This is an appeal from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court of Franklin County upholding the denial of unemployment compensation to Robert L. Morris. The appellant is the Administrator of the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation. He had originally determined that Morris was eligible. This determination was reversed by a referee, who was upheld by the Board of Review. The Common Pleas Court affirmed the Board of Review.
Morris was employed by Lennox Industries, Inc., on December 16, 1963. He worked for six and one-half months. The plant was shut down from June 26 to July 13, 1964. Morris was unemployed during that period and received no pay. Previous to Morris' employment, Lennox had entered into a collective bargaining contract with Lennox Employees Association Independent Union of Columbus, Ohio. The contract provided for certain vacation and vacation pay rights. The contract also provided that the "usual" vacation period would be the last week of June and the first week of July, with the company retaining the right to determine the period. However, under the contract, the right of an employee to vacation time off varied from none to one week, two weeks or three weeks, depending upon length of service. The right to and amount of pay during vacation also varied with length of service. The so-called vacation shutdown for 1964 was the period of June 26 to July 13.
Under the terms of Article XII of the labor contract, Morris *Page 189 was not entitled to either time off or to remuneration during the shutdown period.
The parties have assumed that the union represented Morris. With the exception of a union security provision in the contract there is nothing in the record to indicate that Morris had joined the union and authorized it to act for him, or ratified the collective bargaining contract. However, in view of the union security provision and the fact that from the early stages of this litigation all parties assumed Morris' representation by the union, this court will also so assume.
Section
"Each eligible individual shall receive benefits as compensation for loss of remuneration due to involuntary total or partial unemployment in the amounts and subject to the conditions stipulated in Sections
It is the position of the referee, the Board of Review, the Common Pleas Court, appellee, and amicus curiae, counsel for Chrysler Corporation, that Morris' layoff was not "involuntary" unemployment within the meaning of the quoted provision of Section
Before discussing this question, several premises which are implicit in this case should be pointed out. All parties have, in effect, conceded that Morris suffered "unemployment" and was "totally unemployed" within the meaning of Section
Morris' layoff was no vacation as to him. He had no contractual right to any time off whatsoever with or without pay, *Page 190 and he did not request any time off. On the record, he was clearly available for work at Lennox or elsewhere, and he wanted to work, but he could not find work. It is, therefore, very clear that Morris' unemployment was involuntary at the time of hislayoff in that on this record he must be considered at that time as being desirous of continuing to work and being required by an employer to cease work.
It should be noted that Morris' layoff is quite distinguishable from that of most other employees of Lennox during the period from June 26 to July 13. Many of them were entitled to time off, and were personally desirous of taking some or all of it during that period.
The issue in this case is thus whether Morris' unemployment, even though involuntary on his part at the time of his layoff, should be held not involuntary because of the provisions of the union agreement. The contention is well summarized in theamicus curiae reply brief:
"The claimant's duly constituted representative had negotiated terms and conditions of employment at Lennox Industries, Inc. One of them was an agreement by the employees that the company could shut down its plant for vacation purposes.
"* * *
"Morris is just as subject to the terms and provisions of the union contract covering his employment as though he had sat at the bargaining table and entered into the agreement personally. Through his agents he had agreed to the plant shutdown. His unemployment during such a period is not involuntary."
In our opinion, the word "involuntary" as used in Section
If unemployment compensation is to accomplish its purposes, the right to benefits cannot depend upon a contractual right of an employee to be employed. It takes no historian to recognize that in many industries the economic disparity between the employer and an individual employee or job seeker *Page 191 is so great that bargaining would be one-sided. In many instances, it would indeed be a farce. The ability of an employer to refuse to agree to long-term employment, or, having agreed, to extract a waiver or release of statutory benefits, is an obvious problem.
Section
To hold that unemployment which is involuntary at the time of layoff can be considered to be voluntary because of a previous agreement by the individual employee would be to undermine the statutory prohibition on agreements to waive or release, and therefore the entire unemployment compensation program. It would be a disingenuous method of legalizing waivers or releases. If we were to accept appellee's interpretation of "involuntary" as used in Section
We prefer to take the position that the involuntary character of the layoff is determined by whether at the time of layoff the employee wishes to cease working. If it is involuntary at that time and the layoff meets the other requirements for a compensatory layoff and the compensation payable is not reduced by payments obtained from the employer, then in our opinion the statutory rights attach and the employee is entitled to claim the benefit of the Act.
Appellee has stressed the case of Marcum v. Ohio Match Co.
(1965),
It is true that in Marcum the claimant relied upon the prohibition against waiver or release. The court's terse comment appears to suggest that they considered the contract provision to be an agreement to waive benefits. See Marcum v. Ohio Match Co.
(1965),
We express no opinion on the holding in Marcum that the claimant's retirement constituted a discharge for just cause. However, if that be assumed, then clearly no statutory right to benefits ever arose and no waiver occurred. The "just cause" clause of Section
We fail to see how anything in Marcum can be considered as indicating that collective bargaining agreements are exempt from the prohibition of Section
The judgment of the Common Pleas Court will be reversed, and the cause will be remanded to the bureau with instructions to allow the claim and make payment of compensation.
Judgment reversed.
BRYANT, P. J., and DUFFY, J., concur.