Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Tomko

65 S.E.2d 524, 192 Va. 463
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 18, 1951
DocketRecord 3784, 3805, 3827, 3834
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 65 S.E.2d 524 (Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Tomko) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unemployment Compensation Commission v. Tomko, 65 S.E.2d 524, 192 Va. 463 (Va. 1951).

Opinion

Eggleston, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Approximately one thousand unemployed miners filed with the Unemployment Compensation Commission their respective claims for benefits under the Virginia Unemployment Compensation Act (Code, § 60-1 ff.). Upon a hearing, after due notice to all claimants and their respective last employers, the Commission denied all of the claims except those of two individuals who had been employed on a part-time basis at the Consumers Mining Corporation in Tazewell county. The rights of these two claimants are not involved on the present appeal.

From this decision the other claimants who had been last employed at mines located in the counties of Tazewell, Wise, Dickenson, Russell and Buchanan, filed appeals in the respective circuit courts of these counties under the provisions of Code, § 60-55.

The Circuit Court of Tazewell county affirmed the decision of the Commission and from that action no appeal to this court has been taken.

The Circuit Courts of Wise, Dickenson and Russell counties entered decrees reversing the orders of the Commission and *466 holding that the several claimants who had invoked the jurisdiction of these respective courts were entitled to recover the benefits sought. We granted appeals in each of these cases to the Commission. (Record Nos. 3784, 3827, 3805.)

The Circuit Court of Buchanan county entered a decree affirming the order of the Commission denying the claims asserted in that court, and we granted an appeal in that case to the claimants. (Record No. 3834.)

The sole question presented to us is whether the evidence with respect to the several claims asserted in the four cases sustains the finding of the Commission that these claimants are not entitled to unemployment benefits under the statute.

A fair summary of the evidence is as follows: On June 25, 1948, the International Union, United Mine Workers of America, of which the claimants are members, entered into an agreement with the operators of the mines with respect to the wages and working conditions of the member' miners. By its terms this agreement expired at midnight on June 30, 1949, and prior thereto the parties, through their representatives, began negotiations for a new contract. These efforts were unsuccessful and on June 30, 1949, the Union, acting through John L. Lewis, its president, and other officers, issued a directive or proclamation requiring all members of the Union to return to work on July 5, 1949 (that being the end of the vacation period as fixed in the previous agreement), and thereafter, until further notice, to work only three days a week, under the same terms, wages, hours and conditions of employment as provided for in the previous agreement between the Union and the operators of the mines.

This directive remained in effect from its issuance until March 6, 1950, when the representatives of the Union and the mine operators executed a new agreement. The Commission found as a fact that while the directive was in effect the claimants were willing to work in the production of coal only-three days a week.

None of the operators involved in this proceeding consented to the directive, although some of them, having no alternative, accepted the work of the men for the limited number of days per week.

There is no dispute as to the fact that each of the claimants now before us was unemployed at the time his claim was filed and at the time of the hearing before the Commission. "While *467 the Commission held that the unemployment of certain other claimants was brought about by the directive, which disqualified them under Code, § 60-47(d), from receiving unemployment benefits, this was not true as to any of the particular claimants now before us. It is conceded that the claimants with whose rights we are now concerned were out of work because of economic causes for which they were not responsible, such as a lack of demand for coal, a curtailment of operations, or a closing of the mines. Indeed, the evidence shows that some of the mines involved had shut down or were operating for a limited time only, before the issuance of the directive.

The Commission based its denial of the claims on the ground that since claimants, in obedience to the directive, were willing to accept work for only a restricted period of three days a week, instead of for the full number of days a week which was usual and customary in their occupation of producing coal, they were not “available for work” and hence were not “eligible to receive benefits ’ ’ under Code, § 60-46.

In their written opinions the Circuit Courts of Wise and Dickenson counties based their conclusion that the claimants were entitled to benefits on the ground that their unemployment was not due to the fact that they were not “available for work,” but to the fact that there was no work available' for them in their usual occupation. The Circuit Court of Bussell county filed no written opinion, but it is agreed that that court reached the same conclusion by a like reasoning.

This is not, in our opinion, a proper conception of the vital section of the Act here involved. Code, § 60-46, which is entitled “Benefit eligibility conditions,” provides that “An unemployed individual shall be eligible to receive benefits with respect to any week only if the Commission finds” that certain specified conditions have been satisfied. Among these is the condition that the unemployed individual “is available for work.”

As used in the statute, the words “available for work” imply that in order that an unemployed individual may be “eligible to receive benefits” he must be willing to accept any suitable work which may be offered to him, without attaching thereto restrictions or conditions not usual and customary in that occupation but which he may desire because of his particular needs or circumstances. Stated conversely, if he is unwilling to accept work in his usual occupation for the usual and customary *468 number of days or hours, or under the usual and customary conditions at or under which the trade works, or if he restricts his offer or willingness to work to periods or conditions to fit his particular needs or circumstances, then he is not available for work within the meaning of. the statute.

The courts have universally held that a claimant who undertakes to limit or restrict his willingness to work to certain hours, types of work, or conditions, not usual and customary in the trade, is not “available for work.”

In Ford Motor Co. v. Appeal Board, 316 Mich. 468, 25 N. W. (2d) 586, it was held that a claimant who restricted her availability for employment to the afternoon shift in order that she might care for her two children earlier during the day, was not “available for work” so as to be eligible for unemployment compensation benefits. Other cases of like import are referred to in that opinion. See also, Corrado v. Director of Division of Unemployment, 325 Mass. 711, 92 N. E. (2d) 379; Valenti v. Board of Review, 4 N. J. 287, 72 A. (2d) 516; Mills v. South Carolina Unemployment Compensation Comm., 204 S. C.

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65 S.E.2d 524, 192 Va. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unemployment-compensation-commission-v-tomko-va-1951.