Parker v. Unemployment Compensation Commission

214 S.W.2d 529, 358 Mo. 365, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 587
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 8, 1948
DocketNo. 40786.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 214 S.W.2d 529 (Parker v. Unemployment Compensation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 214 S.W.2d 529, 358 Mo. 365, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 587 (Mo. 1948).

Opinion

*366 [530]

DOUGLAS, P. J.

This is an appeal from a decision of tbe Unemployment Compensation Commission denying compensation to plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s claim alleges that she was eligible under the Unemployment Compensation Law to receive compensation. Her claim was denied on the ground she “was not available for work” as required by the law to establish eligibility for compensation. She duly took all the various steps for an appeal to the Unemployment Compensation Commission which also found her not available for the work and ineligible for compensation. Plaintiff then filed this action in the circuit court to review the finding of the commission which is the means for judicial review prescribed by the law.

This action was filed on the 6th day of April, 1946 naming the individual members of the commission as parties defendant. Thereafter the commission was abolished in a reorganization of the executive department of the state government, and Honorable Michael J. Carroll, director of the new Division of Employment Security, the successor to the Unemployment Compensation Commission, entered his appearance as a party defendant. He adopted the pleadings of the defendant members of the commission as his own pleadings. The circuit court reversed the decision • of the commission, and found plaintiff xvas eligible for compensation. Carroll has appealed to this court.

[531] We shall first consider whether this case comes within the scope of our appellate jurisdiction as limited by the Constitution. Because of the recent amendments to the Unemployment Compensation Law and the new act substituting the Division of Employment Security for the Unemployment Compensation Commission, which were passed to carry into effect the reorganization of the executive department required by the Constitution of 1945, we of our own accord at the time the case was submitted questioned the statement that we had jurisdiction rather than the Kansas City Court of Appeals. Of course, if Carroll in his capacity as Director of the Division of Employment Security is the proper party defendant in a proceeding such as this, jurisdiction lies in this court because as such director he is a state officer. We have exclusive appellate jurisdiction in all civil cases where a state officer as such is a party. Const. 1945, Art. Y, Sec. 3.

We have consistently held prior to the recent changes and amendments to the Unemployment Compensation Law that we had exclusive appellate jurisdiction in cases arising under that law. The reason for the ruling was that the three individual members of the commission in their own names were the necessary parties to bring suit on behalf of the commission. This authority of the commissioners was found in a provision of the law which authorized actions for the *367 collection of delinquent contributions to be brought “in the name of the three commissioners administering this act as members of the commission.” See Laws 1939, 1. c. 922, Sec. 15(h). Since the individual members of the commission were state officers and proper parties to such actions we ruled we had appellate jurisdiction of such actions. Murphy v. Hurlbut Undertaking and Embalming Co., 346 Mo. 405, 142.S. W. (2d) 449. ¥e followed this ruling in Meyer & Co. v. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 348 Mo. 147, 152 S. W. (2d) 184, although the individual members of the commission were not named as parties. We considered the question of our jurisdiction again in Trianon Hotel Co. v. Keitel, 350 Mo. 1041, 169 S. W. (2d) 891 where we confirmed our previous rulings. However, we observed in the Trianon Hotel ease that the fact that the members of the Unemployment Compensation Commission were state officers was not of itself determinative of the question of our jurisdiction. The basic factor which decided that question was that the commission appeared in court by the individual members — the members themselves were parties to the actions, not the commission. We found that the commission was not a legal entity, not a quasi public corporation with authority to sue and be sued in its official name. We pointed out that the members of the Public Service Commission, of the State Highway Commission, of the Social Security Commission were all ..state officers but as such the members were not parties to actions brought by or against their respective commissions because the commissions were legal entities, public quasi corporations.

Now the question arises -whether the recent changes and amendments to the laws relating to unemployment compensation indicate that the legislature intended to make the Division of Employment Security a legal entity so that it may now sue and be sued in its official name.

The change in the administration of unemployment compensation -was made, as we have pointed out, in pursuance to a reorganization of the executive department called for by the Constitution of 1945. Article IY, Section 12 defined the composition of the new executive department. In addition to the governor and other state officials it named the departments, of revenue, education, highways, conservation and agriculture. Then it provided for the establishment”of not more than five additional departments, and, of particular interest here, for the assignment of all boards, bureaus, commissions and agencies to appropriate departments. In conformity with this provision the legislature created a new department, the Department of Labor and Industrial Relations, under the supervision and control of a commission designated as the Industrial Commission of Missouri. Laws 1945, p. 1101- secs. 10160.1-10160.12 RSA. It created four divisions within the new department and assigned the administration *368 of the Unemployment Compensation [532] Law to one of the divisions entitled the “Division of Employment Security.” The division was placed under the control and supervision of a director, appointed by the governor. The director was vested with the powers and responsibilities and impressed with the duties placed on him by the Unemployment Compensation Law.

Thus we have the Division of Employment Security under a director succeeding the Unemploment Compensation Commission under three commissioners. Laws 1945, p. 1731; sec. 9424 A, USA. The division was substituted for the old commission throughout the Unemployment Compensation Law. For example we find: “It shall be the duty of the division to administer this law; . . . ” After placing the division under the control of a director with power to' employ assistants and prescribe their duties, the law makes no further mention of the director except in one qualified instance which we will consider presently. All-references are to the division. Rights, duties and responsibilities are all conferred on the division.

There is no provision to be found in the law which gives the division the usual specific authority to sue and be sued in its official name, nor does the law authorize it to have an official seal as it formerly did the commission. However from the powers granted the division and the attributes conferred upon it ordinarily attached to a legal entity, it is our conclusion that the legislature has made the» division a definite legal entity with rights and powers of a public quasi corporation.

Of compelling significance leading to this conclusion are the provisions which give the division authority to be a party to actions in court in its own name.

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Bluebook (online)
214 S.W.2d 529, 358 Mo. 365, 1948 Mo. LEXIS 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-unemployment-compensation-commission-mo-1948.