Nelson v. Van Horn Construction Co.

102 N.E.2d 57, 62 Ohio Law. Abs. 160, 45 Ohio Op. 378, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 399
CourtTrumbull County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 9, 1951
DocketNo. 59110
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 102 N.E.2d 57 (Nelson v. Van Horn Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Van Horn Construction Co., 102 N.E.2d 57, 62 Ohio Law. Abs. 160, 45 Ohio Op. 378, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 399 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By THOMAS, J.

Plaintiff appeals from an adverse ruling of the Board of Review of the Ohio State Bureau of Unemployment Compensa[162]*162tion (herein called the Bureau), which held that he had not established his eligibility for unemployment compensation benefits and denied him the right to receive benefits for the week ending January 28, 1950.

Plaintiff is 58 years old, has a family, and is classified as a laborer.

Prior to being laid off because of lack of work he worked for the Van Horn Construction Company of Youngstown, Ohio, as a plasterer’s helper. For four or five years he had worked at the same line of work.

He journeyed to Louisiana in the latter part of July, 1950, and remainder until a week after Christmas when he returned to Warren.

In dispute are his efforts to obtain employment on and about January 23, 1950, when he applied to the Warren office of the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation. The evidence concerning this disputed period will presently be considered.

On February 8, 1950 a person connected with the Warren office of the Bureau took a statement from the plaintiff which the plaintiff signed.

It read: “I was L. O. L. W. from Van Horn plaster contractor on 7-13-49. I have not worked since 7-13-49 and have been looking for work — unable to get work.

I have made the following contacts for work in the last four weeks. Union Hall (every day). This is the only contact I make.

The above statement has been read to me and is true and correct.”

February 8, 1950 the administrator disallowed the plaintiff’s claim for benefits for the week ending January 27, 1950.

It found that “claimant’s only contact for work in the last four weeks has been in the Union Hall” and decided that:

“Claimant is not actively seeking work. Benefit rights shall be suspended as of January 22, 1950 in accordance with §1345-6-2 (4) of the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Act. Benefit rights shall remain suspended until Claimant re-establishes eligibility by actively seeking work on his own initiative.”

The plaintiff, on February 10, 1950, appealed from the administrator’s decision and stated on his notice of appeal that:

“I am actively seeking work and will name the contact I have made at the hearing.”

His appeal was heard on March 21, 1950, before a Referee who affirmed the administrator’s decision on April 17, 1950. A memorandum testimony was made by this Referee but no stenographic record was taken.

[163]*163Application for leave to institute a further appeal from the decision of Referee was granted by the Board of Review and oral testimony was taken before a Referee on June 22, 1950. A stenographic transcript of the testimony is filed with this appeal.

On August 18, 1950 the Board affirmed the decision of the Referee of April .17, 1950. The Board’s reasoning in support of its decision, is here given:

“The statement given by claimant on February 1, 1950, and his testimony before the Referee on March 21, 1950, also the testimony of his witness shows that up to February 13, 1950, Claimant has not contacted any prospective employers in regards to finding employment except to report to his Union Labor Hall and at the Local Office on his claim.”

“Claimant having only reported to his Union Labor Hall could not say as of January 22, 1950, the date of the beginning of his benefit year, that he was available for suitable work and was actively seeking such work. Therefore, he has failed to meet the requirements of the above quoted law. (The Board had previously quoted §1345-6-a (4).

As amended, effective October 18, 1949, §1345-6-a (4), with the introductory sentence of §1345-6-a reads—

“No individual shall be entitled to waiting period or benefits for any week unless he or she (4) is able to work and available for suitable work and is actively seeking such work, either at a locality in which he has earned wages subject to the unemployment compensation act during his base period or at a locality where such work is normally performed; And”

It is essential to a determination of the questions raised on this appeal to ascertain the meaning of this fourth eligibility condition for unemployment compensation benefit rights.

. In the recent case of Shannon v. Bureau, 155 Oh St, 53, 44 O. O. 75 the Supreme Court considered the claim of a waitress whose efforts in seeking employment were limited to registering at the local employment office at the Ohio State Employment Service.

This claim accrued before §1345-6-a (4) as amended, became effective, but the Supreme Court decided the case after the effective date. The court’s reference to the present language is quite important.

After referring to the amendment of October 18th, 1949 in which reference the court significantly italicized “actively seeking such work” the court went on to say:

“If the present case had arisen after the amendment of the Statute, it could not have been argued that registration alone qualified the Claimant as being available. This amend[164]*164ment, we believe, merely clarifies and does not change the meaning of the word “available” as it appeared in the Statute previous to the amendment.”

From this language it is concluded that the general test adopted in the Shannon case for determining availability is deemed, by the court, to be equally applicable to §1345-6-a (4) as presently worded. This is the general test.

To be available for suitable work and to actively seek such work “the Claimant must act in good faith and make reasonable effort to find suitable employment. Mere registration and weekly reporting, without such reasonable effort, does not satisfy the requirement of the Statute in question and does not make the Claimant ‘available.’ ”

A sensible definition of the term “actively seeking work,” consistent with the Shannon ruling, is the one given by The Missouri Industrial Commission, February 3, 1949. C. C. H. paragraph 8150 p. 28,629.

“The ‘actively seeking work’ proviso of the law has no fixed or defined meaning. It is subject to interpretation in the light of the facts- of each particular case. This proviso is merely a guide provided by the Legislature to test a Claimant’s willingness to work. What constitues an active search for' work in one case may be totally inadequate in another case and vice versa. The true test is: Does a Claimant sincerely want work and has he acted in a reasonable way under his circumstances in trying to relieve his unemployment.”

It is interesting to note that a similar “willingness to work” test was adopted in connection with an analogous condition of the British Unemployment Insurance Law which required the Claimant to be “genuinely seeking work.”

A recognized Umpire’s decision (Final Report Royal Commission on Unemployment Insurance, 1932, page 323) thus defined the meaning of “genuinely seeking work.”

“In considering whether a person is genuinely seeking work the most important fact to be ascertained is the state of the applicant’s mind. If a person genuinely wants work, i. e. really prefers working for wages to living on benefit, it is probable that she is genuinely seeking it.

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E.2d 57, 62 Ohio Law. Abs. 160, 45 Ohio Op. 378, 1951 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-van-horn-construction-co-ohctcompltrumbu-1951.