EAGLE TRUCK TRANSPORT, INC., A CORPORATION OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE, APPELLANT, v. BOARD OF REVIEW, DIVISION OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY, AND BERNARD CARROLL, SR., RESPONDENTS.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
Argued February 3, 1959-Decided March 10, 1959.
29 N.J. 280
Mr. Edward A. Kaplan argued the cause for respondent Board of Review, etc. (Mr. Clarence F. McGovern, attorney).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FRANCIS, J. Bernard Carroll, Sr. was granted unemployment compensation benefits. The employer, Eagle Truck Transport, Inc., sought a review in the Appellate Division of the Superior Court but the matter was certified on our motion before decision there.
Carroll, a resident of Brooklyn, New York, was employed as a truck driver for eight years by Eagle, whose place of business is in Jersey City, New Jersey. On January 23, 1958 he resigned under circumstances constituting a voluntary quit. It is undisputed that his work record and contributions to the unemployment compensation fund were adequate to warrant a claim for benefits if the cessation of work had been involuntary. After quitting he obtained employment of the same type with different employers in Brooklyn. On March 10, 1958 he becamе unemployed in
In support of the position, reliance is placed upon
“An individual shall be disqualified for benefits:
“(a) For the week in which he has left work voluntarily without good cause, and for each week thereafter until he has earned in employment (which may be with an emрloying unit having in employment one or more individuals) at least four times his weekly benefit rate, as determined in each case.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The argument is that “in employment” refers to New Jersey employment which is normally covered by the act or to work of the type included as “employment” under the act, and performed in this State for an “employing unit” having in employment one or more individuals.
“[S]ervice, including service in interstate commerce performed for remuneration or under any contract of hire, written or oral, express or implied.”
The inclusion of service in interstate commerce requires special comment. The Legislature of New Jersey, as well as those of other jurisdictions, recognized that work for some employers would be rendered partly in this State and
“The term ‘employment’ shall include an individual‘s entire service, performed within or both within and without this State if * * *”
There follows a specification of variant circumstances under which interstate service shall be deemed to call for contributions to our fund, and its amenability to claims of employees so occupied in the event of involuntary unemployment. However, we are not concerned here with any problem arising out of intеrstate employment. Carroll‘s work, which is said to have removed his disqualification, was intrastate but performed in New York. Under ordinary circumstances such occupation would be subject to the law of that state and ultimately would result in qualifying him for benefits there when sufficient work credits and contributions had been accumulated. 30 McKinney‘s Consolidated Laws of New York, c. 31, p. 376, Labor Law, § 511. The unusual problem before us is whether employment as a truck driver in another state which produced at least four times the New Jersey unemployment compensation rate purged the disqualification of a former New Jersey employee who, if the work had been performed here, would be entitled to benefits.
Resolution of the issue must turn upon the construction of “in employment” and the parenthetical clause following it (“which may be with an employing unit having in employment one or more individuals“) (emphasis re
In the day-to-day operation of the Compensation Law when benefits are sought by an unemployed person, the inquiry is a retrospective one. Prior to the loss of his position, did he earn sufficient credits in employment in this State by rendering intrastate or the specified interstate service for remuneration under any contract of hire? Such an employee does not have to be a resident of New Jersey (with an exception not here material) either while establishing the work credits or at the time of the making of the claim. For example, a person who becomes involuntarily unemployed may accept work in another state and yet retain his rights under our act during the benefit year. So if he loses his position there during such year and before the accumulation of enough service credits to entitle him to recover in that state, he may have recourse to the New Jersey fund, so long as he keeps himself available for work as required by
Moreover, the legislatures of all 49 states became aware that they would have to make provisions for persons who
The significance of the acceptance by this State of the reciprocal agreement in the present contеxt is that when the Legislature was engaged in the consideration of the 1950 amendment of subsection 5(a) which created its present form, it was fully conscious of problems of multistate employment. It knew that a worker who became involuntarily unemployed in New Jersey and who had work credits here would be entitled, if he obtained and subsequently lost employment in the State of New York, to claim benefits from his base employer in New Jersey, either before or after exhausting аny accumulated credits in New York (short of
As originally enacted, subsection 5(a) disqualified a voluntary quit worker for the week in which he left work and for the three weeks which immediately followed (in addition to the waiting period).
In 1950 (L. 1950, c. 172, p. 374), the provision was modified by adoption of the present formula under which disqualification is imposed for the week of the quit and thereafter until the worker has earned in employment (“which may be with an employing unit having in employment one or more individuals“) at least four times his weekly benefit rate. Admittedly, when such amount is
“[A]ny individual * * * or cоrporation * * * [which has] in its employ 1 or more individuals performing services for it within this State.” (Emphasis supplied.)
And according to the introductory sentence of the section, that significance is to be attached to it “unless the context clearly requires otherwise.” But the Legislature took pains to redefine “employing unit” in the amendment of 5(a). It did not simply repeat the 19(g) definition therein. The specification for the performance of the services “within this State” was omitted. If the words “employing unit” alone had been inserted, undoubtedly the conclusion would be drawn that the given general statutory connotation was meant. So the fact that only part was included shows an inescapable intention to qualify the general definition by
The suggestion has been advanced that if it was not intended to confine the purging work to this State, the result could have been аccomplished by omitting the parenthetical clause entirely. That may be true. But then doubt would be engendered as to whether “in employment” meant employment of the type included under the law and with a subject New Jersey employer. Clearly, one reason why the reference was made to the employing unit employing one or more individuals was to indicate that the services did not have to be rendered for a subject employer, i. e., one having four оr more individuals “in employment.”
Our attention has been called to the fact that prior to In the Matter of Leo N. Brown, B. R.-41945-C (1958), the Board of Review had construed the 1950 amendment of 5(a) as requiring the purgative employment to be served in covered employment with a New Jersey employing unit. In that case, however, after a thorough reconsideration of the problem, the earlier view was found to be erroneous and the Board declared that subsequent wages in the required amount earned in another state would remove the disqualification. Eagle not only contends that the Brown ruling is incorrect but points also to the legislative history in support of its position. It does appear that subsequent to the earlier agency decisions referred to, bills were submitted to the Legislaturе (under whose sponsorship the record does not disclose) for the purpose of overruling them. None of these proposals was ever adopted. There is no doubt that the failure of the lawmakers to amend a statute after a construction has been placed upon it by an agency charged with its administration is often spoken of as some evidence that the interpretation accords with their intent in enacting it. Barringer v. Miele, 6 N. J. 139, 144 (1951). However, the inferencе is not at all conclusive and cannot be considered as a bar to a later determination by the agency or by the courts that the earlier view was erroneous.
The judgment is affirmed.
“There is no doubt that the failure of the lawmakers to amend a statute after a construction has been placed upon it by an agency charged with its administration is often spoken of as some evidence that the interpretation accords with their intent in enacting it. Barringer v. Miele, 6 N. J. 139, 144 (1951). However, the inference is not at all conclusive and cannot be considerеd as a bar to a later determination by the agency or by the courts that the earlier view was erroneous.”
There is here not merely legislative silence or inaction following administrative interpretation, but a failure to enact a proposed change in the law. The sponsors of amendments designed to override the administrative construction placed the problem in specific terms squarely before the Legislature.
In 1951, the year following the 1950 amendment to 5(a), the meaning of which we are presently concerned with, there was introduced in the House of Assembly a bill to further amend 5(a). That bill as reported by the Unemployment Compensation Committee of the House of Assembly deleted the crucial phrase “earned in employment (which may be with an employing unit having in employment one or more individuals)” and substituted therefor the language “worked and earned thereafter in any type of service an amount equal to at least four time his weekly benefit rate, as determined in each case.” (Assembly Bill 172 (1951).) The bill passed the Assembly and reposed in the Senate Committee on Labor Industries and Social Welfare. Had it passed, it would have obviated the present problem. By taking out the words “in employment” and substituting the words “in any type of service” the bill would eliminate the necessity for “covered employment” in order to toll disqualification and would also allow excluded employments
“Subsection 5(a) was amended last year by Chapter 172 P. L. 1950. Through inadvertence, the new provisions were made unduly harsh upon the employee in purging his voluntary quit without good cause. The 1950 provision permits the employee to lift the disqualification only by working in employment covered by the New Jersey law. Also it prevents the worker from lifting the disqualification if he works in excepted or excluded employment; for example, on a farm, in a home, etc. It has been found particularly severe in the case of those workers who live in the metropolitan areas and who procure jobs across State lines. Inasmuch as work in the other States is very seldоm performed for a New Jersey employer or covered by the New Jersey law, the work performed in the other States, and the remuneration received therefor, do not count in favor of the disqualified employee.
The new rewrite both eliminates all these objections and carries out the fundamental purpose of the disqualification feature. The worker is asked to demonstrate that he has genuinely rejoined the labor market. He should be permitted to make his demonstration by working wherever a job is available to him and in the kind of job to which he succeeds in attaching himself.” (Emphasis supplied)
From the Legislature‘s viewpoint, the construction presently urged by Eagle was admitted and the salient fact, so far as we are concerned, is that such a construction did not move the Legislature to action. From such fact I can only infer an acquiescence in the Board‘s original construction of the aсt.
Other amendments to 5(a), with similar statements of purpose appended to that included in Assembly Bill 172 (1951) were unsuccessfully proposed each year since 1951. 1952 (Assembly Bill 236); 1953 (Assembly Bill 437); 1954 (Assembly Bill 81); 1955 (Assembly Bills 4 and 224); 1956 (Senate Bill 264) (Assembly Bill 21); 1957 (Senate Bills 19, 127, 241); 1958 (Senate Bills 30, 303); 1959 (Assembly Bill 389).
Assembly Bill 437 (1953), as reported by Committee Substitute passed in the Assembly, was received in the
If we once accept legislative history as a relevant interpretive guide, see Deaney v. Linen Thread Co., 19 N. J. 578 (1955), then we ought to follow where it logically leads. The majority have accomplished what the sponsors of the many bills failed to achieve, and what the Legislature has not thought provident to enact. This, I think, borders on judicial legislation in its accurate sense, i. e., the substitution of the judicial view of the wisdom of a particular policy in instances where a contrary legislative view is expressed or where, as here, fairly implicit.
Accordingly I vote to reverse the order from which the appeal has been taken.
For affirmance-Chief Justice WEINTRAUB, and Justices HEHER, JACOBS, FRANCIS and PROCTOR-5.
For reversal-Justice BURLING-1.
