Northrop Aircraft, Inc. v. California Employment Stabilization Commission

198 P.2d 898, 32 Cal. 2d 872, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 271
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1948
DocketL. A. 20298
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 198 P.2d 898 (Northrop Aircraft, Inc. v. California Employment Stabilization Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northrop Aircraft, Inc. v. California Employment Stabilization Commission, 198 P.2d 898, 32 Cal. 2d 872, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 271 (Cal. 1948).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant commission from a judgment for the plaintiff in an action to recover the amount of an additional employer’s tax for 1943 purportedly assessed pursuant to the Unemployment Insurance Act (formerly Unemployment Act, Stats. 1935, p. 1226, as amended, 3 Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 8780d), and paid by the plaintiff under protest. The controversy presents the question of the power of the commission to make the additional assessment.

The case was tried on stipulated facts which were adopted as the findings of the court. For an understanding of the relevancy of the facts, it is deemed necessary to review briefly some of the provisions of the act in effect at the time involved.

Section 1 declares the state policy underlying the legislative enactment for a compulsory accumulation of funds to be used for a system of unemployment insurance. Section 2 states that the enactment is part of a national plan of unemployment reserves and social security without which the state system is not to function.

“Employment” is service performed for wages or under a contract of hire. (§6.5.)

By section 9(a) “employer” means an employing unit which in each of 20 weeks of the current calendar year has four or more individuals in employment. An “employing *874 unit” (§9(e)) is an individual or organization employing subsequent to January 1, 1936, one or more persons. Section 9.5 provides that an employing unit which becomes an employer subject to the act within any calendar year shall be subject to the act during the whole of that calendar year.

Section 37 requires contributions by every employer for each calendar year in which he is subject to the act. For the year 1938 and thereafter the rate of contribution is specified to be 2.70 per cent of all wages with respect to which contributions become due and payable for employment subject to the act (§ 38), but by section 39(c) after December 31, 1940, a minimum of 1 per cent may be contributed by an employer whose separate account (see §§ 40, 41) has been subject to benefit charges during the period of 12 complete consecutive calendar quarters ending on the computation date for the rating period and his net balance of reserve is 11 per cent or more of his average base payroll.

Section 41.1(a) requires the commission annually to furnish each employer with an itemized statement showing the charges and credits to his account, the net balance of his reserve, and his contribution rate for the next succeeding rating period. For our purposes the computation date is June 30th for the purpose of establishing the contribution rate for the next succeeding calendar year (§ 42(a) (4)) and the rating period is the full calendar year next succeeding that computation date (§ 42(b) (4)).

The plaintiff, Northrop Aircraft, Inc., was incorporated in this state on March 7, 1939. Prior to July 29, 1939, it had several unpaid officers, and one employed person to whom on August 1, 1939, it paid salary accrued for services rendered during the preceding May and June. Beginning on July 29, four officers and two additional employees were paid. These facts were communicated to the commission by letter, and on November 21, 1939, the plaintiff was advised that it qualified as a subject employer on December 16, 1939, and that it would be liable for contribution on total 1939 payrolls at the employer rate of 2.7 per cent. Therefore commencing not later than July 29, 1939, the plaintiff had in its employ one or more individuals performing services for wages (employing unit), and prior to December 17, 1939, had in employment four or more individuals performing services for wages in each of 20 different weeks during the calendar year 1939. The plaintiff remained a subject employer under the act.

*875 On March 27, 1943, the plaintiff received a notice dated March 26, 1943, of employer’s contribution rate for th.e rating period January 1, 1943, to December 31, 1943, showing the figures of charges, credits, average base payroll, and net balance of reserve, and ratio requiring a specified contribution rate of 1 per cent.

By section 41.1(b) of the act the employer had 60 days after the date of mailing of such notice within which to protest any of the items shown on the statement. No protest was filed by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff filed reports and made the contributions for the first three quarters of 1943 at the specified rate of 1 per cent. No further action was taken by the commission until December 29, 1943, when it issued an amended notice of employer’s contribution rate for the calendar year 1943 specifying a change in ratio calling for an increase of the rate from 1 per cent to 2.7 per cent, and a notice dated December 28, 1943, of additional contributions totaling $312,896.62 due for the first three quarters. These notices were mailed to the plaintiff with an explanatory letter dated December 30, 1943, and were received by the plaintiff on January 3, 1944.

The plaintiff protested the foregoing action of the commission. Its protest and objections were argued but were ineffectual. On March 31, 1944, the plaintiff paid under protest the sum of $398,133.50, representing the excess of contributions for 1943 over the 1 per cent rate. This action for refund was filed within the 60-day limitation specified in section 45.10 of the act.

Neither the plaintiff nor the commission contest the accuracy of any of the items in the statements or notices of employer’s contribution rate for 1943 except the items of ratio and rate of contribution. Nor is there any question of the qualification of the plaintiff for the 1 per cent rate for 1943 except in the matter of the initial date of employer subjectivity. The stipulation of facts conceded that the plaintiff became a subject employer and remained so after the initial date of subjectivity, but there was no agreement as to that date. On the agreed facts with reference to employment the trial court concluded that the correct opening date of subject status under the act was July 31, 1939. It was agreed, however, that all the facts bearing on the plaintiff’s subject status were communicated to the commission prior to any related action by it. The court adopted the commission’s view that *876 its first action in 1943 specifying the ratio calling for the 1 per cent contribution rate was erroneously based on the assumption that the plaintiff’s reserve account had been subject to benefit charges during 12 complete consecutive calendar quarters ending on June 30, 1942 (the computation date for the 1943 rating period). Translated, this assertion means that the commission should have taken July 31, 1939, as the date of initial subject status, in which event the period preceding the computation date for the 1943 rating period would lack one month of comprising the required 12 complete consecutive quarters. In the explanatory letter of December 30, 1943, addressed to the plaintiff, the commission admitted that it had all the necessary information from which to find the correct opening date, which in September, 1939, was determined to be July 31, 1939.

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198 P.2d 898, 32 Cal. 2d 872, 1948 Cal. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northrop-aircraft-inc-v-california-employment-stabilization-commission-cal-1948.