Immel v. Brown
This text of 143 So. 2d 156 (Immel v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Maxine IMMEL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Richard E. BROWN, Jr., Administrator, etc., Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
C. O. Brown, Alexandria, for plaintiff-appellant.
Marion Weimer, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellee.
Before TATE, FRUGE, and SAVOY, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
Board of Review of the Division of Employment Security held the plaintiff to be disqualified for unemployment compensation because she had failed to apply for suitable work offered to her, LSA-R.S. 23:1601(3). Pursuant to her statutory right, LSA-R.S. 23:1634, the plaintiff filed *157 suit in the district court of her domicile to obtain judicial review of this determination. The trial court upheld the administrative tribunal's denial of benefits and dismissed the plaintiff's suit.
The claimant now appeals to this court praying for reversal of such determination. In the alternative, she prays for a remand of these proceedings for additional evidence to be taken by the administrative tribunal concerning material facts explaining why the work offered to her was not "suitable", within the meaning of the statute, in order to show that she was not disqualified for failing to accept it.
Based on the evidence at the administrative hearing, the Board of Review found: "The claimant has worked for the past twenty (20) years as a waitress. On June 27, 1961, the claimant was called by the local office of the Division of Employment Security for a referral to a waitress' job with Louis & Joe's Cafe. The claimant reported to the local office and accepted the referral. She did not report to the cafe in person because she had a sick daughter and could not leave. She called the prospective employer by telephone, but did not get to talk to him. She talked to someone else. She did not make any further effort to contact him. * * * There is sufficient evidence before this Board to support the finding that the claimant refused an offer of referral to suitable employment by the Employment Service, and she has failed to justify her refusal of such employment." (Italics ours.)
We may say at this point that the sketchy record of the administrative hearing contains sufficient evidence to support this factual finding of the board. And, of course, factual findings of the board, if supported by sufficient evidence, must be accepted on judicial review by the courts, the jurisdiction of which is confined to questions of law. LSA-R.S. 23:1634; Vandike v. Brown, La.App. 3 Cir., 139 So.2d 803.
But an extremely serious question is presented by the claimant's alternative prayer for a remand to present material evidence not contained in the record of the administrative hearing, a question which was not well briefed before our learned trial brother. The claimant's attorney points out that she is an uneducated white lady who appeared at the administrative hearing without benefit of counsel, and her attorney argues that this lady (without knowledge of what was legally relevant) did not present evidence as to material facts, during the somewhat unsympathetic interrogation of her by the appeals referee during the brief administrative hearing, to show that the work was not suitable and that she was legally entitled to refuse to accept it.
We will set forth the revelant procedural facts in the light of which this contention is advanced.
The administrative agency's records introduced into evidence reveal: The claimant was referred on July 27, 1961 to Louis & Joe's Cafe for a job interview. On July 28th, the following day, the agency interviewer reported that she had not reported to the employer on the referral. On August 7, 1961 (ten days later), by initial claim determination (see LSA-R.S. 23:1624) the agency held that she was disqualified for benefits from July 28th and thereafter (until she was able to earn wages equal to ten times her weekly benefit, so as to be again within the protection of the Louisiana Unemployment Compensation Law, LSA-R.S. 23:1471 et seq.), "for the following reason: You failed to apply for suitable work offered you. Job offered referral to was in your usual occupation at your customary rate of pay. Benefits denied."
The claimant then appealed this initial claim determination to the agency's appeal tribunal (see LSA-R.S. 23:1629), and a hearing on her appeal was then held by an agency appeals referee. At this hearing, as has been held, the statutory requirement of notice and a fair hearing limit the *158 appeal tribunal's consideration of disqualifying causes to those specific acts set forth by the agency's initial determination of disqualification, and the claimant may not be disqualified for other acts of which he had not been given notice by the agency's initial claim determination. Johnson v. Brown, La.App. 3 Cir., 134 So.2d 388; King v. Brown, La.App. 3 Cir., 115 So.2d 405.[1] Cf. also, Huddleston v. Brown, La. App. 2 Cir., 124 So.2d 255.
At the hearing, as well as in the written statements she made to the agency prior to it, the claimant apparently considered the crux of the agency's complaint to be that she had telephoned the prospective employer for information concerning the job offer, instead of going in person. She testified that the employer's place of business was a good distance from her home and that she could not easily leave because of a sick daughter, so that she had telephoned from a drug store (she did not have a telephone at home) and had talked to someone there since the manager was out.
Following the hearing, the appeals referee affirmed the agency's determination of the claimant's disqualification for unemployment benefits following which the claimant appealed this decision to the agency's board of review (LSA-R.S. 23:1630). As previously noted, the board upheld the disqualification determination, following which the claimant obtained counsel and sought judicial review of the agency determination (LSA-R.S. 23:1634) by the present proceedings.
In her petition for judicial review, the claimant alleges the following material facts explaining her failure to pursue further the job offer:
"Claimant stated at the hearing that she did talk to someone at Louis & Joe's Cafe where she was referred to but she was unable to talk to the boss. She called to tell them that she would be available for the job, but that she had a daughter who was very ill. Although she left word she was not called back by this cafe. * * * Claimant shows that the geographical location of Louis & Joe's Cafe is on Lower Third Street, in Alexandria and is a Negro street which makes it very dangerous for a white woman to leave her place of employment at a late hour to catch a bus or to walk on this street. That she is a widow and has no means of transportation other than the bus which at late hours runs every 45 minutes. * * * Claimant shows that due to the above reasons it would not be at all satisfactory for her to attempt to work at this cafe where her hours would be from three P.M. till eleven P.M. When claimant called the cafe they told her that the waitress answering the phone had the morning shift and that her shift would be from 3 till 11."
There is no evidence at the agency hearing concerning these allegations by the claimant,[2] and of course the trial court properly refused to permit the claimant to introduce evidence concerning them in the judicial review proceedings. See LSA-R.S.
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143 So. 2d 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/immel-v-brown-lactapp-1962.