290 N.W. 802 | Minn. | 1940
The 1936 statute establishing the state unemployment compensation system declares that it was enacted under the police power of the state "for the compulsory setting aside of unemployment reserves to be used for the benefit of persons unemployed through no fault of their own" to alleviate economic insecurity due to unemployment as a serious menace to the health, morals, and welfare of the people, to encourage employers to stabilize employment, and by providing benefits to the unemployed to maintain purchasing power and limit the serious social consequences of poor relief assistance. The act establishes the state unemployment compensation fund (§ 3), which is derived from taxes exacted of employers subject to the act computed on a basis of employment and pay rolls. The act is administered by the unemployment compensation commission through which the fund is disbursed. A comprehensive plan is set up for the payment from the fund of unemployment benefits to workers employed within the state by designated classes of employers. The benefits are payable to the employes covered by the act during unemployment upon prescribed conditions and at prescribed rates. See Bielke v. American Crystal Sugar Co.
The employe has nothing to do with the collection of the tax from the employer. Payment of the tax is enforced against the employer by civil action in the name of the commission. § 14(b).
Although the federal social security law applies only to employers of eight or more employes, our 1936 statute made no such distinction.
L. 1939, c. 443, § 1H (6) (k) (3 Mason Minn. St. 1940 Supp. § 4337-22H[6][k]), which amended the 1936 act, among other things excludes all employers of less than eight employes where the services of all of such employer's employes are performed outside of the corporate limits of a city, village, or borough of 10,000 or more population as determined by the last United States census.
Plaintiff alleges that he has been for many years, was at the time of the commencement of this action, and expected to continue to be employed as an engineer by defendant in its ice manufacturing plant in the city of Red Wing; that the defendant employs less than eight persons; that under the 1936 law plaintiff was entitled to unemployment benefits in the event of unemployment, which he actually received in 1938; that Red Wing is a city of less than 10,000 population according to the last census; that the effect of the 1939 amendatory act is to exclude plaintiff from unemployment benefits and to exempt defendant from obligation to pay unemployment taxes, thereby depriving plaintiff of rights which he enjoyed and relieving defendant of obligations under the 1936 act; and "that at times during the years to come the said plaintiff, whose life work and occupation is that of an employe, as defined in said act, will be unemployed and will be denied the benefits of said act if his prayer for relief is not granted."
It is alleged that plaintiff asserts and maintains that the 1939 amendatory law is unconstitutional as class legislation violative of the provisions of the state and federal constitutions; that defendant asserts and maintains that the act is constitutional; and *280 that "various questions" have arisen and exist between plaintiff and defendant as to their respective rights, status, and legal relations with respect to unemployment compensation with resulting "uncertainty and insecurity" on the part of each of them regarding such matters. The prayer is for judgment determining "the rights, status, and legal relations of plaintiff and defendant under the Unemployment Compensation Act, and removing the uncertainty and insecurity now existing with respect thereto, declaring, adjudging and decreeing that said subsection H-(6) (k), Section 1, Chapter 443, Session Laws of Minnesota, for 1939, is invalid, void and unconstitutional under the Constitution of the State of Minnesota and of the United States of America."
The answer in effect admitted all the allegations of the complaint except that the 1939 amendatory act was unconstitutional. The attorney general intervened on behalf of the state, adopting the allegations of the answer. Plaintiff's motion on the pleadings for judgment was granted.
Unemployment benefits cannot be recovered directly from the employer. Plaintiff makes no such claim. He asserts no right, present or future, against the defendant. He claims a right in the future to unemployment benefits from the fund which is contingent upon his becoming unemployed. In the final analysis, the complaint demands an advisory opinion as to plaintiff's future right to unemployment benefits in the contingency of his future unemployment and to defendant's liability to pay the tax.
The case was argued and submitted before we had the record and appellant's printed brief. The presentation was upon the assumption that the case presented a justiciable question concerning the constitutionality of the 1939 amendatory act. The argument was confined to the constitutional questions without a consideration of the right of the parties to maintain the action under the declaratory judgments statute. Before there can be any consideration of the constitutional questions it must appear that we have a case before us for the exercise of the judicial function. *281
Proceedings for a declaratory judgment must be based on an actual controversy. The controversy must be justiciable in the sense that it involves definite and concrete assertions of right and the contest thereof touching the legal relations of parties having adverse interests in the matter with respect to which the declaration is sought, and must admit of specific relief by a decree or judgment of a specific character as distinguished from an opinion advising what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts. Mere differences of opinion with respect to the rights of parties do not constitute such a controversy. This court of its own motion will reverse for want of jurisdiction of the subject matter where it appears there is no real controversy, on the grounds that there is no proper case for a declaratory judgment and the judicial function does not comprehend the giving of advisory opinions. County Board of Education v. Borgen, 192. Minn. 512,
Our decision in the Borgen case,
Here there is no controversy between the parties with respect to the act assailed and there can be none. Where the employe is entitled to benefits, his rights are against the fund only. Where the employer is liable for the tax, the liability is to the fund only. As to such matters, neither has an adverse interest against the other in the particular case.
A case by way of contrast may be helpful to emphasize what has just been said. In Aetna L. Ins. Co. v. Haworth,
Plaintiff has no present right to unemployment benefits, nor do we know that he ever will have a right to them. Any right that he may have to benefits, even if it were determined under the 1936 law, is conditioned upon his future unemployment and proceeding to obtain them in strict conformity with the provisions of the statute. See §§ 6 and 7, as amended by L. 1939, c. 443, §§ 5 and 6. The provisions of § 8(f) that there shall be no judicial review of a claim for benefits until after a party has exhausted his remedies before the commission as required by the act in itself should be sufficient to deter us from passing on plaintiff's right to benefits now.
But, that aside, the plaintiff's claims are based on a hypothetical state of facts, which may never become real. Courts have declined to determine rights in anticipation of an event which can happen only in the future. It was not contemplated that there should be declarations upon remote contingencies or as to matters where the plaintiff's interest is merely contingent upon the happening of some event in the future. Courts will wait until the event giving rise to rights has happened so that the alleged rights have become fixed under an existing state of facts as of the time when the declaration of rights is to be made. Electric B. S. Co. v. Securities
Exch. Comm.
In Ashwander v. TVA,
In State ex rel. La Follette v. Dammann,
The fact that the attorney general has intervened does not make a justiciable controversy out of what was obviously not one as between the original parties. By the terms of his intervention the attorney general stands in the defendant's shoes for the obvious purpose of raising the constitutional questions. The judicial power does not extend to giving advisory opinions to the other departments of the government. The right to give such opinions being coextensive with the duty, courts will refrain from giving them, Rice v. Austin,
Reversed with directions to dismiss the action. *286