Potts v. REVIEW BD. OF INDIANA, ETC.
This text of 438 N.E.2d 1012 (Potts v. REVIEW BD. OF INDIANA, ETC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Carlton C. POTTS and Donald J. Tendam, Jr., Claimants-Appellants,
v.
REVIEW BOARD OF INDIANA EMPLOYMENT SECURITY DIVISION, William H. Skinner, David L. Adams and Paul M. Hutson, As Members of and As Constituting the Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division, Appellee.
Court of Appeals of Indiana, Fourth District.
*1013 Nora L. Macey, Miles, Segal & Macey, Indianapolis, for claimants-appellants.
Linley E. Pearson, Atty. Gen., Gordon R. Medlicott, Deputy Atty. Gen., Indianapolis, for appellee.
YOUNG, Presiding Judge.
Appellants-claimants Carlton Potts and Donald Tendam appeal a Review Board decision denying them unemployment benefits for the benefit year of April 1981 to April 1982. On appeal, they contend that the decision is contrary to law because the Review Board allocated wage credits for their vacation pay to the week it was paid rather than to the week the vacation occurred.
We reverse and remand.
The facts indicate that both claimants were employed at TRW Ross Gear in Lafayette when they were laid off on April 11, 1980. In that same year Ross Gear closed its plant for vacation purposes during the last week of July and the first week of *1014 August in accordance with a collective bargaining agreement. The employees were required to use their accrued vacation during this closing even though they could take additional accrued vacation at other times upon notice to the company. The collective bargaining agreement also required Ross Gear to disburse all vacation pay in the month of June. Therefore, Ross Gear paid its employees, including those on lay-off status, their vacation pay in June.[1] Both claimants received four weeks vacation pay of approximately nineteen hundred dollars at this time. Subsequent to their lay-off and in the remainder of 1980, claimants received unemployment compensation except for the two-week period the plant closed when the vacation pay was treated as deductible income thereby eliminating them from eligibility for unemployment benefits for those weeks.
In April 1981, the claimants applied for unemployment compensation for their benefit year of April 12, 1981 through April 10, 1982. To determine the claimants' eligibility, the Employment Security Division examined their earnings for their base period[2] of January 1980 to December 1980. The Division credited the claimants' vacation pay to the second quarter[3] of the base period when it was paid rather than the third quarter when the vacation occurred. Accordingly, the claimants did not have the essential nine hundred dollars of wage credits in the third or fourth quarters, and therefore, were found ineligible for benefits in this benefit year under Ind. Code 22-4-14-5.[4]
I.C. XX-X-XX-X[5], in part, requires an individual to have established wage credits of not less than nine hundred dollars in the last two calendar quarters of his base period before he can receive payment of benefits. "Wage credits" are defined as remuneration paid for employment by an employer to an individual in I.C. 22-4-4-3 and remuneration includes vacation pay under I.C. 22-4-4-1. Therefore, claimants must have nine hundred dollars of remuneration paid for employment by the employer to them in the last two quarters of 1980 to qualify for benefits.
*1015 Although claimants remained on lay-off status throughout the remainder of 1980 they contend that they established sufficient remuneration for this period under a proper crediting of their vacation pay. However, they claim the Review Board erroneously credited this vacation pay to the second quarter when it was paid rather than the third quarter when the vacation occurred. The claimants argue that the Review Board's decision to allocate the vacation pay to the quarter in which it was paid is neither mandated by statute nor by regulations. Rather the claimants find the statute to be ambiguous and suggest that it should be construed liberally in a manner which is fair and consistent. Their statutory construction includes reliance on the statutory provisions concerning deductible income[6] which allocates vacation pay, when paid prior to the vacation, prospectively to the week for which it is paid.
Under I.C. XX-X-XX-X wage credits are to be reported by the employer and credited to the individual in the manner prescribed by the board. Thus, the Act indicates that the legislature has given the Indiana Employment Security Board authority to use their expertise and discretion in determining how wage credits are reported and credited.
The board has prescribed that employers file wage reports showing the total remuneration paid for covered employment to each employee in any calendar quarter. 640 I.A.C. 1-1-1. Therefore, wage credits are reported according to the quarter in which they are paid. Under 640 I.A.C. 1-8-1, concerning wages subject to employer contributions, wages are deemed paid when they are either actually or constructively paid.[7] These regulations specifically approach wage credits from the perspective of the employer's duty to report them. The only regulation, however, addressing how wage credits are to be credited to the individual is 640 I.A.C. 1-9-5 which states:
Wages paid subsequent to the last day of an individual's base period shall constitute wage credits for the next succeeding base period; provided, such succeeding base period includes the time or period during which such wages were paid.
These regulations do not specifically address the issue in this case; however, when logically read together, they provide sufficient guidelines to establish that the board has determined that wage credits are to be credited to individuals in the same manner as they are reported by the employer. Thus, wage credits are to be credited when the remuneration is paid.
Claimants contend that this treatment of wage credits by the board is unreasonable and inconsistent with the Act's treatment of vacation pay in view of the deductible income provisions found at I.C. 22-4-5-1 and 2 which allocate the pay forward to the time for which payment is made. This contention advances a claim that the wage credit treatment for employees is out of harmony with the statute and its purposes. Therefore, we must determine whether the board has properly exercised its authority in treating the crediting and reporting of wage credits in the same manner.
Rules and regulations promulgated by administrative boards must be reasonable and reasonably adapted to carry out the purpose or object for which these boards were created. Financial Aid Corporation v. Wallace, (1939) 216 Ind. 114, 23 N.E.2d 472; 125 A.L.R. 736; Indiana Employment Security Division v. Ponder, (1950) 121 Ind. App. 51, 92 N.E.2d 224. Boards cannot enlarge or vary, by the operation of such rules, the powers conferred upon them by the Legislature, or create a rule out of harmony with the statute. Ponder, supra. If the rules are in conflict with the state's organic law, or antagonistic to the general law of the state or "opposed to *1016
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