In each of these cases the petitioner appeals from a decision of the District Court of Lawrence which affirmed a decision of the board of review in the division of employment security of the department of labor and indus
The appeals to this court are in accordance with G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 151A, § 42, as appearing in St. 1943, c. 534, § 6. See now St. 1947, c. 434. Under § 42 "the findings of the board of review as to the facts, if supported by any evidence, shall be conclusive, and the court shall render a decision or decree in accordance with such findings.” See Jordan Marsh Co. v. Labor Relations Commission, 316 Mass. 748, 756. Questions of law are reviewable here.
The issue in each case is whether the employee is barred from benefits by a refusal to accept work offered by the petitioner as a substitute for that previously performed by the employee. The petitioner contends that the work offered was suitable and that the refusal to accept it is a bar. The interest of the petitioner in the matter is due to the fact that the amount of its contributions to the unemployment compensation fund is affected by the amount of unemployment benefits paid to its employees who are laid off.
The applicable provisions of the employment security law, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 151A, as appearing in § 1 of c. 685 of St. 1941, are these: Section 24 provides, "An individual, in order to be eligible for benefits under this chapter, shall . . . (b) Be capable of and available for work and unable to obtain work in his usual occupation or any other occupation for which he is reasonably fitted . . .. ” Section 25 provides, "No waiting period shall be allowed and no benefits shall be paid to an individual under this chapter for . . . (c) Any week in which an otherwise eligible individual fails, without good cause, ... to accept suitable employment whenever offered him .... ‘Suitable employment,’ as used in this subsection, shall be determined by the director, who shall take into consideration whether the employment is detrimental to the health, safety or morals of
In the case of the employee Dzioba there was evidence that she had been trained for office work at a business college; that she had worked in Boston in a credit department; that she had been doing clerical work for the Pacific Mills for two years before she was told there was less work and she would have to go; that at the time of the hearing she was working as stenographer and interviewer in “a credit office” in Lawrence; that the work offered by the Pacific Mills as a substitute for the clerical work she had been doing would have consisted of circulating through the shipping department, stapling tags to pieces of cloth that were piled on trucks or benches, recording yardages, counting them on an adding machine, and operating a numbering machine; and that the pay would be about the same as that which the employee had been getting, except that it would be by the day instead of a salary. The board held that it was unreasonable to force a skilled office worker at the beginning of a period of unemployment to accept work “much below her best skill.”
In each of the Evlian and Sobon cases the employee was a skilled weaver when laid off. The offered employment was work of lower grade at substantially less wages. It was, or could have been, found that the employee had a reasonable expectancy of again securing high grade employment. The board held that the offered employment was not suitable.
From the foregoing it will be seen that the questions of law presented are in substance whether in determining the suitability of employment offered in place of that lost the board can consider (1) that the offered employment fails to utilize the full skill and capacity of the worker, (2) that the pay is substantially less than he has been receiving, and (3) that when the new employment is offered the worker still has a reasonable expectancy of securing employment of the grade for which his capacity fits him and has not had sufficient opportunity to secure it. The petitioner contends that none of these matters can be considered, and apparently further contends that no benefits can be awarded if the worker has refused any work which he is reasonably capable of performing.
If the law had not been changed since the first unemployment compensation law was enacted by St. 1935, c. 479, § 5, there would be a more substantial basis for at least a part of the petitioner’s contention. The definition of unemployment in § 1 (o) of the law then included inability to obtain “any employment” and said nothing of suitability. Section 19 (c), which corresponded to the present § 25 (c), did mention suitable employment and defined it as “any employment not detrimental to the health, safety or morals of an employee, for which he is reasonably fitted by training and experience, including
Under the present wording of the statute we cannot say that there was error of law in taking into account such matters as the skill and capacity of the worker, his accustomed remuneration, his expectancy of obtaining equivalent employment, and the time which he had had to obtain it. It may reasonably be thought that employment which requires a highly trained and skilled worker, who still has
The petitioner apparently argues that § 24, dealing with eligibility for benefits, requires the employee to take any work “for which he is reasonably fitted” in the sense of
In each case the decree of the District Court affirming the decision of the board of review and dismissing the petition is affirmed.
So ordered.