This is an appeal by an employer from the judgment of the Superior Court sustaining an award of the unemployment commissioner in favor of the plaintiff. He was an employee at the New Haven *255 plant of the American Steel and Wire Company, hereinafter called the company, and was a member of the union which as the bargaining agent had negotiated a contract with the company. This contract provided that eligible employees would be entitled to a vacation with pay each year. Employees in the service of the company from one to five years were to receive one week, those in service from five to twenty-five years, two weeks, and those in service twenty-five years or longer, three weeks. The employee could specify the vacation period he desired, or the plant management and grievance committee could agree upon such a period, but the company retained the final right to schedule the vacation period between May 1 and October 1 in each year and to allot the vacation time or change the allotments made as it might see fit. The contract stipulated that the employer “retains the exclusive rights to manage the business and plants and to direct the working forces,” including “the right to relieve employees from duty because of lack of work or for other legitimate reasons.” It further stated that “a period of temporary shutdown in any department for any reason between June 1 and October 1, unless other periods are mutually agreed upon, may be designated as comprising the vacation period for any employees of the department who are eligible for vacations.” No vacation period was agreed upon and on April 28, 1949, the company posted a notice to its employees that the plant would close for a two-weelc vacation period between 7 a. m. on July 30 and 7 a. m. on August 15. This notice indicated that construction work was to be performed during the shutdown period and stated that those employees who were required to work during the two weeks would be notified by their supervisor. The plaintiff, who was eligible for only one week of vacation, received a full week’s pay for the first week *256 of the shutdown. He was mentally and physically able to work during the second week, registered for work with the employment service and duly filed a claim for unemployment benefits for that week. He returned to work for the company when the plant reopened on August 15.
The company attacks the conclusions that the plaintiff had fulfilled the eligibility requirements and was not subject to any disqualification under the unemployment compensation law. General Statutes, § 7501, provides: “An individual shall be deemed to be totally unemployed throughout a week if he has performed during that week no services for which remuneration of any nature is payable. . . .” The company argues that, although the plaintiff may have been technically “unemployed” within this provision, his ■unemployment resulted from the voluntary agreement of the union as his agent and that, furthermore, he was not “available for work” during the vacation period. The provisions of the statutes pertinent to the discussion of these claims are § § 7507 and 7508. Section 7507 requires that the employee be “(2) . . . available for work, provided no person shall be termed available for work unless he has been or is making reasonable efforts to obtain work” and that “(4) he has been totally or partially unemployed . . . during his current benefit year for one week . . . with respect to which he has received no benefits but during which he was eligible for benefits in all other respects and was not ineligible for benefits under any provision of section 7508.” Section 7508 disqualifies an employee “(2) during the week in which, in the opinion of the administrator, he has (a) left work without sufficient cause connected with his employment.”
If the plaintiff had been eligible for a two-week vacation with pay he would not have been entitled to
*257
unemployment benefits for any part of the two-week shutdown period.
Kelly
v.
Administrator,
Our rule is that “one is not debarred from compensation because he has voluntarily left his employment unless the administrator shall be of the opinion that it was without sufficient cause connected with his employment’; and even if the administrator does so find or if he has been discharged for willful misconduct in the course of his employment he is denied compensation only for the week in which he left his employment and the four following weeks. {Rev. 1949, § 7508 ( 2).}”
Wyka
v.
Colt's Patent Fire Arms Mfg.
Co.,
The rule laid down in
American Bridge Co.
v.
Review Board,
(Ind. App.)
It is significant that the rule laid down in the Massachusetts case of
Moen
v.
Director of Division of
*260
Employment Security,
The company also alleges that the plaintiff was not eligible for unemployment compensation because he was not “available for work” and was not “making reasonable efforts to obtain work.” § 7507 (2). In
LeClerc
v.
Administrator,
In applying the rule as to when a person is available for work, the circumstances must of course be considered.
Leonard
v.
Unemployment Compensation Board of
Review,
This interpretation of the situation finds accord in the rulings under similar circumstances of the administrators of the unemployment compensation acts of several states. See App. Ref. Dec. No. 978,
The company points to § 7507 (2), which contains a provision to the effect that “no person shall be termed available for work unless he has been and is making reasonable efforts to obtain work.” It sought a correction in the finding by adding to it that “During the vacation period claimant made no effort to obtain other employment.” The commissioner found that the plaintiff, “being out of work for a limited period of time, by registering for work with the Employment Service . . . *263 made reasonable efforts to obtain work.” We cannot disturb this finding as one illegally or illogically drawn from all of the facts of the case. The commissioner correctly held that the plaintiff was eligible for benefits and not subject to any of the disqualifications under the law.
The view we take of the case makes it unnecessary to discuss the other reasons of appeal.
There is no error.
In this opinion Jennings, Inglis and O’Sullivan, Js., concurred; Brown, C. J., dissented.
Notes
In re Buffelen Lumber & Mfg. Co.,
Minn. Stat. §268.09 (Henderson 1949); Wash. Rev. Stat. Ann. §9998-211 (Sup. 1945); Pa. Stat. Ann. tit. 43 §802 (Sup. 1950); W. Va. Code Ann. §2366 (78) (1) (1949); Mass. Ann. Laws c. 151 A, §25 (e) (1) (1949); N. Y. Lab. Law §593 (1).
