Zabrowski v. Administrator, Unemployment Compensation Act

149 A.2d 310, 146 Conn. 215, 1959 Conn. LEXIS 148
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 4, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 A.2d 310 (Zabrowski v. Administrator, Unemployment Compensation Act) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zabrowski v. Administrator, Unemployment Compensation Act, 149 A.2d 310, 146 Conn. 215, 1959 Conn. LEXIS 148 (Colo. 1959).

Opinion

Mellitz, J.

The plaintiff, seventy-two years old, worked for the North and Judd Manufacturing Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, from 1945 to June 29, 1956, when she was involuntarily retired by the company. About one month after her retirement she received a lump sum payment of $577.61 under a retirement plan established by the company in 1945. She filed a claim for unemployment compensation as of July 1, 1956. Her weekly benefit rate was $24. Her average weekly wage during the twelve-month period prior to her retirement was $47.52. Under the provisions of what is now § 31-236 (4) (a) of the 1958 Revision of the General Statutes, an individual is ineligible for benefits during any week with respect to which he has received remuneration in the form of “any payment by way of compensation for loss of wages.” The unemployment commissioner held that the plaintiff was not rendered ineligible for benefits by reason of the payment she received under the retirement plan and affirmed an award made to her *217 by the administrator. The Superior Court, on an appeal taken by the company, reversed the commissioner and held that the payment to the plaintiff was a pension payment, the equivalent of twelve weekly wage payments, and that it disqualified her from receiving unemployment benefits for a period of twelve weeks. Prom the judgment of the Superior Court the administrator has brought this appeal.

The plan established by the company in 1945 was designed to provide retirement annuities and other benefits to those of its employees who would become eligible under its terms. As part of the plan, the company made contributions of a percentage of its profits to a trust it created. After five years, 50 per cent of an employee’s interest became vested, and annually thereafter an additional 10 per cent became vested, so that by the end of ten years the employee’s entire interest was fully vested and payable as indicated in the plan. The interest of an employee in the trust fund was distributable only on death or retirement, except that the vested interest of an employee who had been discharged or who had resigned was distributable, in the case of a man, upon his reaching the age of sixty-five, and in the case of a woman, upon her reaching the age of sixty, or in a series of instalment payments commencing within one year from the date of severance from employment. If the employee was not then living, his interest went to his beneficiary or estate. The interest of a retired person was payable only in such instalments and at such times and in such manner as the administrative committee set up under the plan might direct. Payment could be directed in the form of life insurance or annuity contracts, or deferred instalment payments over a period of twenty years. *218 The committee adopted the policy of making payments monthly, computed by dividing the total amount standing to the credit of the retired person by his life expectancy, except that to a person employed for less than twenty years payment was made in a lump sum for the reason that monthly instalments in the case of such a person would be very small and administratively undesirable. It was in pursuance of this policy that the sum of $577.61, the amount standing to the credit of the plaintiff on her retirement, and to which she had acquired a vested right, was paid to her in a lump sum rather than in monthly instalments computed on the basis of her life expectancy. The issue is whether the receipt of this payment disqualified the plaintiff from receiving unemployment benefits during the twelve-week period following her retirement from employment.

The legislative purpose in adopting the provisions in § 31-236 (4) (a) relating to disqualification was to prevent a duplication of benefits to an individual with respect to a week in which he was receiving payment from his employer as compensation for loss of wages. Accordingly, we have held an individual disqualified where the compensation was in the form of a vacation payment made out of the employer’s own resources; Kelly v. Administrator, 136 Conn. 482, 487, 72 A.2d 54; or out of an employer-financed, union-administered welfare fund; Conon v. Administrator, 142 Conn. 236, 246, 113 A.2d 354; or in the form of a pension paid out of an employer-financed plan; Kneeland v. Administrator, 138 Conn. 630, 635, 88 A.2d 376; or out of a plan jointly financed by employer and employees, at least to the extent the pension was increased by the employer’s contributions; Barclay v. Administrator, 139 Conn. 569, *219 572, 95 A.2d 797; or out of an employer-financed severance pay plan. Brannigan v. Administrator, 139 Conn. 572, 577, 95 A.2d 798.

Following the Kneeland decision, supra, the legislature in 1953 added what is now subdivision (c) of § 31-236 (4): “. . . or (c) retirement pay or a pension paid directly by the employer or paid indirectly by the employer in the manner set forth in subdivision (5) of [subsection (b) of section 31-222], provided, if the weekly amount of such retirement pay or pension is less than the individual’s total unemployment benefit rate, . . . such person shall be eligible for benefits at a reduced rate and his total unemployment benefit rate shall be reduced by the number of whole dollars in the weekly amount of such retirement pay or pension.” Cum. Sup. 1955, § 3074-d. The effect of this amendment was to make special provision for the employee receiving remuneration in the form of retirement pay or a pension. Prior to the amendment an employee was totally ineligible for unemployment benefits during any week with respect to which he received any pension payment, no matter how small. Kneeland v. Administrator, supra, 636. Under subsection (4) (c) of § 31-236, an employee remains eligible for benefits, but at a reduced rate, if the weekly amount of retirement pay or pension paid to him is less than his total unemployment benefit rate. The trial court interpreted the plan established by the company as a pension plan, and the payment to the plaintiff a pension payment. It concluded that the payment was a substitute for wages lost by her by reason of the loss of her job and that the disqualification provisions of § 31-236 (4) applied. The administrator contends that the plan is one of deferred compensation, rather than a pension plan, that for some time prior *220 to her retirement the plaintiff had an indefeasible right to the sum of $577.61, which stood to her credit in the trust fund, and that when payment was made to her it was in no sense a payment by way of compensation for loss of wages but a payment of deferred earned compensation and therefore not a basis for disqualification under the statute.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Meredith Corp. v. Iowa Department of Job Service
320 N.W.2d 596 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1982)
First Bank of Commerce v. Labor & Industrial Relations Commission
612 S.W.2d 39 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1981)
Geremia v. Administrator, Unemployment Compensation Act
150 A.2d 203 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 A.2d 310, 146 Conn. 215, 1959 Conn. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zabrowski-v-administrator-unemployment-compensation-act-conn-1959.