General Motors Corp. v. Erves

209 N.W.2d 713, 47 Mich. App. 591, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 1334
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 25, 1973
DocketDocket 13094-13098
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 209 N.W.2d 713 (General Motors Corp. v. Erves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Motors Corp. v. Erves, 209 N.W.2d 713, 47 Mich. App. 591, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 1334 (Mich. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinions

Levin, P. J.

Plaintiff, General Motors Corporation, appeals a judgment of the circuit court ordering payment of "back-to-work” benefits to the five individual defendants. We affirm as to defendants [593]*593Lawson and Griffith and reverse as to defendants Bloomer, Kartsonas, and Erves.

All five individual defendants were employed by General Motors Corporation, Cadillac Car Division. All were laid off during the annual model changeover period in the summer of 1968.

(I) Bloomer and Kartsonas received their layoff notices at the end of their shift on Friday, August 2, 1968. They returned to work three weeks and two days later, on Monday, August 26, 1968. Erves received his notice at the end of his shift on Friday, July 5, 1968 and, similarly, returned to work three weeks and two days later, on Monday, July 29,1968.

(II) Lawson and Griffith received notices at the end of their shift on Wednesday, July 31, 1968, and returned to work four weeks later, on Wednesday, August 28,1968.

At issue is the back-to-work benefit — a sum equal to one week’s unemployment compensation —payable under the Employment Security Act to an employee who has "a period of unemployment” which commenced with a "layoff” that continues "for more than 3 weeks” and who, obtains employment with any employer within 13 weeks of the last week worked:

"(2) When an individual has had a period of unemployment: (i) for which he has been paid benefits for 1 or more weeks or has received credit for a waiting week, (ii) which commenced with a layoff by an employing unit that continued with such employing unit for more than 3 weeks, and (iff) which has been terminated by his accepting and engaging in full-time work with any employing unit within the 13 weeks immediately following his last week of employment with such employing unit, such individual shall be paid for the most recent week in such period for which benefits are payable or were paid to him or for which he was [594]*594entitled to credit for a waiting week, an amount equal to his currently applicable weekly benefit rate in addition to any benefits otherwise payable or paid to him for such week.”1

I

General Motors contends that the layoff notices received by Bloomer, Kartsonas, and Erves on a Friday became effective as of the next scheduled day of work, the following Monday, and therefore the layoff lasted exactly three weeks, not longer. The three men contend that the layoff became effective on the last day worked and, therefore, they were laid off for three weeks and two days and are entitled to back-to-work benefits.

The men argue that decision here is controlled by Michigan Supreme Court decisions denying group life insurance benefits to beneficiaries of laid off employees.2 In the cited cases, however, there was no issue concerning the status of the employee between receipt of notice of layoff and the next day — but for the notice of layoff — he would have expected to work. Nor would the Court’s conclusions concerning insurance coverage in those cases be determinative of legislative intent in enacting this peculiar proviso of the Employment Security Act.

The primary purpose of the act is to compensate workers for lost wages. While the individual defendants had worked occasionally on weekends during the first half of 1968, this was not the usual practice. Bloomer and Kartsonas had not worked [595]*595any weekend during the two months preceding the layoff; the record is silent as to Erves. It appears that the impact of the layoff in terms of wage loss was not felt until the Monday after the last day the men worked.

The men suffered no wage loss on the Saturday or Sunday which immediately followed the last day of work. They lost three weeks’ wages — not "more”. How then could they have been laid off for more than three weeks? Only by ignoring customary usage and a common-sense construction of the legislative language and purpose would exactly "3 weeks” of lost work become — by counting a superfluous, ordinarily not worked Saturday and Sunday — "more than 3 weeks”.3

Of controlling concern is the time when the impact of the layoff becomes felt by a worker and when it is lifted. We see that impact, for purposes of the back-to-work benefit, primarily in terms of lost wages, rather than any of the other possible incidents of a layoff which may affect a worker at an earlier or later point in time.

Erves, Bloomer, and Kartsonas were laid off, for purposes of the back-to-work benefit, as of the first day — but for the notice of layoff — they would have expected to work, that is, the Monday they were told not to report for work. They were reemployed exactly three weeks later when they reported for work. They are not entitled to back-to-work benefits.

We have considered the commission’s interpretation in its manual providing that for purposes of [596]*596determining eligibility for the back-to-work payment "the controlling factor in determining the effective date of the layoff will be either the last day on which work was made available by the employing unit or the date of notification of layoff to the worker, whichever is later”.4

While this guideline works well where the last day worked is in the middle of a regularly scheduled work week, we believe it to be unnecessarily inflexible and inconsistent with the spirit of the act in failing to differentiate that case from the kind of case now before us where the last day worked is the last day of a normal five-day work week and there is no expectation that work will be provided on Saturday and Sunday.

II

Lawson and Griffith were laid off for four weeks. They argue that, perforce, they have met the statutory qualification of "a layoff * * * that continued * * * for more than 3 weeks”.

General Motors would read the statute as requiring a "period of unemployment” of "more than 3 weeks”. Because Lawson and Griffith received "short-week” benefits under their union’s agreement with General Motors,5 they were not "unemployed” within the Employment Security Act’s special meaning of that word during the week in which they were laid off or the week in which they resumed work.6 General Motors argues that since [597]*597Lawson and Griffith were not unemployed for "more than 3 weeks”, they could not have been laid off for more than three weeks.

But Lawson and Griffith were unemployed. They had "a period of unemployment.” While the act requires a layoff of more than three weeks, it does not in terms require that the period of unemployment extend for any particular time; it requires simply "a period of unemployment” — the length of that period is not explicitly stated. The only length explicitly stated is "more than 3 weeks” of layoff. The back-to-work benefit is geared to the period of the layoff, not the period of unemployment.7

[598]*598Affirmed as to Lawson and Griffith; reversed as to Erves, Bloomer and Kartsonas. Remanded for proceedings in accordance with this opinion.

V. J. Brennan, J., concurred.

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General Motors Corp. v. Erves
209 N.W.2d 713 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
209 N.W.2d 713, 47 Mich. App. 591, 1973 Mich. App. LEXIS 1334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-motors-corp-v-erves-michctapp-1973.