Continental-United Industries Co. v. Director of the Division of Employment Security

326 Mass. 423
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 326 Mass. 423 (Continental-United Industries Co. v. Director of the Division of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental-United Industries Co. v. Director of the Division of Employment Security, 326 Mass. 423 (Mass. 1950).

Opinion

Qua, C.J.

These three cases come here upon a single statement of agreed facts in the form of a case stated and were reported without decision by a judge of the Superior Court. All three cases raise the question whether the employing enterprise with which the cases are concerned, operated by successive employing units, was entitled to a more favorable contribution rate than that with which it had been charged and at which it had paid for parts of the years 1944 and 1945, and the questions now before us are whether, in what manner, and to what extent the successive employing units or any of them can realize the benefit of the “overpayments.” The first case is a bill in equity by the fourth and latest employing unit praying for a declaratory judgment that it is entitled to the benefit of all the “overpayments” by way of having them applied against qontributions payable by it under the act. The second and [425]*425third cases are actions of contract brought under § 18 of the act as appearing in St. 1941, c. 685, § 1, by the second and third employing units to recover the “overpayments” made by each respectively.

From the facts agreed it appears that prior to May 9, 1944, Walsh Holyoke Steam Boiler Works, Inc., hereinafter called Walsh Holyoke Steam, the first employing unit, operated the enterprise and because of its previous record enjoyed a contribution rate of one half of one per cent. On that day Franklin Machine & Foundry Company, the second employing unit, hereinafter called Franklin, by acquisition of the capital stock and all the assets and employees of Walsh Holyoke Steam, succeeded to the enterprise; but the director denied to Franklin the benefit of the wage experience of Walsh Holyoke Steam and assessed Franklin as a new employing unit at the rate of two and seven tenths per cent, at which rate Franklin paid until March 31, 1945. On April 1, 1945, Franklin transferred to Walsh Holyoke Boiler Works, Inc., hereinafter called Walsh Holyoke, a new corporation, being the third employing unit, the assets, employees, and business of the employing enterprise in exchange for all the stock of the new corporation, and Walsh Holyoke became a succeeding employing unit. The director assessed it as a new employing unit at the rate of two and seven tenths per cent. Finally, in May, 1946, Continental-United Industries Co., Inc., hereinafter called Continental, which then owned all the stock of Walsh Holyoke, exchanged its stock ownership for the assets of the latter corporation and continued the business and so became the fourth employing unit operating the enterprise. In each instance the successor employing unit took over the entire business of its predecessor, continued it without interruption, and assumed all its liabilities. In each instance the predecessor unit wholly ceased to do business in this Commonwealth, and the successor unit had no business in this Commonwealth other than that to which it ■succeeded. Moreover, at all times Continental owned all the stock of Franklin and through stock ownership was at [426]*426all material times the sole real owner and in control of the entire enterprise through all the changes hereinbefore narrated. We read the brief of the Attorney General in behalf of the director as conceding that the second, third and fourth of these employing units was each in turn a successor employing unit within the meaning of the act.

It now becomes necessary to turn to the pertinent statutes. By St. 1945, c. 516, certain changes were made in subsection (c) of § 14 of the act. As so modified the subsection, so far as here material, read, “(c) For the purposes of this section, when the employing enterprises of an employer or employers are continued solely and without interruption by an employing unit not previously subject to this chapter, the contribution record of the predecessors and the record of workers’ benefit wages which were charged or would have been charged to the predecessor employer or employers, if no change in legal identity or form had occurred, shall cease to be the records of the predecessor employer and shall become part of the records of the successor employing unit in determining his benefit wage ratio in the following cases: — . . . 7. Where a corporation so succeeds to the employing enterprises of an individual, partnership or other corporation, without substantial change in the nature of the business.” 1 After providing that the subsection should apply retrospectively for (as relates to this case) the years 1944 and 1945, the subsection contained a proviso “that the provisions of this subsection shall not authorize the refund of any moneys except in accordance with section eighteen. The director may, however, issue credit memoranda as against future contributions to any employer entitled thereto under this chapter. Said credit memoranda shall be personal to the employer to whom issued and shall not be assigned or encumbered, or be subject to trustee or mesne process.” This act became effective September 26, [427]*4271945.1 The reference to "credit memoranda” was new in the act of 1945. The § 18 to which reference is made appears in St. 1941, c. 685, § 1. It provides that if, upon application within three years of a person who has paid a contribution, the director shall determine that the contribution "was erroneously collected,” he "shall allow such person to make an adjustment thereof in connection with a subsequent payment, or shall authorize the refund of said amount . . ..” It further provides that where the director denies an application for a readjustment or a refund, “which application has been filed by an applicant who has paid a contribution under this chapter, such applicant, in addition to any other remedy which he may have, may bring an action of contract against the director to recover the whole or any part of such contribution.” Further details of this section are not here material.

After the act of 1945 became effective on September 26, 1945, the director issued to Franklin "a credit memorandum” in the amount of $10,991.06 to cover so much of its previous contributions as would be an "overpayment” when according to the retrospective feature of the 1945 act Franklin became entitled to the benefit of the record of its predecessor with respect to the years 1944 and 1945; but Franklin had no opportunity to use this "credit memorandum” against any contributions due from it because its successor, Walsh Holyoke, had taken over the enterprise before the 1945 act took effect and before this credit memorandum was issued. Similarly the director issued a "credit memorandum” to Walsh Holyoke;2 but that employer was able to use only a small part of its' “credit memorandum” against contributions due from it before its successor, Continental, took over the enterprise. The unused portion of this “credit memorandum” is $4,645.63. From the time when the 1945 act took effect the director has given Walsh [428]

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551 N.E.2d 1221 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1990)
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Bluebook (online)
326 Mass. 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-united-industries-co-v-director-of-the-division-of-employment-mass-1950.