Hmelyar v. Phoenix Controls

791 N.E.2d 695, 339 Ill. App. 3d 700, 274 Ill. Dec. 603
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 17, 2003
Docket2-02-0242
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 791 N.E.2d 695 (Hmelyar v. Phoenix Controls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hmelyar v. Phoenix Controls, 791 N.E.2d 695, 339 Ill. App. 3d 700, 274 Ill. Dec. 603 (Ill. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE HUTCHINSON

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Peter M. Hmelyar, appeals from an order of the circuit court of Du Page County on administrative review, affirming a decision by defendant, the Board of Review of the Illinois Department of Employment Security (the Board), that denied plaintiff unemployment benefits for December 3, 2000, through December 16, 2000. The Board found that, during this period, plaintiff was not “unemployed” under section 239 of the Unemployment Insurance Act (the Act) (820 ILCS 405/239 (West 2000)). On appeal, plaintiff contends that this finding is against the manifest weight of the evidence. We reverse and remand.

On November 9, 2000, defendant Phoenix Controls terminated plaintiffs employment. In an “Employment Separation and Release” (severance agreement) dated November 9, 2000, Phoenix Controls informed plaintiff that, from November 22, 2000, through July 12, 2001, he would receive 34 weekly severance payments of $2,295 each and that his health insurance plan would continue in force.

By a letter dated November 15, 2000, Gordon Sharp, president of MylndoorAir, Incorporated (MylndoorAir), offered plaintiff a job as its vice president of sales. The letter, which plaintiff signed November 15, 2000, set out the terms of employment. The terms included:

“1. Compensation including three components: salary, two contingent bonuses, and incentive stock options (ISO).
* Annual base salary of $121,000. Note that from November 13th, 2000 through July 9th, 2001 this salary and all health and dental benefits will be paid by Phoenix Controls.
* * *
* 50,000 Incentive Stock Options, with a current purchase price of $1.75/share, and a four-year vesting period (pending Board of Director approval).
2. From November 13th, 2000, through July 13th, 2001 your health and dental benefits will continue to be provided by Phoenix Controls. Additionally you are covered with all of your other Phoenix Controls benefits until the end of November. Consequently, from December 1st and forward you will be eligible for all of the following Group Insurance Benefits except health and dental coverage.”

The “Group Insurance Benefits” included life, short-term disability, and long-term disability insurance. The value of any benefits was tied to plaintiffs salary.

Plaintiff filed a claim with the Illinois Department of Employment Security for unemployment benefits for December 3 through 16, 2000. The claim included a “work search record” for the week ending December 15, 2000. Phoenix Controls protested the claim. The case went to a hearing before a referee on January 24, 2001. Plaintiff and Jamie Hopmayer, Phoenix Controls’ human resources manager, testified by telephone. At the time of the hearing, the severance agreement had not been filed; thus, the referee had not reviewed it.

Plaintiff testified that his last day of employment for Phoenix Controls was November 9, 2000. At that time, plaintiffs weekly salary was $2,295. Although the letter from MylndoorAir stated that plaintiffs “annual base salary” would be paid from November 13, 2000, through July 9, 2001, that “salary” was reflected as part of his severance package. Plaintiff believed that, if he stopped working for MylndoorAir, he would still receive his severance pay from Phoenix Controls. Plaintiff was looking for other job opportunities, but he and Sharp had hoped that, as soon as MylndoorAir obtained enough financing, plaintiff could begin to “draw *** money from the company.”

Plaintiff further testified that Sharp had started Phoenix Controls but left approximately two years before the hearing to form MylndoorAir, At one time, MylndoorAir was a unit of Phoenix Controls and had leased office space from Phoenix Controls, but since January 2000 the companies had been “separate business entities.”

Since mid-November 2000, plaintiff had assisted MylndoorAir with marketing research and developing a business plan. In the week beginning December 3, 2000, plaintiff devoted approximately 16 hours to this work; for the week beginning December 10, 2000, the figure was 20 hours. To date, plaintiff had received no “W-2 wages” from MylndoorAir. His contract provided for several contingent bonuses, but none had been paid because the contingencies relating to raising capital had not been fulfilled. Also, the stock options would not begin to vest until November 15, 2001, and would have value only if the company received “venture capital funding.”

Hopmayer testified that plaintiffs “base salary” under the MylndoorAir contract was actually part of his severance package from Phoenix Controls. Asked whether the MylndoorAir contract was “later modified” to conform to the severance agreement, Hopmayer responded, “That has nothing to do with Phoenix Controls. *** [Ojbviously, one company has no control over what another company does with Pete Hmelyar. *** [T]hat document was not drafted in concert with Phoenix Controls at all.”

The referee found that plaintiff was not an “unemployed individual” during the period at issue and specifically that plaintiffs stock options had some value and that plaintiff received them when he started with MylndoorAir. Also, while not expressly finding that the payments from Phoenix Controls were “wages,” the referee doubted that they were severance pay, as the MylndoorAir contract called them “salary.”

Plaintiff appealed to the Board and supplied it a copy of the severance agreement. The Board affirmed the referee. In holding that plaintiff had not been “unemployed,” the Board reasoned:

“While the claimant states he has received no remuneration for his services, clearly the stock options he has received have a value of at least $1.75/share. Whether or not the stock options have vested, the claimant, under his employment contract, has been given the rights to the stock options. Also, as remuneration for his services, the new employer is providing group insurance benefits for the claimant. While the claimant may not be receiving base salary during the period under review, the claimant has received remuneration or wages for the services he performed for his new employer.”

On administrative review, the trial court affirmed the Board’s decision. Plaintiff timely appealed. He contends that the Board’s decision must be reversed outright because he was an “unemployed individual” during the period at issue. Plaintiff argues specifically that neither the stock options nor the group insurance benefits were “wages” as defined in the Act. See 820 ILCS 405/234, 235 (West 2000). Plaintiff argues in the alternative that, even if he did receive wages, the Board did not determine their value and thus did not decide whether either week’s wages were less than his weekly benefit amount. Therefore, the Board could not decide whether plaintiff was “unemployed” and the cause must be remanded so the Board may do so.

Phoenix Controls has not filed a brief on appeal.

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791 N.E.2d 695, 339 Ill. App. 3d 700, 274 Ill. Dec. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hmelyar-v-phoenix-controls-illappct-2003.