Worthington Construction Co. v. Employment Security Division, Alaska Department of Labor

413 P.2d 929, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 147
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1966
DocketNo. 582
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 413 P.2d 929 (Worthington Construction Co. v. Employment Security Division, Alaska Department of Labor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthington Construction Co. v. Employment Security Division, Alaska Department of Labor, 413 P.2d 929, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 147 (Ala. 1966).

Opinion

NESBETT, Chief Justice.

The Alaska Employment Security Act requires employers to make annual contributions to the Employment Security Administration Fund based upon the total amount of wages paid to employees.1 Wages are.defined by AS 23.20.530(a) in pertinent part as, “ * * * all remuneration for service from whatever source, including * * * the cash value of all remuneration in a medium other than cash * *

Appellants are contractors who provided room and board to employees who worked away from their regularly established homes. In making their contributions for 1961 and 1962 under the act, appellants used as a basis for calculation the actual wages paid to employees, which did not include money paid to provide room and board.

The Employment Security Division of the Alaska Department of Labor assessed appellants for a deficiency in contribution based upon the value of room and board furnished to employees working away from their homes. Appellants protested but the assessments were sustained by the Commissioner of Labor. The superior court for the [930]*930Third Judicial District affirmed the Commissioner’s holding.

The question is whether “wages” included the value of food and lodging provided by appellants for employees working away from their regularly established homes.

We are of the opinion the value of food and lodging provided by appellants to their employees should have been considered as wages under the circumstances.2

Appellants’ argument is grounded on AS 23.20.005(b) of the Alaska act which declares it to be the intention of the legislature to cooperate with the appropriate agencies of other states and the federal government in accomplishing the purpose of the act, stated to be that of providing a nationwide employment security program, and particularly to meet the requirements of Title III of the Federal Social Security Act. It is specifically provided that where doubt as to the proper construction of a provision of the Alaska act exists, it shall be resolved in favor of conformity with the requirements of the federal act.

Appellants then point out that the definitions of “wages” under the Federal Insur-anee Contribution Act3 and the Federal Unemployment Tax Act4 of the Internal Revenue Code 5 are similar to the definition under the Alaska act and that under all of the federal acts “wages” does not include traveling expenses, including meals and lodging, incurred in the business of and for the convenience of the employer.

Based upon the authorities below appellants argue that the travel expense exclusion from wages applies to food and lodging furnished to construction workers employed away from their regularly established homes.6

We believe that the precedents cited by appellants are applicable only when interpreting statutes involving income and withholding taxes, and not when interpreting statutes establishing social insurance taxes.

The different purposes of the two types of statutes accounts for the different interpretations of the statutory meaning of “wages” which have been made by authorities which we consider to be persuasive.

This difference was perhaps first pointed out in California Employment Comm’n v. Black-Foxe Military Institute.7 In inter[931]*931preting the California Unemployment Insurance Act the court held that the value of room and board furnished to some employees of the military institute who were required to live with the cadets was to be included as wages where the statute defined wages as “all remuneration payable for personal services * * * and the reasonable cash value of all remuneration payable in any medium other than cash” 8 even though the value of the room and board would not be taxable for federal income tax purposes. The California court’s reasoning was that an income tax law is purely a revenue measure to be strictly construed and restricted in scope to matters clearly included, whereas a social insurance tax is actually more in the nature of a contribution having the broad social object of ameliorating the hardships of unemployment. The court concluded that including in the definition of “wages” the phrase “the cash value of a remuneration payable in any medium other than cash” indicated an intent that real compensation not be minimized by concealing it in other forms than money payments. The court rejected the “convenience rule” often followed in applying income tax laws.

In Pacific American Fisheries, Inc. v. United States9 the company furnished room and board to workers at remote cannery sites. The question was whether the value of room and board was to be included as wages under the social security tax law. The “convenience of the employer” rule was rejected and the value of room and board was held to be wages and taxable. The court recognized the same distinction between income tax and social tax statutes as did the California court in Black-Foxe.10

Since we are adopting the rule of interpretation originally expressed in Black-Foxe and followed by Pacific American Fisheries, the judgment is affirmed.

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Related

Peoples Life Insurance v. Maryland Deparment of Employment Security
260 A.2d 287 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1970)

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413 P.2d 929, 1966 Alas. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthington-construction-co-v-employment-security-division-alaska-alaska-1966.