(After stating the foregoing facts.) Section 54-610 of the Code (Ann. Supp.) provides in part as follows: “An individual shall be disqualified for benefits— . . (d) For any week with respect to which the commissioner finds that his total or partial unemployment is due to a stoppage of work which exists because of a labor dispute at the factory, establishment or other premises at which he is or was last employed/but he has not been restored to such last employment, his disqualification for benefits under this subsection shall be deemed to have ceased at such time as the commissioner shall determine such stoppage of work to have ceased and such operations to have been resumed.”
Counsel for both sides concede that this case turns upon a
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proper construction of the phrase in the act, “stoppage of work which exists because of a labor dispute at the factory, establishment, or other premises at which he is or was last employed.” Counsel for the employer contends that this phrase refers to a stoppage of work by the employee, and that these employees are disqualified for benefits because the stoppage of work meant their stopping work on account of a strike of which the employer was notified, which strike is still in existence because the employer has never been given notice of its discontinuance. Counsel for the commissioner and the employees contend that the term refers to a substantial curtailment of operations at the factory, establishment, or other premises at which the employee is or was last employed. This provision of the act has not heretofore been construed by the appellate courts of our State. Counsel for the employer rely for their interpretation of this provision of our statute on Board of Review
v.
Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.,
The contrary view is also held in Lawrence Baking Co.
v.
Michigan Unemployment Compensation Comm.,
*859 The evidence amply authorized the finding that the unemployment of the .employees herein was due to a stoppage of work which existed because of a labor dispute at the factory at which they were last employed; that it began on August 18, 1947, and continued until September 20, 1947; that on the latter date normal operations had been resumed at the factory, but the employees had not been restored to their employment; that on said latter date the stoppage of work due to the labor dispute had therefore ceased; and that the employees, upon reporting for duty on September 22 and being refused re-employment, were no longer disqualified for benefits under the Unemployment Compensation Law.
It follows that the judge of the superior court did not err in affirming the decision of the Board of Review.
Judgment affirmed.
