STONEWALL CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, a corporation, Appellant, v. Robert E. McLAUGHLIN et al., constituting the District Unemployment Compensation Board, Appellees.
No. 2357.
Municipal Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.
Decided May 28, 1959.
151 A.2d 535
Argued March 16, 1959.
Joseph Notes, Washington, D. C., with whom Louis Mackall, Jr., and A. John Weil, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellees.
Before ROVER, Chief Judge, and HOOD and QUINN, Associate Judges.
QUINN, Associate Judge.
Appellees brought this suit against appellant in the Municipal Court to recover contributions alleged to be owing to the District Unemployment Compensation Board.1 According to the complaint, the most recent contributions had been due on
It is firmly established that a sovereign, whether state or national, is exempt from the operation of statutes of limitations where it seeks to assert a public right, unless the sovereign expressly provides that its claim shall be barred if not pursued within a stated period of time.3 Congress has not provided a specific statute of limitations for suits to recover contributions due to the District Unemployment Compensation Board. In view of this fact, appellees take the position that the above stated rule is applicable here; that a suit of this character is an assertion by a sovereign power of a public right, and it is therefore exempt from the general statute of limitations. We agree.
“Compulsory unemployment contributions are taxes * * *”4 which are expended for a public purpose, the relief of unemployment.5 Therefore, a suit brought to recover such contributions is one asserting a public right. Administration of the Act6 and the right to collect contributions,7 including the right to make collections by a civil action if necessary,8 is vested in the District Unemployment Compensation Board, appellee herein, by Congress, which has plenary power to legislate for the District of Columbia.9 Consequently, the general statute of limitations does not run against the Board in a suit by it to recover unemployment contributions.10
Affirmed.
HOOD, Associate Judge (dissenting).
I dissent. I think it is more reasonable to assume that Congress by failing to specifically impose a time limitation on actions by the Board intended that such actions be controlled by our general statute of limitations than to assume that Congress intended that such actions be subject to no time limitation.
