Hartsville Cotton Mill v. South Carolina Employment Security Commission

79 S.E.2d 381, 224 S.C. 407, 1953 S.C. LEXIS 111
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 29, 1953
Docket16812
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 79 S.E.2d 381 (Hartsville Cotton Mill v. South Carolina Employment Security Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartsville Cotton Mill v. South Carolina Employment Security Commission, 79 S.E.2d 381, 224 S.C. 407, 1953 S.C. LEXIS 111 (S.C. 1953).

Opinion

The following is the order of

Judge Lewis:

This action was instituted by the plaintiff-employer under Section 6(i) of the South Carolina Unemployment Compensation Law, Section 7035-86 (i) of the Code of Laws of South Carolina, 1942, and is in the nature of an appeal from *409 a decision of the South Carolina Employment Security Commission.

From the record before me the following facts appear. The defendant, Doris T. Lambert, was employed by The Hartsville Cotton Mill for a period of approximately five months prior to January 22, 1951, on which date she was discharged for irregular attendance. Mrs. Lambert worked on the third shift during the entire period of such employment except for a few days worked on the second shift just prior to her discharge. On April 11, 1951, she signed and filed the Commission’s Form UCB-101, designated “Initial Claim”, whereon she stated that she thereby registered for work, that she was available for work and able to work, that she would accept work on only the second shift, and that “I had been working on third shift ever since I began to work. I changed shifts the last week I worked and worked second shift. I thought the change was permanent but at the end of the week they told me I had to go back to work on third shift. I could not go back to work on the third shift as I had let me cook go and had no one to keep my children on the third shift. My husband works third shift and he can keep the children while I work second shift.” An Initial Determination dated May 7, 1951, was made by a claims examiner of the Commission holding that claimant was “Unavailable — Ineligible”, that the claim was valid, that claimant’s benefit year began April 11, 1951, that the weekly benefit amount was $20, and that the net maximum benefit was $360. Plaintiff appealed from those portions of the Initial Determination which held the claim to be valid and which established a benefit year, a weekly benefit amount and a net maximum benefit amount. The testimony of Mrs. Lambert, of her husband and of witnesses for The Hartsville Cotton Mill was then taken before an Appeals Referee. Thereafter, by its decision, dated August 20, 1951, the South Carolina Employment Security Commission found that the third shift was that of Mrs. Lambert’s most recent employ *410 ment and held that she “changed her domestic relations in such fashion that she could no longer work” on that shift and that, under the case of Judson Mills v. South Carolina Unemployment Compensation Commission, 204 S. C. 37, 28 S. E. (2d) 535, “the claimant cannot be deemed as available for work and, hence, she is ineligible for unemployment compensation.” The Commission’s decision affirmed the Initial Determination in its holding that claim was valid and in setting up a benefit year, a weekly benefit amount and a net maximum benefit amount. This action was then commenced by plaintiff in the Court of Common Pleas of Darlington County, and is in the nature of an appeal from those portions of the Commission’s decision last hereinabove mentioned.

From the pleadings and from the briefs filed by counsel, it appears that the issue here is whether a claimant who is found to be “Unavailable — Ineligible”, or who fails to meet any of the other benefit eligibility conditions of Section 4 of the Unemployment Compensation Law, Code Section 7035-84, can file a valid claim for benefits, as such term is used in that Law, upon which there can be established a benefit year, a weekly benefit amount and a net maximum benefit amount. For a determination of the question, reference is made to the exceedingly technical provisions of the Unemployment Compensation Law.

Section 19(b), Code Section 7035-99(b), defines the word “Benefits” as “the money payments payable to an individual as provided in this Act, with respect to his unemployment.”

Section 4, Code Section 7035-84, provides in part that:

“An unemployed individual shall be eligible to receive benefits with respect to any week only if the commission finds that. * * *
“(b) He has registered for work * * *.
“(c) He is able to work and is available for work. * * *”

*411 Section 6(a), Code Section 7035-86(a), provides that “Claims for benefits- shall be made in accordance with such regulations as the commission may prescribe. * * *”

Implementing Section 6(a), Commission Regulation XII, A, 1, (a), provides:

“Initial Claims: Any individual claiming benefits or waiting period credits for total unemployment shall report in person at the Employment Service Office * * * and shall thereon, on Form UCB-101, set forth that he (1) registers for work, and (2) files a claim for benefits. Such a claim shall constitute the individual’s registration for work and his claim for benefits or waiting period credits.”

Section 6(b) (1), Code Section 7035-86 (b), (1), provides for a review of the claim by an examiner designated by the Commission and for an Initial Determination thereon to be made.

Section 19 (p), Code Section 7035-99 (p), defines “Benefit year” as “the 52 consecutive-week period beginning with the first day of the first week with respect to which the individual first files a valid claim for benefits”. Section 19(c), Code Section 7035-99(o), defines “Base period” as the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters immediately preceding the first day of the benefit year. Section 3(b), Code Section 7035-83(b), determines the weekly benefit amount and the net maximum benefit amount to which a claimant is entitled and bases this determination upon the wages paid during claimant’s base period.

From the foregoing it appears that there must be a “valid claim” for benefits before a benefit year, base period, weekly benefit amount and net maximum benefit amount can be determined. Benefits are defined to mean money payments, and by Section 4(c) of the Act, Code Section 7035-84(c), an unemployed individual is not eligible for such benefits or money payments, unless he or she is “available for work”. Here the claims examiner and *412 the Commission have found as a fact that Mrs. Lambert was “Unavailable — Ineligible”. Where a claimant files a claim for benefits for which he or she is not eligible, it would require a strained construction of the language of the Law to hold that such constitutes a “valid claim”. I am constrained, therefore, to conclude that the decision of the Commission is in error in holding that the claim filed in this case was valid and in establishing a benefit year, a weekly benefit amount and a net maximum benefit amount. The holding that the claim is invalid finds further support in the fact that claimant did not register for work on the shift of her most recent employment.

It is an undisputed fact that Mrs. Lambert was not entitled or eligible to receive benefits, meaning money payments, at the time she filed the claim in question. Section 6(b) (1) of the Unemployment Compensation Law, Code Section 7035-86(b) (1), provides:

“An examiner designated by the commission shall review the claim. An initial determination thereon shall be made promptly and

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.E.2d 381, 224 S.C. 407, 1953 S.C. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartsville-cotton-mill-v-south-carolina-employment-security-commission-sc-1953.