Winchester Repeating Arms Company v. Radcliffe

15 Conn. Super. Ct. 62, 15 Conn. Supp. 62, 1947 Conn. Super. LEXIS 49
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 15, 1947
DocketFile 69407
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Conn. Super. Ct. 62 (Winchester Repeating Arms Company v. Radcliffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winchester Repeating Arms Company v. Radcliffe, 15 Conn. Super. Ct. 62, 15 Conn. Supp. 62, 1947 Conn. Super. LEXIS 49 (Colo. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

ROBERTS, J.

This decision is upon respondent’s motion, filed in the Superior Court on April 7, 1947, to dismiss the appeal of Winchester Repeating Arms Company.

The following are facts found from ithe record of the proceedings before the commissioners and the stipulation on file in this court, and a summary of the proceedings from the time of the examiner’s decision to the filing of the stipulation in this court.

The respondent-claimant, William Radcliffe, was employed by the appellant, Winchester Repeating Arms Company, for a time prior to September 21, 1946. The last day of employment of respondent-claimant by the appellant was on September 21,1946. On October 20, 1946, the respondent-claimant filed an additional claim for unemployment benefits, pursuant *63 to statute. On November 26, 1946, the administrator, by Morris E. Tonpen, special review unit, a representative designated by the administrator and referred to as an examiner, approved the claim for unemployment benefits of the respondent-claimant for the period following October 20, 1946, on the ground that his unemployment on and after October 20, 1946, was due to a lockout not resulting from the demands of the employees.. On said November 26, 1946, the Winchester Repeating Arms Company was notified by letter of this decision, and said letter also contained the following: “This decision shall be final and benefits shall be paid accordingly on any subsequent compensable claims unless you shall within seven(7) days after the date of this notification, file an appeal with 'the Unemployment Compensation Department and apply for a hearing before an Unemployment Com-mssioner.” On November 27, 1946, within seven days after the notification of said decision, Winchester Repeating Arms Company by D. K. Wil'lers, assistant personnel superintendent, filed an appeal from the decision of the examiner and requested a hearing before the commissioner and among the claims that the award was illegal was one that the employee participated in a sit down strike. Said appeal was received on December 2, 1946, by 'the appeals commissioner for the ¡third congressional district. The record as certified to this court by the commissioners on this appeal also contains a decision of the administrator dated December 6, 1946, relating to claims of employees of the appelant other than the named respondent-claimant, and also an appeal therefrom by the Winchester Repeating Arms Company to the commissioner. On December 2, 1946, the respondent-claimant and the other claimants, by their attorney, made a motion to dismiss the appeals of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. Whereupon said motion to dismiss said appeals of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company came on for a hearing before commissioners Ernest B. Partridge, Carl A. Lundgren and Robert J. Stack, at which hearing testimony was presented and arguments made in behalf of the claimants and the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. On February 17, 1947, the commissioners filed their decision, wherein the motion to dismiss said appeals was granted. On February 28, 1947, the Winchester Repeating Arms Company, by its attorneys, filed a petition and appeal from the finding and decision of said unemployment compensation commissioners to this court with the appeals commissioner of the third congressional district, and said peti *64 tion and appeal was filed in this court on March 3, 1947. On April, 7, % 1947, the respondent-claimant, by his attorney, filed in 'this court a motion to dismiss said appeal, as on file.

Pursuant to motion, this court on April 11, 1947, entered an order wherein cases numbers 69366 to 69406 inclusive, and 69408 to 69409, are consolidated 'into the above entitled action number 69407, entitled Winchester Repeating Arms Company v. William Radcliffe, wherein the issues in all of said cases are to be heard and decided in and as case number 69407. On May 9, 1947, the parties in this action filed a stipulation, as on file, and among other provisions thereof, the appellant admits “that any award of benefits to these claimants for the period here in issue would not affect its merit rating account.”

The question before this court narrows itself, under the above motion to dismiss the appeal, to the question whether or not the Winchester Repeating Arms Company has a right to appeal to this court under (he statutes of Connecticut now in effect.

The determination of this question, even though it is conceded by 'the appellant that any award of benefits to these claimants for the period here in issue would not affeot its merit rating account, requires a brief review of the statutes affecting this issue.

Section 1337e(c), Cum. Sup. 1939, reads in part aé follows: “Compensable separations. As at the beginning of each compensable period of unemployment of an individual, a compensable separation shall be charged to the merit rating account of each employer Who ¿hall have employed the individual during at least four different calendar weeks in the fifty-six day period preceding the beginning of such compensable period, ...” It will thus be seen that, from the above stated facts, the merit rating account of the Winchester Repeating Arms Company would not be affected in this case because of the fact that the employment of this claimant ended on September 21, 1946, and the compensable period commenced on October 27, 1946.

Section 967h, Sup. 1945, “Initial determination,” appears to the court to be the most important statute in this case. It is to be noted in considering this statute that the language thereof was substituted for that of subseotion (b) of § 1341e, which was repealed. Subsection (b) of § 1341e was the effective statute when the Unemployment Compensation Act was first adopted in Connecticut in 1936. At that time each employer had a “reserve” account against which the unemployment claims of *65 his employees were charged. The act was later changed, and I 703g was enacted whereby subsection (a) thereof provides for merit rating of each employer coming within its provisions.

Connecticut then changed from the so-called “reserve” to the so-called “merit rating,” whereby a compensable separation was only charged to the merit rating aocount of sudh employer who had employed the employee within the period as provided in_ § 1337e(c), as quoted above, and any compensation not falling within said § 1337e(c) is chargeable to the so-called “pool account” to which all employers contribute.

Again referring to § 967-h, it is found that after providing for the initial determination of the claim by the examiner, the following language appears: “He [examiner} shall promptly

notify the claimant, and the employers against whose merit rating accounts compensable separations due to any benefits awarded by the decision might be charged, of the decision and the reasons therefor. Such decision shall be final and benefits shall be paid or denied in accordance therewith unless the claimant or any of- such employers shall, . . . , file an appeal from such decision and apply for a hearing.” It is to be noted that the language in § 1341e(b), before the change was made to its present form in 967h, read, “He shall promptly notify the claimant, and the employers against whose reserve accounts any benefits awarded by the decision might be charged, of the decision and the reasons therefor.” And it further states . . .

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Bluebook (online)
15 Conn. Super. Ct. 62, 15 Conn. Supp. 62, 1947 Conn. Super. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-repeating-arms-company-v-radcliffe-connsuperct-1947.