CHARLES M. HOWELL, JR., ET AL., APPELLANTS, V. DIVISION OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY, ET AL., RESPONDENTS.
Kansas City Court of Appeals
June 13, 1949
222 S. W. 2d 953
The judgment should be affirmed for the reasons herein stated.
Boyer, C., concurs.
PER CURIAM:-The foregoing opinion of SPERRY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. The judgment is affirmed. Dew, P. J., Cave, J., concur; Vandeventer, J., (sitting by order of Supreme Court) concurs.
As a background of the action for judicial review these facts appear: On January 8, 1943, plaintiffs filed an application for termination of coverage as an employer, subject to the law as of January 1, 1943, on the ground that they did not have the required number of employees for a sufficient period during the calendar year 1942 to render them subject to the payment of contributions to the Compensation Commission, and that they were therefore entitled to termination of coverage which had previously existed. On the 19th day of March 1943 the Commission, without notice or hearing, by resolution approved the application and on April 8, 1943, notified plaintiffs by mail of the action taken and enclosed formal notice of termination
Plaintiffs filed their petition for a rehearing and reconsideration on March 27, 1944. The petition for reconsideration does not appear to have been ruled by the Commission, but on April 26, 1944, the Commission by resolution determined that a hearing would be held in the matter of whether plaintiffs ceased to be an employer as of January 1, 1943, under the provisions of
At such hearing there was evidence that three named lawyers were connected with the partnership of Howell, Jacobs & Howell, and were referred to as “associates.” The evidence in the main consisted of an inquiry concerning the relationship between the associates and the partnership; the Commission contending and seeking to show that said associates were employees, and the partnership contending and seeking to show that said associates occupied the status of independent lawyers and independent contractors, and were not employees of the partnership.
The report and findings of fact made by the special representative stated that the issue presented turned upon the employment status
The judgment of the circuit court in this case merely recited that the court found the issues in favor of defendant and against the plaintiffs. “Wherefore, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the order of the Unemployment Compensation Commission be and is hereby affirmed.” There is no mention or finding in the judgment of the court in reference to the jurisdiction of the Commission to reconsider its initial approval of plaintiffs’ application and to arrive at the decision which it made on March 10, 1944, without notice or hearing, or whether said decision was in excess of the statutory authority of the Commission. This was the first ground alleged in plaintiffs’ petition for judicial review. The
It would have been entirely proper and right, if not in fact necessary, for the court to have determined whether the Commission had authority and jurisdiction to arrive at its decision made on March 10, 1944, in the manner in which it proceeded. The failure of the court to make such specific determination is not presented in this appeal as a ground for reversal and we, therefore, pass it by merely with the suggestion already made.
The chief contention of appellants is that the court erred in affirming the decision of the Commission because the Commission was without jurisdiction to reopen plaintiffs’ case on March 10, 1944, and proceed as it did to a decision, for lack of statutory authority. Reliance is placed upon the ruling of the Supreme Court in the case of Peerless Fixture Co. v. Keitel, 355 Mo. 144, 195 S. W. (2d) 449, 452, 453; and upon
Respondents’ reply to these contentions is that the Commission‘s initial approval of the application did not purport to be its final action thereon; that it was tentative or interlocutory, and that the Commission‘s reconsidered action was in any event authorized by
“The Commission may, upon its own motion or upon application of an employing unit, and after notice and opportunity for hearing, make findings of fact and on the basis thereof, determinations with respect to whether an employing unit constitutes an employer and whether services performed for or in connection with the business of an employing unit constitutes employment for such employing unit. Any determination or decision made hereunder may be reopened or reconsidered when the Commission finds such action is essential to promote the accomplishment of the objectives of the law.”
The question which arises from these contentions, and with which we are required to deal, is one of procedure. In a consideration of that question due regard must be had to all sections of the Unemployment Compensation Law, including the section just quoted. How then does the case stand?
The validity of the final decision of the Commission, after a hearing before its special representative, is dependent upon the validity of its action in reopening and deciding the case on March 10, 1944. We think the conclusion is inescapable that the entire procedure of the Commission subsequent to its initial approval of plaintiffs’ application to be relieved from coverage was unauthorized because the procedure of the Commission did not conform to the requirements of the statute authorizing a reconsideration of a decision. A tribunal of the State authorized to levy a tax after notice and an opportunity for a hearing, cannot justify such a levy by a hearing after its decision is made. The hearing and a finding of facts must precede the decision. Such is the only practice recognized in any judicial or quasi-judicial procedure, and the same principle applies to the Commission in this case. There was, in effect, a pre-judgment of the merits of plaintiffs’ case and a decision before trial. Such procedure is under a strict ban of the law and nothing like it has been tolerated in Anglo-American jurisprudence since the Tudor tyranny when Judge Jeffreys won favor of the king and infamy ever after.
It results from the foregoing that the decree of the circuit court should be reversed and the cause remanded to said court with direction to reverse the decision of the Commission and to remand the case. The Commissioner so recommends. Sperry, C., concurs.
PER CURIAM:--The foregoing opinion of BOYER, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. The judgment is reversed and the cause
