M. R. Prestridge Lumber Co. v. Employment Security Commission

176 P.2d 190, 50 N.M. 309
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1946
DocketNo. 4890.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 176 P.2d 190 (M. R. Prestridge Lumber Co. v. Employment Security Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. R. Prestridge Lumber Co. v. Employment Security Commission, 176 P.2d 190, 50 N.M. 309 (N.M. 1946).

Opinion

SADLER, Chief Justice.

The petitioner before the District Court of Bernalillo County, the appellant here, complains of a judgment rendered against it, or them (if we think separately of the partners composing the firm), by said court in certiorari proceedings instituted by petitioner to review the action of the respondent, the appellee, in fixing the rate of contribution to be paid by the petitioner for the years 1942 and 1943 to Employment Security Commission of New Mexico under the Unemployment Compensation Law. Article 8, 1941 Comp. (L.1936, Sp. Sess., c. 1, as amended). Certiorari was applied for under 1941 Comp. § 57-806(i), and Supreme Court Rule, § 19-101(81) (c), adopted pursuant thereto. Hereinafter, the respondent, in the interest of brevity, will be referred- to as simply “the Commission.”

As the matter proceeded before the Commission, both the 1942 and the 1943 rates of contribution, as fixed by it, were reviewed and redetermined in an agreed consolidation for all purposes of the two applications for such redetermination filed by the petitioner before the Commission. Following a somewhat lengthy hearing, the Commission made findings of fact as follows:

“1. In 1932 M. R. Prestridge and Carl Seligman formed a partnership composed of themselves as partners, with the firm name and style of ‘B. M. C. Logging Company, the principal business of which was contract logging in the vicinity of Grants, New Mexico. In 1933, by oral agreement subsequently embodied in written articles of partnership dated November 1, 1937, the firm name and style of the partnership was changed to ‘Prestridge and Seligman’, under which name M. R. Prestridge and Carl Seligman continued to conduct a business substantially of the same character, in the same vicinity until about June 1941. The partnership of M. R. Prestridge and Carl Seligman, operating under the name of Prestridge and Seligman, was with respect to the year 1936 and each calendar year thereafter an employer subject to the contributions imposed by the Unemployment Compensation Law of New Mexico and filed reports and paid contributions.
“2. In the year 1939, while operations continued at Grants, ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ under contract with the George E. Breece Lumber Company went to Otero County, New Mexico, and started logging and sawmill operations 'by which they cut timber and sawed the same into rough lumber, and hauled the rough lumber to the Breece Mill at Alamogordo. This operation continued under the name of ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ until about June of 1941. During the last three months of this operation, the lumber was delivered to the mill of the Southwest Lumber Company at Alamogordo.
“3. On March IS, 1940, in order to expand their lumber manufacturing operations, M. R. Prestridge and Carl Seligman executed articles of partnership under which they became the partners under the firm name of ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company.’ This firm purchased the lumber mill and acquired timber rights of the George E. Breece Lumber Company at Alamogordo and on or about February 1, 1941, commenced repairing and renovating the mill for active operation, completing this repair and renovation about June 1, 1941.
“4. On or about June 1, 1941 operations under the name of ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ were discontinued in Otero County, all subsequent operations down to the present being conducted as the ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company.’
“5. On or about June 1, 1941, M. R. Prestridge and Carl Seligman, as a partnership of Prestridge and Seligman, wound up the business at Grants, New Mexico, and also under the contract with the Breece Lumber Company in Otero County as stated above, and at that time the equipment owned by ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ was taken over for the operations of the partnership known as M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company and the employees of the former were transferred to the new operations. The business of ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company’ continued to be the same as that formerly conducted by ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ in Otero County except that rough lumber was now processed into finished lumber in the mill at Alamogordo.
“6. The two enterprises, one conducted at Alamogordo as ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company’ and the other conducted at Grants and Alamogordo as ‘Prestridge and Seligman,’ had the same partners, and for a period of two or three months in the year 1941 both conducted business at the same time, and in the main ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company’ thereafter carried on the business formerly conducted by ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ in Otero County with the exception that they also finished lumber in the mill at Alamogordo as aforesaid.
“7. The enterprise known as the M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company is still being conducted in Otero County, New Mexico, which includes the cutting and felling of timber and the operation of a modern sawmill at Alamogordo, New Mexico.
“8. A contribution account for ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ for liability commencing in 1936 was registered and maintained in that name by the Commission, and reports and contributions were made into, that account for their operations at Grants and also, for the last two calendar quarters of 1940, for their operations at Alamogordo in Otero County. As of January 1, 1941, as a result of inquiry by the Commission as to the change of location and at the request of the employer, a separate contribution account was established in the name of ‘Prestridge and Seligman,’ and reports and contributions for their operations at Alamogordo were made into this account beginning January 1, 1941. Reports and contributions continued to be made during most of 1941 into the earlier account also. At no time during 1941, or before or afterward until this controversy had arisen, was any application made for registration of an account in the name of the ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company/ nor was any notice filed of any change in ownership or organization or legal identity of the employing unit carrying on any of the operations at either place. Shortly after the new operations under the firm name and style of the M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company had commenced, wages for some employment on behalf of ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ were reported together and on the same report and into the same account as wages for employment on behalf of the new enterprise conducted as the M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company. Thereafter all of the wages for employment in the latter enterprise were reported on report forms of the Commission addressed to and in the name of ‘Prestridge and Seligman/ at Alamogordo, the reports being filed and the contributions being paid into this account, the second of the two which the Commission had established for ‘Prestridge and Seligman.’ This continued until after- the beginning of this controversy with respect to the fixing of rates. Arrangements were made with-the Commission by Carl Seligman, at one and the same time in 1942, for the payment or the allowance’ of additional time, in the case of certain contributions due and delinquent with respect to operations of both ‘Prestridge and Seligman’ and operations at Alamogordo conducted as the M. R, Prestridge Lumber Company. The contributions due on the last report for the ‘Grants job’ were paid by check of the ‘M. R. Prestridge Lumber Company/ the check also including contributions for the ‘Alamogordo job.’

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rodman v. New Mexico Employment Security Department
764 P.2d 1316 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1988)
Ribera v. Employment Security Commission
594 P.2d 742 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1979)
Wilson v. Employment Security Commission
389 P.2d 855 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1963)
Parsons v. Employment Security Commission
379 P.2d 57 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1963)
State Ex Rel. Transcontinental Bus Service, Inc. v. Carmody
208 P.2d 1073 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P.2d 190, 50 N.M. 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-r-prestridge-lumber-co-v-employment-security-commission-nm-1946.