Estes v. Department of Labor

625 P.2d 293, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 425
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1981
DocketNo. 5033
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 625 P.2d 293 (Estes v. Department of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estes v. Department of Labor, 625 P.2d 293, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 425 (Ala. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

DIMOND, Senior Justice.

Cynthia Estes filed an appeal with the Department of Labor, State of Alaska (hereafter Department), following denial of her application for unemployment insurance benefits. An appeals tribunal declined to decide the merits of her claim because it found that her appeal from the initial notice of determination of denial of benefits was not timely, and good cause for late filing was not shown. This decision was affirmed by the Commissioner of Labor and then by the superior court. Estes’ motion for reconsideration by the superior court was denied and appeal was taken to this court. We reverse.

Resolution of the issue here requires application of AS 23.20.340(e) of the Employment Security Act and the Department’s accompanying regulation, 8 AAC 85.150(a)(2)(B).1 The statute and the regulation provide that an appeal from a denial of unemployment benefits must be filed within ten days after the notice of determination is mailed unless good cause for late filing is shown. We hold that, given the liberal construction mandate of the Employment Security Act, and the circumstances of this case, good cause existed to allow Estes an appeal on the merits.2

At the time of her appeal from the denial of benefits, Estes was a seventeen-year-old high school senior. She was living away from her parents and seeking work while she finished school. On January 23, 1978, the Department issued and mailed to her a notice of initial determination informing her that she had been denied unemployment insurance benefits. The notice specified the reasons for denial. It also stated that she had ten days from the date the notice was [295]*295mailed to file an appeal, and gave instructions on how to file the appeal.3

Estes received this notice on or shortly before January 31,1978.4 According to the statute and the regulation, timely appeal would have to have been filed by February 2,1978 (ten days from January 23,1978, the date of mailing). However, Estes did not file her appeal from the denial of benefits until February 6, 1978, her next scheduled day to report to the unemployment office. Her appeal was therefore four days late.

On February 16, 1978, the Department issued a notice of hearing on her appeal for February 28, 1978. At the hearing, the appeal referee heard testimony on the timeliness issue and on the merits of Estes’ appeal. Estes testified that, while she had not fully read the notice of determination, and thus did not read all of the information regarding her appeal rights, she was under the impression that she had ten days from the date she received the notice in which to appeal. Her regular report day was within that time, so presumably she believed that her appeal was timely.5 The referee decided that Estes had not shown good cause for her late appeal, and concluded that under the terms of AS 23.20.340(e) and 8 AAC 85.150 he lacked jurisdiction to decide the merits of her appeal.

Estes timely appealed this decision to the Commissioner of Labor, but the Commissioner affirmed the appeals tribunal. He concluded that Estes had an “affirmative responsibility to appraise herself of [the] contents” of the notice, and her failure to discharge that duty in a timely manner deprived her of her appeal right.

The Alaska Employment Security Act is a remedial statute with the primary purpose of “amelioratpng] the negative effects that involuntary unemployment has on both the unemployed individual and society as a whole.” State v. Boucher, 581 P.2d 660, 662 (Alaska 1978). The Act specifically provides that its terms are to be liberally construed toward accomplishment of its purposes.6 This mandate applies to the De[296]*296partment’s application of the appeal period and good cause provisions in the statute and regulation to Estes’ appeal from the denial of benefits.

In a similar case considering good cause for an untimely appeal under the California Unemployment Insurance Code, the California Supreme Court noted the different positions of the parties involved in an appeal from a denial of unemployment benefits:

“We deal here with the relations between an executive agency specifically and solely charged with the administration of a special and relatively technical law and one of the intended beneficiaries of that law. The law deals with a class of persons for whom the Legislature has expressed a particular concern and with a class of persons who are highly unlikely to be skilled either in law or in semantics and, thus, particularly dependent on the administrative agency to help them in securing the benefits that the law provides.”

Gibson v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board, 9 Cal.3d 494, 509 P.2d 945, 947, 108 Cal.Rptr. 1, 3 (1973), quoting Perez v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board, 4 Cal.App.3d 62, 83 Cal.Rptr. 871, 873-74 (1970) (dissenting opinion).

In that case the court concluded that the inadvertent failure of an attorney to file the appeal in time constituted sufficient good cause to allow the appeal. The court noted that the statutory scheme “provided for an informal, nontechnical procedure for adjudicating claims,” id. 509 P.2d at 948, 108 Cal.Rptr. at 4, which would not be furthered by a strict application of the rule such that even excusable inadvertence by the attorney would not constitute good cause.7

Similarly, the ten-day period should not be strictly applied to a claimant who inadvertently files late, particularly when the claimant had very little time to file a timely appeal. The ten-day appeal period established by the statute begins to run from the date the determination is mailed. Within that short time an applicant without legal training is expected to comprehend and determine the advisability of making an appeal, and then take appropriate action. Obviously, the vagaries of the postal system can sometimes leave a claimant with very little time in which to make a decision and act. It is understandable that under such circumstances a claimant may, through his or her own inadvertence, fail to file within the specified time limit.8

The record indicates that Estes had as little as two days in which to make a timely appeal.9 She had no assistance of counsel during that time. Even she could have actually filed a timely appeal within that period, it was unreasonable under the circumstances to expect her to do so. Strict application of the ten-day period did not serve the purposes of the Employment Security Act in this instance. In fact, the short time she actually had to file the timely appeal could be considered good cause in itself for a late filing.

Admittedly, Estes may not seem a totally appropriate candidate for such treatment because her testimony indicates that she never fully informed herself of her appeal right as set out in the notice. However, even in these circumstances the Department should not strictly apply the rules to [297]*297the detriment of a person the statute is intended to serve.

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Related

Hartung v. State, Department of Labor
22 P.3d 1 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2001)
Sonneman v. Knight
790 P.2d 702 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
625 P.2d 293, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estes-v-department-of-labor-alaska-1981.