Carter v. BOARD OF REVIEW UNDER OK. EMP. SECURITY ACT
This text of 1958 OK 73 (Carter v. BOARD OF REVIEW UNDER OK. EMP. SECURITY ACT) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Zelma C. CARTER, Annie J. Clements, Billie F. Collie, Oliver D. Ervin, Velma F. Graham, Mildred A. Lusk, Dorothy D. Mann, Joe M. Marler, Frank Smith, and John Lee Stach, Plaintiffs in Error,
v.
The BOARD OF REVIEW UNDER OKLAHOMA EMPLOYMENT SECURITY ACT, Oklahoma Employment Security Commission and Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc., a corporation, Defendants in Error.
Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Dyer, Powers & Gotcher, James D. Bass, Tulsa, for plaintiffs in error.
Homer L. Hurt and Roy W. Riegle, Jr., Tulsa, for Douglas Aircraft Co., Inc.
Burton Duncan and Milton R. Elliott, Oklahoma City, for Oklahoma Employment Security Commission.
*363 WILLIAMS, Justice.
This case arises under the Oklahoma Employment Security Act, 40 O.S. 1951 sec. 211 et seq., and is an appeal by Zelma C. Carter and others, hereinafter referred to as claimants, from a judgment of the District Court of Tulsa County which upheld or approved a decision of the Board of Review holding that claimants were not unemployed during certain periods immediately following the termination of their employment and that consequently they were ineligible for unemployment compensation during said periods.
Claimants were all employees of Douglas Aircraft Company whose services had been terminated by Douglas between April 6 and April 27, 1956. Pursuant to the collective bargaining agreement between the Union and Douglas, each claimant, upon being discharged, was paid the full salary or wages due him and in addition received a further sum designated as "vacation pay", and some of them received a further sum designated as "sick leave pay". Immediately following their discharge, claimants all filed applications with the Oklahoma Employment Security Commission for unemployment compensation under the provisions of the Oklahoma Employment Security Act, supra. Such Commission held that claimants were not unemployed for the period immediately following their respective discharges, finding that the vacation pay and sick leave pay received by them were wages under said Act, and that such wages were paid with respect to the week or weeks immediately following the discharges; that such pay should be apportioned out to said period immediately following the discharges on a weekly basis of the regular weekly wages, computed at the hourly wage rate for 40 hours per week; that claimants could not be eligible for benefits until after exhaustion of the time for which said pay was apportioned. Under said holding a few of the claimants were disqualified from receiving unemployment compensation for one week, most of them were disqualified for two weeks and a few of them were disqualified for three weeks, depending in each case upon the amount of vacation pay and sick leave pay which they had received when discharged. All of the claimants were paid unemployment compensation after the expiration of the disqualification period if they continued to be unemployed and filed claims, and the controversy relates only to the one, two or three week period during which each claimant was held to be disqualified by virtue of having received vacation pay and sick leave pay.
40 O.S. 1951 sec. 214, as amended by Laws 1953, p. 142, sec. 3, provides in effect that an unemployed individual shall be eligible to receive benefits with respect to any week only if the commission finds that he has filed a claim therefor; that he has registered for work at the employment office; that he is able and available for work; that he has been unemployed for a waiting period of one week; and that he has earned certain wages in the past. 40 O.S. 1951 sec. 229(j) as amended by Laws 1955, p. 242, § 1, defines "unemployment" as follows:
"An individual shall be deemed `unemployed' with respect to any week during which he performed no services and with respect to which no wages are payable to him, or with respect to any week of less than full-time work if the wages are payable to him, or with respect to such week are less than his weekly benefit amount plus Seven Dollars ($7.00)."
Sub-section (l) of the same section defines the term "wages" as follows:
"`Wages' means all remuneration for services from whatever source, including commissions and bonuses and *364 the cash value of all remuneration in any medium other than cash. Gratuities customarily received by an individual in the course of his work from persons other than his employing unit shall be treated as wages received from his employing unit. The reasonable cash value of remuneration in any medium other than cash, and the reasonable amount of gratuities, shall be estimated and determined in accordance with rules prescribed by the Commission; provided that the term `wages' shall not include: * * *
"(4) Dismissal payments after December 31, 1939, which the employing unit is not legally required to make by law or contract."
Admittedly, no services were rendered by claimants for Douglas during the period immediately following the dates of their respective discharges, but claimants did receive wages, for we think it is obvious that the vacation pay and sick leave pay which they received constituted wages and were not gratuities. Such payments were required by the terms of the collective bargaining agreement negotiated between the labor union and Douglas, and therefore do not fall under exception (4) of the statute above quoted as dismissal payments which the employing unit was not legally required to make by law or contract. The question is, however, whether such wages were payable "with respect to" the period immediately following separation from employment. If said wages were not paid "with respect to" such period in question, then claimants were unemployed during such period and consequently were entitled to unemployment compensation therefor, but if such wages were paid "with respect to" such period, then claimants were not unemployed during the period in question and were not entitled to unemployment compensation therefor.
Under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement above referred to, employees of Douglas who have completed at least six months of employment with the company are entitled to a certain amount of vacation with pay, and employees who have completed at least one year of employment with the company are entitled to a certain amount of sick leave with pay. In other words, they are entitled to receive pay for certain periods of time during which they render no services. Instead of merely continuing to pay the wages of an employee who is on authorized vacation or sick leave, Douglas follows a plan prescribed by the collective bargaining agreement under which the amount of annual vacation pay and sick leave pay for all eligible employees is calculated as of the same date, to-wit, the Sunday immediately prior to May 1 of each year. This is known as the "computation date". The employees are all given their checks for vacation pay and sick leave pay at one time which must be within thirty days after the computation date, regardless of when, during the year, they may elect to take time off. This vacation pay is for a vacation period to be taken by the employee, if production requirements permit him to take time off and he elects to do so, during the twelve months following the computation date. Sick leave pay is likewise for sick leave to be taken by the employee, if needed, during the twelve months following the computation date.
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1958 OK 73, 323 P.2d 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-board-of-review-under-ok-emp-security-act-okla-1958.