The Cottrell Clothing Company
v.
Bernard E. Teets, et al.
No. 18,930
139 Colo.
558; 342 P.2d 1016
Supreme Court of Colorado
En Banc
July 6, 1959
Mr. Joseph F. Little, for plaintiff in error.
Mr. Duke W. Dunbar, Attorney General, Mr. Frank E. Hickey,
Deputy, Mr. James D. McKevitt, assistant, for defendants in error.
MOORE, Justice.
This cause is before us on writ of error to review the judgment
of the district court of the City and County of Denver entered in
proceedings which originated before the Executive Director of
Employment Security on a claim for unemployment compensation.
The applicant was granted compensation without disqualification
before the administrative agency. Upon review in the district court
the award of the commission was modified to the extent that the
maximum disqualification for benefits, amounting to ten weeks, was
imposed upon claimant. The effect of the district court judgment was
to make available to claimant a maximum of sixteen weeks
compensation, instead of twenty-six weeks to which he would have
been entitled except for his alleged misconduct. The employer, The
Cottrell Clothing Company, seeks reversal contending that the act
authorizing unemployment compensation to an employee who has been
discharged for misconduct connected with his work, is
unconstitutional.
There is no dispute in the pertinent facts which were before the
trial court on stipulation. The applicant, Phillip Downare, was a
clothes presser employed by Cottrell. The employer had purchased and
installed clothes pressing machinery which Downare refused to use
after being directed several times to do so. On the date when he was
discharged the employer found five suits on the delivery rack
containing alteration marks which the new equipment would have
removed had it been used. The suits were not in fit condition to be
delivered to customers. Thereupon Downare was discharged. He applied
for unemployment compensation and his application was opposed by
Cottrell. The claimant, although served with process in the district
court action, did not enter an appearance and is not represented in
this court.
Pertinent provisions of the Colorado Employment Security Act to
which our attention is directed by counsel, are the following:
C.R.S. 1953, 82-1-2, contains the legislative declaration of
public policy wherein we find this statement:
"The legislature, therefore, declares
that in its considered judgment the public good, and the
general welfare of the citizens of this state require the
enactment of this measure, under the police powers 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." (Emphasis supplied.)
This section also uses the term "involuntary unemployment" and
states that it is "a subject of general interest and concern which
requires appropriate action by the legislature* * *."
Prior to 1957 the law provided that the maximum weekly benefit
payments and the maximum period of weekly disqualifications were
equal at twenty each. In 1957 the legislature amended C.R.S. '53,
82-4-4 to read in pertinent part as follows:
"Any otherwise eligible individual shall
be entitled during any benefit year to a total amount of
benefits equal to whichever is the lesser of twenty-six
times his weekly benefit amount and one-third of his wage
credits for insured work paid during his base period;* * *."
The 1957 amendment to 82-4-9 (1) reads in part as follows:
"(a) An individual shall be disqualified
for benefits if the department finds that such individual
has* * * left work voluntarily without good cause, or been
discharged for misconduct connected with his work* * *."
"(b) Such disqualification shall be not
less than one week nor more than ten consecutive weeks in
addition to the waiting period,* * *."
C.R.S. '53, 82-7-1, creates the Unemployment Compensation Fund to
which "contributions" must be made by employers who come within the
provisions of the act. This section concludes with the following
language: "All money in the fund shall be commingled and undivided."
C.R.S. '53, 82-6-3, requires that the administrative agency shall
"maintain a separate account for each employer and shall credit his
account with all contributions paid on his own behalf." After a
fixed period of "contributions" to the fund on the part of an
employer the amount thereof thereafter depends upon his benefit
experience, that is to say, if his turnover of employees is large
and numerous claims for compensation are made by his one-time
employees, his "contribution," or tax, is higher. If no claims are
shown by his "benefit experience" or if they are few, he may
conceivably be relieved of further contributions to the fund, so
long as required reserves in his account are available.
The complaint filed by the employer in the district court
questions the constitutionality of the act which authorizes payment
of sixteen weeks unemployment compensation to one who is discharged
for misconduct connected with his work. The specific contentions are
that the act: (a) deprives the employer of its property without due
process of law; (b) authorizes the administrative agency to expend
moneys for purposes other than those for which they were intended;
(c) grants irrevocable privileges to persons who quit their
employment or are discharged for misconduct; (d) impairs the
obligation of the contract alleged to exist between the employer and
the State of Colorado; (e) permits the taking of private property by
the State of Colorado for private use without consent of the owner;
(f) allows an expenditure of moneys of the employer without
affording it an opportunity to object thereto, or to pursue judicial
remedies to restrain such taking; (g) that the act improperly
delegates judicial powers to an administrative agency; and (h) that
the procedures prescribed by article 5, chapter 82, for filing of
claims and the determination thereof, violate the Colorado
constitution in that they establish burdensome, expensive and
time-consuming procedures which, in effect, nullify and discourage
appeals by persons adversely affected by the orders of the
administrative agency.
Questions to be Determined.
First: Is the matter of compensation for unemployment a subject
so related to the public welfare as to authorize the general
assembly, in the exercise of the police power, to enact a law
directing the payment of benefits to unemployed persons and levying
a tax upon employers to defray the cost thereof?
This question is answered in the affirmative. The line of
demarcation between a proper exercise of the police power and an
infringement of constitutional guarantees is not always well
defined. We deem it advisable to direct attention to some
fundamentals in this connection, and to that end, we quote from the
opinion in In Re Interrogatories, 97 Colo. 587, 52 P.2d 663,
as follows:
"Police power, the genesis of the General
Assembly's action, is inherent in government, and was well
known to the common law. 4 Blackstone's Comm. 162. 'This
power* * * has been said to be as broad as the public
welfare. It is an inherent attribute of sovereignty with
which the state is endowed for the protection and general
welfare of its citizens,* * *.' Rowekamp v.
Mercantile-Commerce B. & T. Co., 72 F. (2d) 852, 858.
(Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit). 'All authorities
agree that the Constitution presupposes the existence of the
police power, and is to be construed with reference to that
fact.' Village of Carthage v. Frederick, 122 N.Y.
268, 273, 19 Am. S.R. 490, 10 L.R.A. 178. The statute
claiming our attention is the expression of that branch of
the government having primary authority to determine what is
requisite to promote and preserve health, safety and morals.
Smith v. People, 51 Colo. 270, 117 Pac. 612; II
Cooley's Constitutional Limitations (8th Ed.) p. 1231.
Unless by its terms it imports evil, or is calculated to
operate arbitrarily, oppressively or unreasonably, courts
may not void the act. McLean v. Arkansas, 211 U.S.
539, 29 Sup. Ct. 206, 53 L. Ed. 315. That in its operation a
police measure may increase their labor, decrease the value
of their property, or otherwise inconvenience individuals,
does not make the act to offend. II Cooley's Constitutional
Limitations (8th Ed.) pp. 1228, 1231. By exercise of
inherent police power, the sovereign, purposing to promote
public health, may fairly and reasonably restrict the use of
property. Beveridge v. Harper & Turner Oil Tr. Co.,
168 Okla. 609, 35 P.2d 435. The unrestricted privilege to
engage in business or to conduct it as one pleases, is not
guaranteed by the Constitution. Nebbia v. New York,
291 U.S. 502. 'A large discretion is necessarily vested in
the legislature, to determine not only what the interests of
the public require, but what measures are necessary for the
protection of such interests.' II Cooley's Constitutional
Limitations (8th Ed.) p. 1231. 'When the subject lies within
the power of the state, debatable questions as to
reasonableness are not for the courts but for the
legislature, which is entitled to form its own judgment, and
its action within its range of discretion cannot be set
aside because compliance is burdensome.' Sproles v.
Binford, 286 U.S. 374, 52 Sup. Ct. 581."
The consequences resulting from widespread unemployment have a
very definite relation to the general welfare of the public. Through
depressions of the past we have learned at first hand the nature and
extent of the problems arising from unemployment, and everyone
appreciates its profound influence upon the welfare of the people as
a whole. As stated by the Supreme Court of the United States in
Carmichael v. Southern Coal Co., 301 U.S. 495, 57 S.C. 877, 109,
A.L.R. 1327, the available research material upon the subject shows:
"* * * that unemployment apparently has
become a permanent incident of our industrial system; that
it varies, in extent and intensity, with fluctuations in the
volume of seasonal businesses and with the business cycle.
It is dependent, with special and unpredictable
manifestations, upon technological changes and advances in
methods of manufacture, upon changing demands for
manufactured products -- dictated by changes in fashion or
the creation of desirable substitutes, and upon the
establishment of new sources of competition.
"The evils of the attendant social and
economic wastage permeate the entire social structure. Apart
from poverty, or a less extreme impairment of the savings
which afford the chief protection to the working class
against old age and the hazards of illness, a matter of
inestimable consequence to society as a whole, and apart
from the loss of purchasing power, the legislature could
have concluded that unemployment brings in its wake increase
in vagrancy and crimes against property, reduction in the
number of marriages, deterioration of family life, decline
in the birth rate, increase in illegitimate births,
impairment of the health of the unemployed and their
families and malnutrition of their children.
* * *
"The end being legitimate, the means is
for the legislature to choose. When public evils ensue from
individual misfortunes or needs, the legislature may strike
at the evil at its source. If the purpose is legitimate
because public, it will not be defeated because the
execution of it involves payments to individuals. Kelly
v. Pittsburgh, supra; Knights v. Jackson, 260
U.S. 12, 15; cf. Mountain Timber Co. v. Washington,
243 U.S. 219, 239-240. 'Individual interests are aided only
as the common interest is safeguarded.' See Cochran v.
Board of Education, 281 U.S. 370, 375; cf. Clark v.
Nash, 198 U.S. 361, 367; Hairston v. Danville &
Western Ry. Co., 208 U.S. 598, 608; Noble State Bank
v. Haskell, 219 U.S. 104, 110."
Second: Does the act here in question violate the specific
constitutional provisions to which our attention has been directed
by counsel for the employer?
This question is answered in the negative. The main issue raised
by the employer and the one chiefly argued by its counsel is that
C.R.S. '53, 82-4-9 (1), which limits the disqualification for
benefits to a maximum of ten weeks and thereby enables persons
"disqualified" from benefits to nevertheless receive them for a
period of sixteen weeks, deprives the employer of its property
without due process of law. For the purpose of this discussion we
assume that the employer, whose future rate of contribution may be
increased if his "benefit experience" shows increased claims, has a
property interest in the fund. We make it clear that we do not so
decide, and again state that the premise is assumed solely for the
purpose of discussion. Even so, we hold that there is no denial of
due process of law. We deem it sufficient to cite as authority for
this conclusion the language of the Supreme Court of the United
States in Carmichael v. Southern Coal Co., supra, as follows:
"(b) Extension of Benefits. The present
scheme of unemployment relief is not subject to any
constitutional infirmity, as respondents argue, because it
is not limited to the indigent or because it is extended to
some less deserving than others, such as those discharged
for misconduct. While we may assume that the state could
have limited its award of unemployment benefits to the
indigent and to those who had not been rightfully discharged
from their employment, it was not bound to do so. Poverty is
one, but not the only evil consequence of unemployment.
Among the benefits sought by relief is the avoidance of
destitution, and of the gathering cloud of evils which beset
the worker, his family and the community after wages cease
and before destitution begins. We are not unaware that
industrial workers are not an affluent class, and we cannot
say that a scheme for the award of unemployment benefits, to
be made only after a substantial 'waiting period' of
unemployment, and then only to the extent of half wages and
not more than $15 a week for at most 16 weeks a year, does
not effect a public purpose, because it does not also set up
an elaborate machinery for excluding those from its benefits
who are not indigent. Moreover, the state could rightfully
decide not to discourage thrift. Mountain Timber Co. v.
Washington, supra, 240. And as the injurious effects of
unemployment are not limited to the unemployed worker, there
is scope for legislation to mitigate those effects, even
though unemployment results from his discharge for cause."
In the case of W.H.H. Chamberlin, Inc. v. Andrews, et al.,
271 N.Y. 1, 2 N.E. (2d) 22, the court, in considering issues similar
to those in the instant case, stated:
"Whether or not the Legislature should
pass such a law, or whether it will afford the remedy or the
relief predicted for it, is a matter for fair argument but
not for argument in a court of law. Here we are dealing
simply with the power of the Legislature to meet a growing
danger and peril to a large number of our fellow citizens,
and we can find nothing in the act itself which is so
arbitrary or unreasonable as to show that it deprives any
employer of his property without due process of law or
denies to him the equal protection of the laws."
We have examined the references to other alleged violations of
constitutional provisions and find nothing to justify a declaration
that the act in question is unconstitutional.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
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