Employment Security Commission v. Magma Copper Co.

366 P.2d 84, 90 Ariz. 104, 1961 Ariz. LEXIS 146
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1961
Docket7165
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 366 P.2d 84 (Employment Security Commission v. Magma Copper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Employment Security Commission v. Magma Copper Co., 366 P.2d 84, 90 Ariz. 104, 1961 Ariz. LEXIS 146 (Ark. 1961).

Opinion

UDALL, Justice.

This is an appeal from a final order of the Superior Court of Pinal County reversing a determination by the Employment Security Commission that claimants, Francisco Ruiz, Gumercindo Provencio and Jose M. Lugo, were entitled to unemployment insurance benefits pursuant to A.R.S. §§ 23-771 to 23-790 (1956). Presented here is the question whether a worker, forced to retire on pension at age 68 or above at the instance of his employer but according to the provisions of a collective bargaining agreement “has left work voluntarily without good cause in connection with his employment” so as to disqualify himself for benefits to the extent provided in A.R.S. § 23-775(1) 1

The facts were submitted on an agreed statement to the Superior Court and on review by this court are stipulated to be as follows. Claimants were employed by the Magma Copper Company in the unit for which the International Union of Mine, Mill & Smelter Workers, Independent had been certified by the National Labor Relations Board as bargaining agent in October of 1957. Provencio and Ruiz were members of the Union and Lugo, though not a member, was entitled to belong. In June of 1958 the Company, the Union and its Local No. 938 entered into a collective bargaining agreement providing for, inter alia, a pension plan. This plan provided in pertinent part:

“2.1 Retirement on Account of Age (a) Normal. On or after January 1, 1958, each Employee shall retire from the service of the Employing Company on his normal retirement date, which *106 shall he the first day of the month on or next following his 65th birthday; provided, however, that the Employee may postpone his retirement and continue in service up to three (3) years after his normal retirement date if he so desires and if and so long as he is able in the opinion of the Employing Company to perform the work available for him; and provided further that the Employee, upon written request of the Employing Company, may if he so desires, continue in service after his 68th birthday. No employee who retires on account of age shall become a Pensioner unless he has completed fifteen (15) or more years of Continuous Service to his actual retirement date.”

The agreement in its entirety was ratified by the members of Local No. 938.

Each of the claimants was over 65 and had worked continuously for the Company for 15 years or more at the time the plan was adopted in June of 1958. And each was requested by the Company to work past his 68th birthday. However, the Company terminated the employment of Ruiz and Provencio on August 31, 1958, and that of Lugo on October 1, 1958. The three were 69, 70 and 72 respectively at the time of their retirement. When so retired by the Company they “applied for unemployment benefits and social security benefits in addition to benefits under the negotiated pension plan. Each of the three claimants stated that he would have desired to remain in the employ of the Company.”

The Employment Security Commission in affirming the findings of its Appeal Tribunal decided that:

“1. * * * The claimants separated from employment under nondisqualifying circumstances.
“2. The employer’s experience rating account shall be subject to charges for benefits subsequently paid.”

On appeal the Commission’s two assignments of error are that the Superior Court erred in reversing the above two findings. The Commission argues (1) that under the agreement the employer Company had the option of continuing to hire or discharge the employees and therefore, ipso facto, the claimants were involuntarily unemployed, and (2) that the collective bargaining contract, if construed as a binding agreement by claimants to be voluntarily unemployed in the future, either at a designated age or at the wish of the employer, would violate A.R.S. § 23-784 which provides :

“No agreement by an individual to waive, release or commute his rights to benefits or any other rights under this chapter shall be valid.”

On the other hand appellee contends “that the employe, through his bargaining agent, has agreed to quit work at a certain age in *107 return for a pension. Having accepted the benefits of the pension plan, the employe must also accept its burdens.”

The question involved in the instant case was first put to a court of last resort in 1953. A New Jersey Superior Court had reversed an award of benefits to claimants mandatorily retired at age 65 according to a collective bargaining agreement which also provided a pension for retiring employees with at least five years service. Reversal by the Superior Court was grounded on the agency argument advanced by appellee here. On appeal to the New Jersey Supreme Court the decision was reversed (5-1) and the award reinstated. Campbell Soup Co. v. Board of Review, etc., 13 N.J. 431, 100 A.2d 287 (1953). Mr. Justice (then Judge) Brennan speaking for the majority at 13 N.J. 435, 100 A.2d 289 remarked:

“If the inquiry is isolated to the time of termination, plainly none of the claimants left voluntarily in the sense that on his own he willed and intended at the time to leave his job.
“The Legislature plainly intended that the reach of the subsection was to be limited to separations where the decision whether to go or to stay lay at the time with the worker alone and, even then, to bar him only if he left his work without good cause. The claimants here did not choose of their own volition to leave the employ of Campbell Soup Company when they were separated. They left because they had no alternative but to submit to the employer’s retirement policy, however that policy as presently constituted was originated. Their leaving in compliance with the policy was therefore involuntary for the purposes of the statute.”

Justice Brennan then examined the effect of the bargaining agreement in light of a New Jersey statute 2 similar in language and in purpose to the no waiver of rights provision in A.R.S. § 23-784, supra. He concluded:

“While the treating as voluntary of a worker’s leaving at the appointed time pursuant to the contract may not bring the contract within section 15, yet in practical effect the contract operates as an advance surrender of benefits, and an interpretation of subsection 5(a) to embrace such leaving is clearly inconsistent with the attainment of the statutory objectives. If an understanding as to the duration of employment were to have that effect, countless claimants would be disquali *108 fied for benefits.

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Bluebook (online)
366 P.2d 84, 90 Ariz. 104, 1961 Ariz. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/employment-security-commission-v-magma-copper-co-ariz-1961.