PEPLINSKI v. EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION.
APPEAL OF CURTISS-WRIGHT CORPORATION.
Supreme Court of Michigan
Decided June 6, 1960
359 Mich. 665
Docket No. 26, Calendar No. 48,470
The power to review a decision relative to unemployment compensation benefits by the appeal board of the employment security commission by a circuit court, as conferred, by statute, is the power to hear and determine, and is a limited judicial review to obtain which a specified procedure in specified courts must be followed (
2. SAME—JUDICIAL REVIEW—JURISDICTION OF CIRCUIT COURT.
Jurisdiction for the limited judicial review of the determination of the appeal board of the employment security commission relative to unemployment compensation benefits, as conferred by statute and independent of the Supreme Court‘s constitutional authority to issue original and remedial, writs, is vested exclusively with designated circuit courts (
3. VENUE—STATUTES.
Venue is primarily a matter of convenience and, aside from specific statutory provisions, is concerned only with the place of trial of an action within the State.
4. UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION—JUDICIAL REVIEW—VENUE—JURISDICTION.
The general statutory and court rule provisions relating to venue and jurisdiction have no application to the judicial review of decisions of the appeal board of the employment security commission in view of the specific provisions of the employment security act vesting specified circuit courts of the State with
5. SAME—JUDICIAL REVIEW—CIRCUIT COURTS—VENUE.
Jurisdiction to review decisions of the appeal board of the employment security commission is conferred upon the circuit court of the county in which the claimant for unemployment compensation benefits resides or Ingham county, and where the review is sought elsewhere, the writ must be dismissed in the absence of provision for change of venue (
6. SAME—COSTS—CONSTRUCTION OF STATUTES.
No costs are allowed in proceeding to recover unemployment compensation benefits, where sole matter of review was a question of statutory construction (
REFERENCES FOR POINTS IN HEADNOTES
[1, 2, 4, 5] 48 Am Jur, Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, and Retirement Funds § 46.
[3] 56 Am Jur, Venue § 2.
[6] 48 Am Jur, Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, and Retirement Funds § 51.
Appeal from Wayne; FitzGerald (Frank), J. Submitted April 6, 1960. (Docket No. 26, Calendar No. 48,470.) Decided June 6, 1960.
Edward Peplinski, an employee of Curtiss-Wright Corporation, Utica Bend Division, filed his claim for unemployment benefits which was denied by the Employment Security Commission and its appeal board. Certiorari issued in county in which claimant did not reside. Motion to dismiss denied, and claimant‘s motion for change of venue granted. Defendant employer appeals. Reversed and remanded.
Rothe, Marston, Mazey, Sachs & O‘Connell, for plaintiff.
Anthony G. Jeffries and Harold R. Sullivan, for defendant Curtiss-Wright Corporation, Utica Bend Division.
SMITH, J. This case concerns the proper forum for consideration of an appeal from the appeal board of the Michigan employment security commission.
The controlling statute1 provides as follows:
“The findings of fact made by the appeal board acting within its powers if supported by the great weight of the evidence, shall, in the absence of fraud, be conclusive, but the circuit court of the county, in which the claimant resides or in which the employer‘s principal place of business in Michigan is located, if no claimant is a party to the case, or the circuit court for the county of Ingham shall have power to review questions of fact and law on the record made before the referee and the appeal board involved in any such final decision, but said court may reverse such decision of said appeal board upon a question of fact only if it finds that said decision of the appeal board is contrary to the great weight of the evidence: Provided, That application is made within 15 days after mailing of a copy of such decision, by certiorari or by any other method permissible under the rules and practices of the circuit courts of this State, and to make such further orders in respect thereto as justice may require. The commission shall be deemed to be a party to any judicial action involving any such decision. An appeal may
be had from the decision of said circuit court in the same manner as provided by the laws of this State with respect to appeals from circuit courts.”
The “power to review” thus granted is the power to hear and determine. It is language of jurisdiction.2 The right of appeal granted, we note, is purely statutory, and in so saying we are not unaware of our constitutional authority to issue original and remedial writs. But here the legislature has provided for a limited judicial review, to obtain which a specified procedure in specified courts must be followed. The benefits in question do not accrue in the course of the common law but have their “roots in legislative enactments,”3 which enactments prescribe both the nature of the benefits and the remedies to be pursued in their effectuation. Jurisdiction for the limited judicial review available is vested exclusively with designated circuit courts.4
With much of what appellee asserts, and what the trial court held, respecting venue, and change of venue, we are in accord. Venue is primarily a matter of convenience. Properly construed, and without reference to specific statutory enactments, it “has nothing whatsoever to do with jurisdiction—instead it is concerned only with the place of trial of an action within the State.”5 But here we have express statutory provisions regulating the appeal, namely, the procedure, the scope of review, and the courts empowered to hear the same. The general provisions of the statute and rules relating to venue and jurisdiction thus have no application to this particular situation.
“In the event such suit is brought in any county other than the county where the injury occurred, the court in which the same is filed shall, upon ascertaining that it does not have jurisdiction to render judgment upon the merits, transfer the case to the proper court in the county where the injury occurred.”
Prior to the effective date of article 8307a, it had been held that where an action had been filed in the wrong county the court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter and could only dismiss.6
The orders appealed from are reversed and the case remanded to the circuit court for entry of orders consistent herewith. No costs, a question of statutory construction.
DETHMERS, C. J., and CARR, KELLY, EDWARDS, KAVANAGH, and SOURIS, JJ., concurred with SMITH, J.
BLACK, J. (concurring). I agree that the statute considered in the opinion of Mr. Justice SMITH (
The statute, fully procedural in nature as to its provision for judicial review, does not conflict with any adopted rule of our Court. Thus upon enactment it became an adopted rule of practice by force of 27-year-old section 3 of Court Rule No 1 (1945).* See Darr v. Buckley, 355 Mich 392, syllabus No 2.
This is not a proper occasion for determination of stated question 1†, that is, whether circuit court venue is substantively jurisdictional. For such reason I am not ready to commit my signature to a ruling which might be construed as holding that this Court does not have authority to determine circuit court venue by rule adopted pursuant to
Whether venue is “jurisdictional” or not, the fact remains that this employer‘s special appearance and motion to dismiss were quite in order. The situation might be otherwise had all parties unreservedly squared off to obtain (and did obtain) a judicial decision of meritorious affirmance or reversal of the administrative ruling in question. See to the point Panhandle Eastern Pipe Line Co. v. Federal Power Commission, 324 US 635, 638, 639 (65 S Ct 821, 89 L Ed 1241).
The employer, having raised the question of improper venue by timely motion, was entitled to a determination below that the writ had been sued out in the wrong circuit and that it should on that account
* Present wording adopted in 1933 revision.—REPORTER.
† “Is the provision in section 38 of the Michigan employment security act, being
I concur in reversal.
TALBOT SMITH
ASSOCIATE JUSTICE
