transferring it to another without compensation. Such legislation to such extent is unconstitutional and invalid.”

Appellants insist that the court erred in its statement of the effect of the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Act. It is insisted that the Kentucky Unemployment Compensation Law as enacted is reasonable and valid in conditioning benefits upon the proximate cause of the claimant’s unemployment rather than upon the circumstances of a previous change of employment, and that the effect of the provisions is clearly not to compensate for voluntary unemployment but to test the voluntary of involunary character of the unemployment by the proximate cause thereof rather than by some remote and conjectural cause.

It is contended that, insofar as this record shows the claimant had no more reason to expect unemploy *214 ment to result from her most recent employer than from the previous one; that she changed her work in good faith; and that the proximate cause of her unemployment was not her change of employers. She was within Iher rights after being separated from her employment io file claim for benefits with the Commission. Notice was given to appellees as well as her most recent employer. As stated above, appellees protested.

Appellants in brief insist further that appellees not only had notice but that they were permitted to appeal to the Referee and given a hearing; that they were given another hearing by the Commission, and thereby had full and repeated opportunity to show any basis for disqualification under the provisions of the Act. However, we cannot overlook the Referee’s decision, which was affirmed by the Commission, wherein it was held: “An adjusted determination was issued on December 5, 1945, holding that the appellant’s protest could not be considered as a basis for imposing a disqualification .As they were not the claimant’s most recent employer.”

In the order upholding the Referee the Unemployment Compensation Commission used these words: “Under the provisions of the Kentucky Unemployment Insurance Law penalties cannot be imposed for quitting a job other than the most recent employment.”

KRS 341.370, as of the time this action was instituted, provides:

“(1) A worker shall be required to serve an additional waiting period of not less than one nor more Than sixteen weeks of unemployment and the maximum -amount of benefits payable to him shall be reduced by not less than one nor more than sixteen times the benefit rate if, according to the circumstances of each case, the commission finds that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 S.W.2d 394, 310 Ky. 211, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/babb-v-bullitt-kyctapphigh-1949.