Brown v. LTV Aerospace Corp.

232 N.W.2d 656, 394 Mich. 702, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 268
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1975
Docket55499, (Calendar No. 9)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 232 N.W.2d 656 (Brown v. LTV Aerospace Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. LTV Aerospace Corp., 232 N.W.2d 656, 394 Mich. 702, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 268 (Mich. 1975).

Opinion

Williams, J.

The major question in this Michigan Employment Security Act (MESA) 1 case is whether or not certain action taken by defendant employer satisfied MESA § 48 2 and disqualified *705 plaintiff employees for unemployment compensation. That action was defendant employer’s report to MESC, after laying off plaintiff employees, that it wás allocating certain amounts to a period of that layoff as vacation pay. The critical language of § 48 is "[a]ll amounts paid * * * for a vacation or a holiday * * * shall be deemed remuneration * * * for the period designated * * * ”. If the employer’s "amounts paid” were "remuneration”, then, of course, plaintiffs would not be "unemployed” and hence not qualified for unemployment compensation. The possible problem with defendant employer’s action is that the defendant employer did not communicate to the laid-off employees "the period designated” during which the "amounts paid * * * for a vacation or a holiday” were to be made. The employees may have thought they were, and acted as though they were, "unemployed” as they were not specifically told that the period was designated for allocation of "amounts paid * * * for a vacation or a holiday”.

Specifically we are asked to resolve the following questions:

1. May an employer designate a period for allocation of vacation pay to a period of layoff?

*706 2. Did the defendant employer have the authority to designate a period for the allocation of 1969 accrued, unused vacation time?

3. Did the defendant properly designate the period for allocation of the 1969 accrued, unused vacation time?

4. Did the pro-rata vacation allowances received by the employees at the time of layoff constitute "termination, separation, severance or dismissal allowances, and bonuses” within the meaning of the proviso to §48 and consequently, cannot be considered disqualifying remuneration?

5. May claimant Boyer join in an action filed in a circuit court located in a county in which he does not reside?

We answer questions 1 and 2 affirmatively and questions 4 and 5 negatively. We reserve judgment on whether the defendant has designated a period for allocation of the claimants’ pay related to their 1969 accrued but unused vacation time and invite the parties to submit briefs on this issue. Set out in § IV of this opinion are some of the questions which the parties may wish to address themselves.

I —Facts

The basic facts are not in dispute. Plaintiffs were employees of LTV Aerospace Corporation (LTV), one of the defendants in this action. 3 Each plaintiff was laid off from work for periods ranging from four to ten weeks during the latter part of 1969 and early 1970. 4 Upon being laid off the *707 plaintiffs registered with the MESC and otherwise qualified for unemployment compensation benefits. However, LTV claimed that plaintiffs were not "unemployed” within the meaning of § 48 for specified segments of the layoffs which LTV allegedly designated for allocation of certain vacation pay and other allowances. The allocations originated from two sources: (1) under Article XV, § 7(a) of the LTV-UAW agreement the plaintiffs were entitled to 80 hours vacation in 1969, and although actual payment was made on the employees’ anniversary-of-employment date, payment for the unused portions of the authorized vacation time was applied to a portion of the layoff; and (2) under § 7(b) of the LTV-UAW agreement, employees in the event of a layoff were to receive accelerated payment of a pro-rata share of the vacation allowance between the last anniversary date and the date of layoff, and this pro-rata amount was paid to the plaintiffs at the time they were laid off. From the record it is unclear when the plaintiffs first learned that their employer intended to designate a portion of the layoff for allocation of pay for the 1969 unused vacation time but it appears that such notice was not received until after the periods designated had commenced or had passed. The MESC held that plaintiffs had received disqualifying vacation pay as alleged by LTV and denied benefits for the periods in question. The referee except for one minor modification 5 affirmed the commission’s determination on April 10, 1970. The referee’s decision was affirmed on October 16, 1970 by the appeal board. Plaintiffs then appealed to *708 the Macomb Circuit Court which on December 2, 1971 dismissed the appeal of Boyer, who was a resident of Oakland County, for lack of jurisdiction and affirmed the appeal board decision as to the remaining plaintiffs. The Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit court (50 Mich App 237; 213 NW2d 254 [1973]) and we granted leave on April 16, 1974. 391 Mich 813.

II —Employer May Designate Period During Layoff for Allocation of Vacation Pay

That the employer may lawfully designate a period during a layoff for the allocation of vacation pay has been settled in this state. See Malone v Employment Security Commission, 352 Mich 472; 90 NW2d 468 (1958). See also Employment Security Commission v Vulcan Forging Co, 375 Mich 374; 134 NW2d 749 (1965). The employer in Malone designated a two-week period during a layoff and paid the employees various amounts of vacation pay in accordance with the union contract. This Court endorsed as correct the circuit court’s holding that such payments constituted remuneration under § 48. 6 It is apparent that this was the very purpose of this part of § 48; i.e., to permit the employer to protect his employment experience rating account by substituting vacation pay for unemployment compensation payment.

Ill —LTV Has Authority to "Designate”

Having determined that an employer may desig *709 nate a period during a layoff for the allocation of vacation pay, we must next determine whether LTV has the authority to make a designation of the period for allocation of such vacation pay. At this point it is necessary to recall that defendant made allocations from two sources — the unused earned and vested 1969 vacation time and the accelerated payment of "pro-rata vacation allowance at the time of termination”. Here we are concerned only with the former; the pro-rata allowances will be discussed in § V of this opinion.

Section 48 provides that the period to which disqualifying payments are to be allocated may be:

"designated by the contract or agreement providing for the payment, or if there is no contractual specification of the period to which such payments shall be allocated, then for the period designated by the employing unit or former employing unit.”

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Bluebook (online)
232 N.W.2d 656, 394 Mich. 702, 1975 Mich. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-ltv-aerospace-corp-mich-1975.