Finston v. Unemployment Compensation Commission

39 A.2d 697, 132 N.J.L. 276, 1944 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 39 A.2d 697 (Finston v. Unemployment Compensation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Finston v. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 39 A.2d 697, 132 N.J.L. 276, 1944 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 55 (N.J. 1944).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was -delivered by

Case, J.

The Unemployment Compensation Commission found that “David Faidech and Henry Einston, trading as Jersey Appliance Company, are subject employers and liable for contributions and reports on all wages payable by them since July 1st, 1937.” That finding is challenged under a writ of certiorari.

On June 26th, 1937, a partnership was formed consisting of Augusta Faidech, David Faidech (a son of Augusta Fai *277 deeh) and Henry Einston under the trade name of New Jersey Coal and Supply Company. The business had been long established. It had been started by Hyman Naidech, husband of Augusta Naidech. On Hyman Naidech’s death in 1929 Mrs. Naidech, individually, continued the business for a time. Then she incorporated it, holding sixteen of the twenty outstanding shares of stock. As of July 1st, 1937, she dissolved the corporation and formed the partnership. That partnership is engaged in the retail sale of coal and mill supplies at Nutley, New Jersey. It was, and for the purposes of this determination will be regarded as still being, a subject employer under the provisions of the New Jersey Unemployment Compensation Act; that is to say, that it has eight employees and is within the application of the statute. Augusta Naidech has an eighty per cent, interest (a continuance of her proportion of ownership of the corporate stock) in that partnership. The remaining twenty per cent, interest is divided between David Naidech and Henry Einston.

At about the same time, July 1st, 1937, or shortly thereafter, David Naidech and Henry Einston formed the partnership which trades under the name of Jersey Appliance Company. That partnership was and is engaged in the business of buying, selling and repairing refrigerators, washing machines, electric irons and other electrical appliances at Belleville, New Jersey. There is no connection between the New Jersey Coal and Supply Company and the Jersey Appliance Company other than that David Naidech and Henry Finston, sole partners in the Appliance Company, hold a minority interest in and participate to an extent in/tho management of the Coal and Supply Company. Mrs. Naidech has no interest in and no control over the employees or the affairs of the Appliance Company and does not participate directly or indirectly in its management. The Jersey Appliance Company does not have, and at no time during its existence has it had, eight employees. Neither of the named partnerships is a subsidiary or an affiliate of the other. There is neither proof nor suggestion of fraud upon, or purposeful evasion of, the statute.

*278 It is first argued on behalf of the respondent that a partnership is not a legal entity and that, therefore, the employees of a partnership are the employees of the individuals constituting the partnership. We shall not attempt the difficult task of defining a partnership. Its aspects differ with the changing angle of viewpoint. Sometimes it is referred to as a contract, In re Gibb’s Estate (Pa.), 27 Atl. Rep. 383; again, as a relation or status, the result of a contract, somewhat as marriage is a relation or status, Haggeti v. Hurley, 91 Me. 542; 40 Atl. Rep. 561; again, as an association, e. g., our Uniform Partnership Law, R. S. 42 :l-6, “A partnership is an association of two or more persons * * and our Workmen’s Compensation Act, R. S. 34:15-36, provides that “ ‘Employer’ * * * includes natural persons, partnerships and corporations * * In Curtis ads. Hollingshead, 14 N. J. L. 402, Chief Justice Hornblower, speaking for the Supreme Court on an issue in attachment, said (at p. 410): “* * * The partnership, the ideal person, formed by the union of interest, is the legal debtor. A partnership is considered in law as an artificial person or being distinct from the individuals composing it. It is treated as such in law and in equity.” Under our Uniform Partnership Law any estate in real property may be acquired in the partnership name and when so acquired may be conveyed only in that name {R. S. 42:1-8 (3)). But whatever the sense in which the word is used, partnership is clearly something more than just one individual added to other individuals; and the fact that the aspects of it vary with varying circumstances makes it necessary, in each instance, to study the context and the function of the word. So, too, “entity” is a word with elastic application. It is defined as something which has reality and distinctness of being; but that reality and distinctness may be either in fact or in thought (Webster’s New International Dictionary). Enough has been said to show that while a partnership does not have a separate existence for all purposes and is by no means of such' detached individualism as is a corporation (although even a corporate structure may disintegrate into elements of flesh and blood when subjected to certain equitable incidents, Telis v. Telis, 132 N. J. Eg. 25), nevertheless in divers *279 respects a partnership may, in this jurisdiction, come within the legal conception of a distinctive being, viz., an entity. Our present problem is to discover the significance of the word “partnership,” not generally, or as a phase of partnership law, but in the particular statute with which we are now concerned; and if a partnership is there conceived of as a reality with distinctness of being, then, so far as this case goes, partnership is an entity.

Employment compensation is a statutory innovation. It confers new rights and new obligations without common law equivalents. The legislature, in creating it, made various arbitrary provisions, one of which is, in effect, that neither the burdens nor tide benefits may be visited upon employees or employer where those actually in employment shall be less than eight, a provision that is not to be altered by judicial construction. Miller Auto Gear and Paris Co., Inc., v. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 132 N. J. L. 34. In the instant ease the immediate employer has less than eight employees, but the Unemployment Compensation Commission held that under the statute it was subject to the obligations of the act because its partners were also partners in another partnership, namely, the New Jersey Coal and Supply Company, that was so subject. An employer, within the moaning of the statute, li. S. 43:21 — 19 (h) (4), is any “employing unit” which, together with one or more other “employing units,” is owned or controlled by the same interests, or which owns or controls one or more other “employing units” and which, if treated as a “single unit” with such other “unit or interests,” employs eight or more individuals. The phrase “employing unit” is thus defined in B. 8. 43 :21-'I9 (g) (italics inserted) :

“Any individual or type of organization, including any partnership, association, trust, estate, joint stock company, insurance company or corporation, whether domestic, or foreign.

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Bluebook (online)
39 A.2d 697, 132 N.J.L. 276, 1944 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finston-v-unemployment-compensation-commission-nj-1944.