This is an appeal pursuant to General Statutes §
The Trade Act of 1974;
In 1981, as part of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (Omnibus Act), Pub.L. No.
The present appeal arises from the application of the amendment made by § 2505 of the Omnibus Act. *Page 308
The following facts are pertinent to this appeal. The plaintiffs were employees of Armstrong Rubber Company, Eastern Division, West Haven (Armstrong). They were laid off for one week in November, 1978, and for another week in January, 1979. They initiated claims for state unemployment compensation on November 16, 1978. On September 21, 1978, the United States secretary of labor issued a certificate of eligibility for TRA for Armstrong workers with a retroactive impact date of June 22, 1978. The plaintiffs then applied for and received, in addition to their unemployment compensation, TRA for the two weeks they were laid off. The plaintiffs were then laid off for two weeks in February, 1980, and one week in April, 1980; they received unemployment compensation and TRA for both layoffs. At this point, the plaintiffs had received five weeks of their fifty-two weeks of TRA.
On April 3, 1981, the Armstrong plant closed, and the plaintiffs were permanently laid off. The plaintiffs then filed new claims for state unemployment compensation, which established a new benefit year for state benefits, and applications for a continuation of their TRA, which they began to receive again. On September 30, 1981, after the plaintiffs had received only thirty-one weeks of TRA, the state department of labor informed the plaintiffs that they would receive no more TRA for the following reason: "In accordance with [
Each plaintiff filed an appeal with the unemployment compensation commission which denied their claims for continued benefits. The appeals referees dismissed their appeals and the employment security board of review *Page 309
affirmed those decisions. The plaintiffs appealed to the Superior Court which remanded the cases for de novo hearings. Following a new hearing, the named plaintiff's appeal was dismissed. The referee found that "[t]he [named plaintiff] filed an initiating claim for state unemployment compensation benefits effective November 26, 1978" and that he had exhausted all his regular state unemployment compensation with regard to this first claim by November 24, 1979. The referee then applied
On motion by all the plaintiffs, the employment security board of review transferred all the cases to itself, adopted the findings of the referee in the named plaintiff's hearing as applicable to all the plaintiffs and affirmed the referee's dismissal of the appeal. The board reasoned that the claimants established their initial TRA entitlement on the basis of their separation from Armstrong Rubber Company on November 24, 1978. Their then existing unemployment compensation benefit year was effective November 26, 1978, and expired on November 24, 1979. The first week of the period covered by the claimants' TRA certification with respect to which the claimants had exhausted their regular unemployment compensation entitlement was the week ending November 24, 1979. Clearly, the fifty-two *Page 310
week period beginning with the first week following the week ending November 24, 1979, extended from November 25, 1979, to November 24, 1980. By operation of
The plaintiffs now appeal these decisions and contend that there was no evidence to substantiate the referee's finding that the entitlement period ended November 29, 1980. They further contend that the referee erroneously concluded that the named plaintiff had exhausted all his regular unemployment compensation as of November 24, 1979.
"In appeals of this nature, the Superior Court does not try the matter de novo. It is bound by the findings of subordinate facts and the reasonable conclusions of fact made by the appeals referee, where, as is true here, the board of review adopted the findings and affirmed the decision of the referee. . . . The court's function is to determine, on the record, whether the referee acted unreasonably, arbitrarily or illegally. Conclusions of law reached by the referee must stand if they resulted from a correct application of the law to the facts found and could reasonably and logically follow from such facts." Robinson v. Unemployment SecurityBoard of Review,
The referee made the following finding of fact: "2. The claimant established a valid TRA entitlement effective November 19, 1978. The benefit period under said entitlement ended November 29, 1980." The plaintiffs contend that there was no evidence presented to support this original finding and request the court to make the following substituted finding: "2. The claimant established a valid TRA entitlement effective September 21, 1979. The benefit period to apply for benefits ended September 21, 1981."
At the hearing, it was established that the secretary of labor issued the certificate of eligibility on September 21, 1979, but with a retroactive impact date of June 22, 1978. It was also established that the named plaintiff received TRA for his first week of unemployment that began November 19, 1978. This court finds that the plaintiffs' entitlement period began on the date of their first TRA payment, and not on the date of certification, as the plaintiffs contend in their requested finding of fact. Under the plaintiffs' requested finding, they would have received TRA payments before they were entitled to them. Thus, the referee's original finding of fact was correct.
In determining that the named plaintiff had exhausted his regular state unemployment compensation as of November 24, 1979, the referee referred to the definition of "exhaustee" in General Statutes (Rev. to 1979) §
The plaintiffs' argument overlooks, however, that
Under
Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed.
