James T Atchley v. Checker Motors Corporation

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 12, 2015
Docket318816
StatusUnpublished

This text of James T Atchley v. Checker Motors Corporation (James T Atchley v. Checker Motors Corporation) 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
James T Atchley v. Checker Motors Corporation, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JAMES T. ATCHLEY, DUANE BELDEN, UNPUBLISHED RAYMOND BOTTING, LAWRENCE BRAGG, February 12, 2015 EDWARD DOOLITTLE JR., ALBERT DORKO, DANIEL DUGGAN, STEVEN ENGEL, ROBERT FEE, DEBORAH FIELDS, HOWARD L. GARNAAT, CAROLL GIVANS, NORMAN GRIMMER, JACK HAMMOCK, JOAN HENDERSON, NORMAN E. HOKE, JACK HOLT, PAUL KALLEWAARD, DUANE A. KNIGHT, ROBERT KRUSYNA, THOMAS LATTERNER, ANNIE LEMMER, JOHN C. LEVERSEE, MICHAEL MANSFIELD, PAUL MERRICK, LAWRENCE E. MIDDLESTADT, DANIEL D. MILLER, ROBERT W. NICHOLSON, II, ELVIS O’HARA, EDGAR V. OLSON, MELVIN PAYNE, MILTON F. PETER, JERAMY ROBERTSON, JEFFREY RUSSELL, JAMES SAVAGE, DAVID L. SHULTZ, DERIC SLIGER, MARY STAFFORD, RICHARD TEMPLE, WILLIAM THURMAN, SHIRLEY TIRONI, CINDY VALORE, KENNETH VANDERROEST, DOUGLAS WAGGONER, JACK D. WALBURN, LARRY WARNER, RICHARD WILLARD, JR., DOUGLAS R. WRIGHT, JAMES YONKMAN, AND JUAN A. ZUNIGA,

Claimants-Appellants,

v No. 318816 Kalamazoo Circuit Court CHECKER MOTORS CORPORATION and LC No. 2011-000442-AE LICENSING & REGULATORY AFFAIRS DEPARTMENT, UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE AGENCY,

Appellees.

Before: O’CONNELL, P.J., and SAWYER and MARKEY, JJ.

-1- PER CURIAM.

The captioned claimants for unemployment compensation, former employees of Checker Motors Corporation (Checker), appeal by leave granted the circuit court’s order of October 11, 2013, affirming the April 8, 2013 decision of the Michigan Compensation Appellate Commission (MCAC), which affirmed but modified the June 29, 2010 decision of an administrative law judge (ALJ) that applied the period designated by Checker in a September 18, 2009 to certain severance payments Checker made pursuant to an August 28, 2009 agreement with claimants’ union. The ALJ applied the allocation period Checker designated, MCL 421.48(2), which commenced September 1, 2009 and ran various weeks depending on each claimant’s length of service. The ALJ affirmed the agency’s determination that because of the severance payments, claimants were not entitled to full unemployment benefits during the designated periods due to offsets required by MCL 421.27(c), and also that claimants would be required to repay benefits improperly paid, MCL 421.62. In its April 8, 2013 decision, the MCAC modified the ALJ’s decision by ruling that the severance payments could not legally be made until August 28, 2009 agreement was approved the bankruptcy court on September 21, 2009. Consequently, benefits paid to claimants before that date were not subject to restitution under MCL 421.62. The circuit court affirmed. Finding no error warranting reversal, we affirm.

I. SUMMARY OF PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The basic facts are not disputed. Checker filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January 2009 but continued to operate its business as debtor-in-possession.1 Claimants were laid off when Checker closed its Kalamazoo plant in June 2009. Claimants filed for unemployment compensation and began receiving benefits that June. At the time the plant closed, Checker was subject to a collective bargaining agreement with the United Steelworkers (USW), covering 125 bargaining unit employees, including claimants. Checker entered an agreement on August 28, 2009, with the USW for termination of the collective bargaining agreement (CBA) and modification of retiree benefits. The agreement resolved a dispute between the parties regarding whether Checker owed or could make severance payments specified in the CBA. The agreement also resolved the claims of terminated employees and union retirees for health insurance benefits. The agreement provided it was subject to and would become effective on the approval of the bankruptcy court. On Checker’s motion, the bankruptcy court issued its order on September 21, 2009, approving and incorporating the agreement.

The agreement provided for severance for terminated employees as follows:

The Debtor [Checker] will make a lump sum severance payment to the Terminated Employees in accordance with the following schedule, covering the period commencing on September 1, 2009:

1 Subject to statutory limitations and those the bankruptcy court imposes, a debtor-in-possession has all the powers and duties of a trustee, 11 USC 1107(a), and unless otherwise ordered by the court after notice and hearing may continue to operate the debtor’s business, 11 USC 1108.

-2- a. 5 years of service – 48 hours of pay

b. 5 years but less than 10 – 96 hours of pay

c. 10 years but less than 15 – 144 hours of pay

d 15 years but less than 20 – 192 hours of pay

e. 20 years but less than 25 – 240 hours of pay

f. 25 years or more – 288 hours of pay

Severance pay shall be calculated based upon the hourly rate of $16.18 (which represents the plant average hourly rate at the time of shutdown). Debtor shall mail severance checks directly to the Terminated Employees, directed to the last known addresses for the Terminated Employees, within five (5) business days of entry of an Order approving this Agreement. . . . [Termination Agreement, 8/29/2009, ¶ 5 (emphasis added).]

In a letter dated September 18, 2009, Checker mailed the severance checks to the terminated employees in accordance with the terms of the August 28, 2009 agreement. The letter noted that the severance checks were 60% of the amount provided for in the CBA and set forth the method of calculating the amount as provided in the agreement. The letter then stated:

The agreement also provided that these severance payments cover the period commencing on September 1, 2009. The Company is allocating these payments over the following time periods, depending on the number of hours of pay involved:

48 hours pay From September 1 through September 8, 2009

96 hours pay From September 1 through September 16, 2009

144 hours pay From September 1 through September 24, 2009

192 hours pay From September 1 through October 2, 2009

240 hours pay From September 1 through October 12, 2009

288 hours pay From September 1 through October 20, 2009

The impact of this allocation is that for each week or partial week over which these severance payments are allocated, the Unemployment Insurance Agency (UIA) may reduce your unemployment benefits for that week. The final determination as to whether your unemployment benefits will be affected will be made by the UIA. [Checker’s letter dated September 18, 2009.]

On September 28, 2009, an attorney for the USW sent a letter to the Unemployment Insurance Agency (UIA or the agency) asserting that Checker “does not have the right to allocate

-3- the severance pay.” The USW took the position that the lump sum severance payment could be allocated only to the week the terminated employees received it.

After conducting an inquiry, MCL 421.32a, the agency issued a redetermination regarding claimants’ eligibility for benefits under MCL 421.27(c). Under § 27(c), an “eligible individual shall be paid a weekly benefit rate with respect to the week for which the individual earns or receives no remuneration,” but the benefit is reduced by a percentage of remuneration received. The agency redetermination was based on the severance pay the claimants received, Checker’s allocation, and MCL 421.48(2), which provides in pertinent part:

All amounts paid to a claimant by an employing unit or former employing unit for a vacation or a holiday, and amounts paid in the form of . . . severance payments, salary continuation, or other remuneration intended by the employing unit as continuing wages or other monetary consideration as the result of the separation, . . .

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James T Atchley v. Checker Motors Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-t-atchley-v-checker-motors-corporation-michctapp-2015.