Crow v. California Department Of Human Resources Development

490 F.2d 580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 14, 1973
Docket26749
StatusPublished

This text of 490 F.2d 580 (Crow v. California Department Of Human Resources Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crow v. California Department Of Human Resources Development, 490 F.2d 580 (9th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

490 F.2d 580

Ellenmae CROW et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees, American
Federation of Labor and Congress of Lndustrial
Organizations and United Steelworkers of
America, AFLCIO, Intervenor
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT et al.,
Defendants-Appellants, United States of America,
Intervenor Defendant-Appellant.

Nos. 26749, 71-1045.

United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.

Dec. 14, 1973.

Charles Liebert Crum, Atty. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C., Asher Rubin, Deputy Atty. Gen. (argued), William P. Spohn, Asst. U.S. Atty., San Francisco, Cal., Morton Hollander and Patricia S. Baptiste, Attys. Dept. of Justice, Robert E. Kopp, Atty. (argue), Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., for defendants-appellants.

Steven P. Berzon, Stefan M. Rosenzweig, Legal Aid Society of Alameda County, Oakland, Cal., K. Randlett Walster, Santa Cruz, Cal., Ono, Manley, Schwartz & Kubota, San Jose, Cal., Contra Costa Legal Services Foundation, Richmond, Cal., Fred H. Altshuler and Lucy K. McCabe (argued), San Francisco, Cal., J. Albert Woll, Washington, D.C., Bernard Kleiman, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiffs-appellees.

Before DUNIWAY and TRASK, Circuit Judges, and BATTIN,* District judge.

BATTIN, District Judge:

Ellenmae Crow commenced this class action against the State of California Department of Human Resources Development1 (hereinafter 'department'), seeking reinstatement of her entitlement to unemployment insurance benefits and an order requiring their continued payment until she was afforded a 'Goldberg' type due process hearing.2

Ms. Crow, who had previously qualified for and was receiving unemployment benefits, was notified by the Department of an employment opportunity. At an interview for this employment opportunity, it came to light that Ms. Crow, if hired, would leave the job if elsewhere offered higher wages. As a consequence, Ms. Crow was not offered employment.

A condition of receipt of benefits from the Department is that the claimant be ready, willing and able to work. Thus, Ms. Crow was advised by the Department that she would have to explain the circumstances surrounding the job interview before her benefit check would be released. She filled out the required form but left blank the question, 'Was any work offered you?' On the basis of this omission, her check was withheld and she was referred to a Department claims interviewer, who concluded that Ms. Crow had, at the 'job interview', 'precluded an offer of suitable work and accordingly was not eligible to receive unemployment compensation benefits for a period of ten weeks.' A subsequent 'pre-appeal' interview, with Ms. Crow in attendance, upheld the withholding of benefits.

Subsequent to filing this action, Ms. Crow requested an administrative hearing, and in lieu of a requested temporary restraining order, the district court withheld action pending the hearing.

The Hearing Referee ruled in favor of Ms. Crow, finding that a claimant could express a desire for higher wages without being guilty of precluding employment if such expression did not convey a negative attitude. Thus, the Referee's decision was based solely on the legal affect of what had transpired at the job interview, although it necessarily characterized Ms. Crow's conduct as permissible. Notwithstanding this administrative result, the district court reached the merits of Ms. Crow's complaint and concluded:

'When an individual is deprived of a statutory benefit which he has previously enjoyed due to an adverse finding where factual issues are in dispute, and where the agency concerned has acted upon third party information, the ancient and 'relatively immutable' jurisprudence of Greene, Sniadach, and Goldberg3 comes into play. It is in a case such as (this) . . ., where the claimant said she was offered no job, and where the (defendant department's) interviewer disagreed, . . . (based on his understanding of third party information), that confrontation and cross-examination are necessary.' Crow v. Cal. Dept. of Human Resources, 325 F.Supp. 1314, 1319 (N.D.Cal.1970).

MOOTNESS

The Supreme Court's remand of Burney4 implicitly indicates that a district court's conclusion against mootness permits review of at least that question. We concur with the district court's finding that this case is not moot, and find it to be of that type which is capable of repetition yet potentially evading review. The intervention as a party plaintiff of the AFL-CIO precludes any other conclusion.

MERITS OF PLAINTIFF'S CLAIM

It is the opinion of this court that the record does not reflect a situation necessitating a wholesale application of the principles enunciated by Goldberg and its progeny. Moreover, should we erroneously construe the record, the procedures employed by the Department in this case and the situations which it encompasses, in our opinion, satisfy the requisites of due process. That procedure, which includes an informal hearing in the presence of the claimant prior to the administrative determination regarding the continued eligibility for unemployment compensation, was employed here and is employed in all similar cases. That procedure is the subject matter of an affidavit filed in this case and which, because of its obvious importance, is set out in the margin.5

First, we disagree with the district court's finding that the termination here was based upon third party information. The situation which Ms. Crow brings to the fore is that in which the claimant is the source of information upon which the continued eligibility claims examiner predicates his decision of ineligibility. Goldberg indicates quite clearly that a pretermination hearing is mandated only where the questioned agency action is challenged as resting upon incorrect or misleading factual premises or upon misapplication of rules or policies under the facts of the particular case. Goldberg v. Kelly, supra, 397 U.S. at 268, 90 S.Ct. 1011. Here, the facts presented the eligibility examiner indicated that the claimant, when asked, admitted that she would leave any job offered for a subsequent, more lucrative position. While it may be true that information from the job opportunity interviewer may have formed a part of the conclusion by the eligibility interviewer, that information, insofar as the record indicates, differed in no material respect from that presented to the Department's interviewer by Ms. Crow. Thus, we are constrained by the record to conclude that we are here dealing not with agency misconstruction of a factual situation, but rather, and if at all, with that aspect of Goldberg which interposes the Fourteenth Amendment in situations challenged as an agency's misapplication of rules or policies.

Second, we find no basis for a claim that there has been misapplication of policies or rules in this case.

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Crow v. California Department of Human Resources
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