Pate v. Rasco
Pate v. Rasco
Opinion
Governor Guy Hunt appointed Mary Rasco to serve as an administrative assistant in his office. As a result of the removal of the Governor from office, Rasco became unemployed. She filed for unemployment compensation. It was denied.
After exhausting her administrative remedies, Rasco filed an appeal to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County. The Department of Industrial Relations requested that the appeal be dismissed, contending that Rasco failed to file the appeal in the proper county, as provided by §
The sole issue on appeal is whether the Montgomery County Circuit Court had jurisdiction to entertain the appeal.
Section
The record reflects that Rasco lived and worked in Montgomery County prior to and while she was employed by Governor Hunt. In May 1993 she applied for unemployment benefits in Montgomery County. In July 1993 she "went to live [in Tuscaloosa] with a friend whose husband had died." She testified that her friend "invited me to stay with her until I could find work."
The weekly "pay order cards" (weekly claims for benefits) submitted by Rasco from *Page 857 July 10, 1993, to November 1993 were postmarked from Tuscaloosa or Birmingham and contained a Tuscaloosa, Alabama, return address. Until September 4, 1993, these same cards, however, indicated Montgomery as her place of residence. She perfected her appeal to the Circuit Court of Montgomery County on August 26, 1993.
The Department contends that Rasco should have filed her appeal in the Circuit Court of Tuscaloosa County because that was where she resided at the time she filed her appeal. It insists that the phrase "county of residence of the claimant" means where the claimant is actually living, whether permanent or temporary, at the time the appeal is filed.
Rasco's position is that the term residence is synonymous with domicile. She contends that the terms denote the place where the person is deemed in law to live and may not always be the place where the person is actually dwelling.
As a general rule, the words residence and domicile are not considered synonymous. Ex parte Sides,
Domicile requires residence at a particular place and an intent to remain there permanently, or for an indefinite length of time. Ex parte Weldon,
The determination of whether Rasco resided in Montgomery County for purposes of invoking the jurisdictional language of §
The trial court made a factual finding that Rasco's residence at the time she filed her appeal was Montgomery County. Such finding is supported by the record.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
The foregoing opinion was prepared by Retired Appellate Judge L. CHARLES WRIGHT while serving on active duty status as a judge of this court under the provisions of §
AFFIRMED.
All the Judges concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lenora W. Pate, as Director of the State Department of Industrial Relations v. Mary L. Rasco.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published