Rivard v. Bijou Furniture Co.

27 A.2d 853, 68 R.I. 358, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 31, 1942
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 A.2d 853 (Rivard v. Bijou Furniture Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rivard v. Bijou Furniture Co., 27 A.2d 853, 68 R.I. 358, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 82 (R.I. 1942).

Opinion

*359 Condon, J.

After the filing of our opinion in this cause on July 23, 1941, (21 A 2d. 563) 67 R. I. 251, the United States moved for a reargument, which was granted on October 23, .1941. At the reargument the United States was restricted in its argument to two grounds: (1) That the opinion of this court failed to dispose of the claim of the United States for capital stock taxes in the amount of $3.30; and (2) that the opinion erroneously treated the claim of the United States for taxes under Title VIII of the social security act as a claim under Title IX of that act.

We shall consider these grounds in that order. We think the matter of the payment of the capital stock taxes was at least impliedly considered in our former opinion. It was held therein that, by virtue of § 3466 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, taxes due to the United States were entitled to priority over all taxes due to the state of Rhode Island, excepting, however, such taxes as were due under the provisions of the state unemployment compensation act, which act was enacted pursuant to the provisions of Title IX of the social security act. We held, in effect, that the latter taxes were entitled to be considered of equal rank with the taxes due the United States under Title VIII of that act in providing the revenues necessary to carry out the policy of the act as declared by congress. ’

We further held, however, that the employee contributions, both under Title VIII and under the state unemployment compensation act, stood in a special relation to all other taxes, because of the manner in which they were required to be paid, that is, withheld by the employer. For this reason we felt that such contributions, by force of the respective statutes, constituted special trust funds, and that the claim of the United States under Title VIII and the claim of the state of .Rhode Island under the state unemployment compensation act for such contributions ought to be paid in full before other taxes.

We then said that the employer contributions under each act should-be paid pro rata from whatever balance was left *360 in the hands of the receiver. Of course we did not intend thereby to hold'that the payment of the capital stock taxes due the United States was to be postponed. On the contrary, we intended to go no further than to hold that the employer contributions under the state unemployment compensation act were entitled to equal consideration with all federal taxes notwithstanding R. S. § 3466.

Under the second ground of its motion, the United States contends that we assumed in our former opinion that its claim for taxes under the social security act arose under Title IX thereof. This is a misconception. What we said was that, although the claim of the United States under Title VIII and the claim of the state of Rhode Island under the state unemployment compensation act, “arise under different statutes, yet, in so far as the two statutes deal with the common subject of unemployment compensation, they are interlocking statutes, closely interrelated and dependent on each other to effectuate a common purpose.” This statement, read in its context in our former opinion, does not mean what has been urged above by the United States. In any event, it was not so intended.

Perhaps a little amplification may make our meaning clearer. We take the view that the state unemployment compensation act, which was enacted by Rhode Island pursuant to the provisions of Title IX of the social security act, is, in effect, an integral part of that title. As such, its revenue provisions for carrying out its purposes were, in our opinion, intended by congress to be on a par with the revenue provisions of the social security act. In that act congress was legislating in furtherance of a general policy expressly declared in the act. That policy was the safeguarding of the economic security of the masses of the people who were dependent upon the continuance of regular, gainful employment for their livelihood.

Both Title VIII and Title IX were designed to effectuate that policy. Each is predicated upon the importance of constant mass employment and the necessity for meeting the *361 shocks of cyclical mass unemployment and of recurring periods of individual unemployment, terminating finally, in the individual, in a supposed superannuation or ultimate unemployability. Title VIII looks to the future and seeks to afford the worker security when that ultimate unemployability stage has been reached. Title IX, on the other hand, is designed to operate more largely in the present by provid- , ing a pool by means of which not only the individual worker may be tided over periods of individual unemployment but also by means of which the country as a whole may be saved from the severe economic shocks of cyclical periods of mass unemployment.

The revenues necessary to provide the means for effectuating these ends are derived from the application of similar revenue-raising methods under each title, the only difference being that the United States has, itself, undertaken exclusively the carrying out of the objects of Title VIII, whereas it has left the carrying out of the objects of Title IX to the states acting in conjunction with the United States and has sought therein to induce the states to co-operate in the work. Under Title IX the United States levies a tax on employers in every state, but if the employer’s state has enacted an unemployment compensation act in accordance with the conditions set out in that title, the employer is granted a credit of 90% of such tax. In this way congress seeks to invite the co-operation of . the several states with the United States in effectuating this part of the national policy of the social security act. It was because of this cooperative feature of the act that the United States Supreme Court could say, as it did in Steward Machine Co. v. Davis, 301 U. S. 548, that the needs of the federal treasury could be cared for as well by payment of unemployment compensation contributions to the states as by payment of taxes to the United States.

But the United States further contended on the reargument that such a view was erroneous as it raises by implication an exception to the explicit,provisions of R. S. § 3466 *362 which congress did not reasonably intend. In support of this contention, it is urged that the supreme court has recently decided a case which indicates a contrary view to the one we hold. United States v. New York, No. 238, October Term, 1941, filed March 2, 1942. We have carefully read that case, and, in our opinion, it does not touch upon the precise question here. Moreover, far from being of assistance to the United States in the contention which it makes here, the court seems to entertain a view of the scope and purpose of Title IX that is not unlike what we hold. Thus on page 5, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Byrnes, says: “Either the state or the federal government must provide the money to meet the requirements of relief to the unemployed. By his contributions to the state, an employer has. diminished the demand upon the

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Bluebook (online)
27 A.2d 853, 68 R.I. 358, 1942 R.I. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivard-v-bijou-furniture-co-ri-1942.