Keysight Technologies, Inc., Petitioner, v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado and Division of Unemployment Insurance, Respondents.
No. 19CA0638
Colorado Court of Appeals
February 13, 2020
2020COA29
Opinion by JUDGE LIPINSKY; Fox and Berger, JJ., concur
SUMMARY
February 13, 2020
2020COA29
No. 19CA0638, Keysight Tech. v. ICAO — Labor and Industry — Colorado Employment Security Act — Premiums and Coverage — Transfer of Experience and Assignment of Rates
On a matter of first impression, a division of the court of appeals considers whether the Division of Unemployment Insurance was required to transfer the experience — essentially the claims history for purposes of calculating a statutory employer‘s unemployment insurance premium rate — of a predecessor employer to a successor employer that had spun off several years earlier. The division holds that the Division of Unemployment Insurance was not required to transfer the predecessor employer‘s experience pursuant to
2020COA29
Court of Appeals No. 19CA0638
Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado
DD No. 46273-2018
Keysight Technologies, Inc.,
Petitioner,
v.
Industrial Claim Appeals Office of the State of Colorado and Division of Unemployment Insurance,
Respondents.
ORDER AFFIRMED
Division VII
Opinion by JUDGE LIPINSKY
Fox and Berger, JJ., concur
Announced February 13, 2020
Akerman LLP, Brian M. Nugent, Melissa L. Cizmorris, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner
No Appearance for Respondent Industrial Claim Appeals Office
Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Krista Maher, Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Respondent Division of Unemployment Insurance
¶ 2 The Industrial Claim Appeals Office (Panel) concluded that several statutory provisions, including, as pertinent here,
I. Background
¶ 3 Keysight was created and spun off from Agilent in 2014. Keysight, which is wholly owned by Agilent, was not an active business before the spinoff. Keysight acquired 75% of Agilent‘s Colorado employees and half of Agilent‘s infrastructure, and became
¶ 4 More than three years later, in 2018, Keysight asked the Division to transfer Agilent‘s experience to Keysight and “revise Keysight‘s unemployment tax rates starting on its liability date forward.” (A statutory employer‘s unemployment compensation tax rate is based on a number of factors, including the unemployment compensation benefit payments made to its former employees over the twelve-month period before the “computation date.”
¶ 5 The Division denied Keysight‘s request. After a series of appeals, hearing officer decisions, and Panel remand orders, the hearing officer entered a decision addressing whether certain subsections of
¶ 6 The hearing officer concluded that
¶ 7 The hearing officer further concluded that
¶ 8 The hearing officer concluded, however, that
II. Discussion
A. Section 8-76-104(2)(b)
¶ 10 Keysight contends that the Panel incorrectly interpreted
¶ 12 “A ‘cardinal principle of statutory construction’ is that no clause, sentence, or word is ‘superfluous, void, or insignificant.‘” Falcon Broadband, Inc. v. Banning Lewis Ranch Metro. Dist. No. 1, 2018 COA 92, ¶ 31, ____ P.3d ____, ____ (quoting TRW Inc. v. Andrews, 534 U.S. 19, 31 (2001)). “Statutory interpretation presents a question of law that we review de novo.” Colo. Med. Bd., ¶ 22, 451 P.3d at 845.
¶ 13
If an employer transfers all or a portion of its trade or business to another employer and, at the time of the transfer, there is substantially common ownership, management, or control of the two employers, the unemployment experience attributable to the predecessor employer shall be transferred to the successor
employer. The rates of both employers shall be recalculated and made effective immediately upon the date of the transfer of the trade or business.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 14 The Division argues, and we agree, that subsection (2)(b)‘s language requiring that the premium rate of the successor employer be “recalculated” necessarily contemplates that the successor employer had a Division-calculated premium rate before the transfer. Importantly, the word “recalculate” means “to calculate or estimate again.” Webster‘s Third New International Dictionary 1893 (2002). And having a pre-existing Division-calculated premium rate, in turn, contemplates that the successor employer was already a statutory employer. See generally
¶ 15 Keysight relies on
¶ 16 The Panel concluded, however, that when subsections (2)(a) and (2)(b) are read together, both address “situations where an employer transfers all or a portion of its trade or business to another already existing employer,” and the difference in the two subsections’ applicability turns merely on “whether there is substantial common ownership between the two employers.”
¶ 17 We acknowledge that subsection (2) is not a model of clarity. Even so, reading subsections (2)(a) and (2)(b) together, and considering subsection (2)(b)‘s requirement that the premium rate of the successor employer be “recalculated,” we perceive no error in the Panel‘s conclusion that subsection (2)(b), like subsection (2)(a), addresses circumstances where the transferee/successor employer was an existing employer at the time of the transfer.
¶ 18 Keysight argues that the Panel‘s interpretation of subsection (2)(b) leads to unfair results, conflicts with the
¶ 19 Because
B. Keysight‘s Request Was Untimely
¶ 20 The Division argues that a separate basis for affirming the Panel‘s order is that Keysight did not timely request revision of its premium rate through the transfer of Agilent‘s experience. We agree.
¶ 21
An employer who wishes to protest a notice of his or her premium rate shall file a written request for redetermination of the premium rate. The written request for redetermination must be received by the Division within twenty calendar days of the date the rate notice was issued.
¶ 22 Keysight does not argue that Regulation 11.1.4‘s twenty-day time limit did not apply to its request. The record shows that Keysight apparently filed the request because it believed the Division had assigned it an erroneous tax rate. Indeed, at one of the hearings, a Keysight witness testified that Keysight requested the experience transfer when it discovered that the Division had allegedly “assigned an incorrect tax rate.”
¶ 23 Keysight instead argues that the Division waived any timeliness challenge under Regulation 11.1.4 because it did not raise the argument during the administrative proceedings. But an appellee may defend the underlying judgment or ruling on any ground supported by the record, so long as the appellee‘s rights are not thereby increased. See Farmers Grp., Inc. v. Williams, 805 P.2d 419, 428 (Colo. 1991); Regency Realty Inv‘rs, LLC v. Cleary Fire Prot., Inc., 260 P.3d 1, 7 (Colo. App. 2009); Olsen & Brown v. City of Englewood, 867 P.2d 96, 99 (Colo. App. 1993), aff‘d, 889 P.2d 673 (Colo. 1995).
III. Conclusion
¶ 25 The Panel‘s order is affirmed.
JUDGE FOX and JUDGE BERGER concur.
