25 S.E.2d 810 | Ga. | 1943
1. The decision of the Supreme Court in Independent Gasoline Co. v. Bureau of Com.,
2. Under section 8 of the unemployment compensation act the written approval of the commissioner of a written offer of an employer to voluntarily become subject to the act must be communicated to the employer in order to subject such employer to the terms of the act. Private uncommunicated approval will not suffice.
3. The decision of the Supreme Court in Zachos v. Huiet,
Nor do we think that the amendment to this clause of the act in 1941 removed the objectionable feature which rendered the original clause unconstitutional. The evil of the original act, as pointed out by this court in the previous decision, was that the law imposes this burden upon a corporation which is a legal entity and which would not otherwise be subject because a majority of its capital stock is owned by one who controls or owns another employing unit. The amendment preserves this evil, in that it provides in part that "any employing unit which, together with one or more other employing units, engaged in related businesses, is owned or controlled directly or indirectly by the same interests, . . and which, if treated as a single unit with such other employing units or interests, or both, would be an employer under paragraph (1) of this subsection." The words "engaged in related businesses," found in the amendment to the act, did not appear in the original; and it is contended by the commissioner that these words change the meaning of the clause and cure the defect of the original as pointed out in the former decision of this court. It is clear that the amendment retains the evil of the original which made the ownership of the majority of the capital stock of a corporation the deciding factor in a determination of whether or not the corporation was made subject to the terms of the act. The additional words found in the amendment, while in some indefinite degree limiting the corporations or employing units that would be subject under this clause of the act, are not sufficient to cure the evil which rendered the original unconstitutional. It follows that the amendment, under the previous decision of this court which held the original unconstitutional, is unconstitutional and void for the reasons there set out. The court erred in overruling these grounds of the demurrer.
2. But the commissioner asserts in his amended petition that the defendant is liable for the amount sued for, by virtue of its voluntary election to come under the act. The petition sets forth as an exhibit a writing signed by the defendant, by the terms of which the defendant offered to voluntarily become subject to the *856
unemployment-compensation act. Section 8 of the act provides that an employer not otherwise subject may voluntarily in writing become subject when its written offer has been accepted or approved in writing by the commissioner. It is admitted that the defendant made a written offer to become subject as of January 1, 1938, but it was not shown upon the trial that the commissioner approved the defendant's offer in writing and transmitted or communicated his written approval to the defendant. A witness for the commissioner, by whom it was sought to prove this fact, testified that he could not say that the commissioner's written approval was duly addressed to the defendant and properly stamped and deposited in the United States post-office. It must be held that there is no evidence to show that the written approval of the commissioner was ever communicated to the defendant. But it is strongly urged by counsel for the commissioner that under the act the defendant became liable immediately upon the approval of the commissioner of its written offer, and that it was unnecessary that his approval be communicated to the defendant. The writing signed by the employer amounts to no more than an offer upon its part, which offer would become binding only when accepted in writing by the commissioner and this fact communicated to the employer. In the absence of an intention that the commissioner's approval be communicated to the employer as a condition precedent to the employer's becoming liable under the act, there would have been no need for a requirement in the law that the commissioner's approval be in writing. The commissioner needed no notice to notify him of his own act. The employer is the only one that would be benefited by having the written notice of the commissioner's approval. It would thereby be put on notice that it must make contributions as required by the act. It thus appears that the legislative purpose in requiring that the commissioner's approval be in writing was to afford this needed notice to the employer. The written offer of the defendant was made on a blank form evidently prepared by the commissioner, and that form contains the following language: "If the election is approved, a copy of the agreement will be returned to you, properly signed." This language contained in the offer renders it not binding until and unless it is approved in the manner there stipulated, which is the return to the employer of a properly signed copy thereof. In Federal Farm Mortgage Cor. v. *857 Dixon,
3. But the commissioner contends that he is entitled to recover the amount sued for, upon the further ground that the defendant, during the period covered in the suit, had eight employees covered by the act, which under section 19(g) 1 rendered it subject to the terms of the act. It is agreed by the parties that the defendant, during the period covered by the suit, had seven employees who were covered by the act, but there is a sharp disagreement as to whether the eighth person was an employee covered by the act. As to this person there is evidence in the record that he was paid $25 per month, that his services consisted in making a statement from the check-stubs and other data showing the operations of the defendant's business. There was no specified time or place for the performance of these services. None of the services were performed at the defendant's place of business or upon its premises. Nor did the defendant give directions of any kind to this person. The only control over this person exercised by the defendant was to require that the work be performed in a satisfactory manner. Only a small portion of this employee's time was consumed in rendering services to the defendant, and he was engaged at all time in other employment, either in the performance of an independent mercantile business of his own, or in doing general accounting work for a number of other concerns. Section 19(h) 6 of the unemployment compensation act (Ga. L. 1937, p. 806) provides that services performed by an individual for wages shall be employment subject to this act, unless it is shown to the satisfaction of the commissioner that "(A) Such individual has been and will continue to be free from control or direction over the performance of such services, both under his contract of service and in fact; and (B) Such service is either outside *858
the usual course of the business for which such service is performed, or that such service is performed outside of all the places of business of the enterprise for which such service is performed; and (C) Such individual is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, profession, or business." It was held by this court in Zachos v. Huiet,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur. *859