Kempf v. Michigan Bell Telephone Co.

358 N.W.2d 378, 137 Mich. App. 574
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 17, 1984
DocketDocket 75060
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 358 N.W.2d 378 (Kempf v. Michigan Bell Telephone Co.) 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
Kempf v. Michigan Bell Telephone Co., 358 N.W.2d 378, 137 Mich. App. 574 (Mich. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

J. B. Sullivan, J.

The subject of this dispute is whether claimant is entitled to unemployment compensation. Respondent has appealed from the circuit court’s order granting plaintiff unemployment compensation and reversing the Michigan Employment Security Commission’s determination. The facts of this case are undisputed and a legal question involving statutory interpretation is presented.

Claimant, Maureen Kempf, became employed by respondent, Michigan Bell Telephone Company, in February of 1968. Due to some health problems claimant was given a medical leave of absence from December 21, 1979, until December 25, 1980, during which time she received sickness disability benefits under Michigan Bell’s employee benefit plan. On December 26, 1980, claimant’s doctor released her to return to work and three days later, on December 29, she was dismissed from her job with termination pay. On the date of her dismissal, December 29, 1980, claimant filed an application for unemployment compensation and preservation of credit weeks. She was denied unemployment compensation because it was determined that she lacked sufficient credit weeks in her base period to establish a benefit year.

In order to establish a benefit year and become eligible for unemployment compensation, one of the requirements is that the claimant have earned *577 a certain number of credit weeks in the 52-week period immediately preceding the filing of an application for benefits. MCL 421.46; MSA 17.550. A credit week is a calendar week in which a person is employed and earns equal to or greater than a specified wage. MCL 421.50; MSA 17.554. There is, however, an exception to the requirement that the credit weeks be derived from the period of 52 weeks immediately preceding the filing of the application for benefits. Section 28a of the statute provides for preservation of unused credit weeks during periods of continuous involuntary disability. MCL 421.28a; MSA 17.530(1). Two subsections of § 28a provide for this, but each addresses a different set of circumstances. Subsection (1) allows for preservation of credit weeks where an individual establishes a benefit year and receives unemployment compensation for a while, and subsequently becomes disabled. Upon becoming disabled the individual is no longer able to collect benefits because he is no longer able to fulfill the requirement of having the ability and availability to perform full-time work. MCL 421.28; MSA 17.530. During his period of disability the individual, although he cannot collect unemployment compensation, may preserve his unused credit weeks and carry them over to the period when he becomes once again able to work and collect against them then.

So too subsection 6 of § 28a allows for preservation of credit weeks but under different circumstances: It provides as follows:

"(6) An unemployed individual who has been unable to establish a benefit year solely due to a period of continuous disability may preserve all credit weeks earned by the individual in the 52 week period preceding the individual’s first week of unemployment, as *578 defined in section 48, caused by the disability. However, credit weeks may be preserved if the commission receives a written request and a physician’s statement, as described in subsection (1) and (2) within 45 days after the commencement of the unemployment, or if the individual is unable to submit the written statement and request due to a medical inability, within 45 days after the end of that medical inability. The individual’s benefit year shall begin the first week the individual was both unemployed and disabled, and the benefit year shall be extended pursuant to subsection (4).” MCL 421.28a(6); MSA 17.530(1)(6).

This subsection addresses a situation where solely due to a period of continuous disability a person is unable, at the time of applying for benefits, to establish a benefit year. One clear example of this is when a person loses his job because he becomes disabled, rather than first losing his job, collecting unemployment compensation, and then suffering a disability. Immediately upon losing his job this person cannot establish a benefit year and receive unemployment compensation because he is not able and available for full-time work due to his disability; however, pursuant to this subsection he may preserve his credit weeks earned in the 52-week period preceding his job loss and disability and carry them over and collect against them when his disability is terminated, if he is unemployed at that time.

The issue in the instant case is whether claimant’s situation also falls within the purview of subsection 6, thereby entitling her to preserve her credit weeks. As required by subsection 6, claimant was unable to establish a benefit year solely due to a period of continuous disability. The instant factual situation, however, differs from the above example because in the above example the reason that an individual is not able to establish a *579 benefit year due to his disability is because at the time he applies for benefits his disability prevents him from being able and available for full-time work. In the instant case when claimant applied for benefits her disability had terminated and she was able and available to perform full-time work. However, her disability was still the sole reason she was prevented from establishing a benefit year; her disability had prevented her from earning any credit weeks in the 52-week period immediately preceding her application for benefits.

Respondent argues that claimant’s situation does not fall within the purview of subsection 6 and that the language of the provision makes clear the Legislature’s intent not to allow individuals in claimant’s situation to preserve their credit weeks. More specifically, respondent argues that subsection 6 allows for preservation of credit weeks earned only in the 52-week period immediately preceding "unemployment, as defined in section 48, caused by the disability”. Respondent argues that claimant was not unemployed during her disability leave and, therefore, cannot preserve the credit weeks earned in the 52-week period preceding her disability, which is what claimant seeks to do.

Whether or not claimant may be deemed to be unemployed during her disability leave, for purposes of subsection 6, depends upon the definition that is given to the terms "unemployed” and "unemployment” as used in this subsection. If claimant is deemed to be unemployed during her medical leave of absence she will be entitled to preserve the credit weeks earned in the 52-week period immediately preceding her disability and leave of absence which began on December 21, 1979. If, however, she is deemed to be unemployed *580 only after she lost her job and after her medical leave terminated she would only be entitled to preserve credit weeks earned in the 52-week period immediately preceding her job loss on December 29, 1980. Since claimant did not earn any credit weeks in the 52 weeks immediately prior to December 29, 1980 because she was disabled, she would have no credit weeks to preserve and could not collect unemployment compensation. Therefore, claimant may prevail only if she is deemed to be unemployed during her medical leave.

Section 48 of the statute pertinently provides:

"Sec. 48.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
358 N.W.2d 378, 137 Mich. App. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kempf-v-michigan-bell-telephone-co-michctapp-1984.