Patricia J. McClain v. Board of Review (080397)(Statewide)
Patricia J. McClain v. Board of Review (080397)(Statewide)
Opinion
**450 Under New Jersey's Unemployment Compensation Law (UCL or Act), N.J.S.A. 43:21-1 to -71, an employee terminated from employment after working a certain number of weeks is ordinarily entitled to unemployment insurance (UI) benefits. An employee who voluntarily leaves her employment without just cause, however, is not entitled to such benefits. N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). The Legislature recognized the inequity facing those employees who served a substantial period with one employer and then voluntarily left for an equal or better opportunity with another employer, only to be terminated shortly afterwards. Those employees terminated by the second employer were denied UI benefits because they had not worked the requisite time at the second job, despite long-term service at their previous employment.
To redress that problem, the Legislature in 2015 passed an amendment to N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), qualifying an employee *357 to receive UI benefits if she "voluntarily leaves work with one employer **451 to accept from another employer employment which commences not more than seven days after the individual leaves employment with the first employer." See L. 2015, c. 41, § 1 (modifying N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) ) (eff. May 4, 2015). The amendment ensured that an employee who was qualified for UI benefits during her first employment would not be disqualified from such benefits if terminated shortly after beginning her second employment. Ibid.
In the two consolidated appeals before us, each employee accepted an offer of employment from a second employer only to have the offer rescinded before the start date -- leaving her jobless. The question is whether in such a circumstance, the employee, whose offer is rescinded through no fault of her own, is entitled to UI benefits pursuant to N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a).
Two Appellate Division panels have reached diametrically opposite answers to that question based on divergent interpretations of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). One panel concluded that the acceptance of an offer of employment to commence within seven days after leaving the first employer -- not the actual start of new employment -- triggers the UI benefit protections of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a).
McClain v. Bd. of Review
,
Both appellate panels present plausible interpretations of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). However, only the
McClain
panel's interpretation is consistent with the remedial purposes of the UCL, an Act we have "construed liberally in favor of allowance of benefits."
Yardville Supply Co. v. Bd. of Review
,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the McClain panel, reverse the judgment of the Blake panel, and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
A.
The basic facts, which are undisputed, are discerned from McClain's and Blake's unemployment compensation proceedings before the Department of Labor.
Between January 2013 and October 2015, Patricia McClain worked at Learning Edge Academy, Inc., teaching toddlers. McClain worked forty hours per week earning $ 8.63 per hour. On October 12, 2015, McClain accepted an offer of employment as a preschool teacher at Kids Choice Academy, where she would make $ 9.25 per hour during a forty-hour work week. Her new job was to begin seven days later. McClain resigned her teaching position at Learning Edge the day she accepted Kids Choice's job offer. The next day, however, Kids Choice called McClain and rescinded the job offer because the teacher she was to replace was returning to her former position.
*358 Cynthia Blake worked as a cook at Laurel Healthcare from September 2013 to August 2015. Blake worked forty hours per week earning $ 10.70 per hour. In late July 2015, Blake accepted an offer of employment as a cook at Alaris Healthcare, where she would earn $ 12.96 per hour during a forty-hour work week. Blake resigned her full-time position at Laurel and was set to begin work at Alaris within seven days of leaving Laurel. Two days before Blake's start date, Alaris rescinded the offer to Blake, **453 apparently after deciding to hire someone else. 1
B.
McClain and Blake both filed for unemployment insurance benefits with the New Jersey Department of Labor. In both cases, the Deputy Director of Unemployment Insurance denied their claims. In both cases, the Appeal Tribunals affirmed because McClain and Blake did not commence their new employment within seven days of leaving their former employer, thus disqualifying them for benefits under N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). The Board of Review affirmed the Appeal Tribunal in both cases.
McClain and Blake separately appealed.
II.
A.
In McClain's case, the appellate panel rejected the Board of Review's interpretation of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) and reversed.
McClain
,
The panel's plain reading of the statute led it to conclude that so long as the employee accepts the job offer, which is set to begin within seven days of leaving the first employer, she is entitled to UI benefits if the offer is rescinded and she is rendered unemployed.
We granted the Board of Review's petition for certification.
B.
In Blake's case, the appellate panel affirmed the Board of Review's decision to
*359
deny Blake UI benefits because Blake voluntarily quit her job with her first employer and never started her second employment due to the rescinded offer.
Blake
,
We granted Blake's petition for certification.
III.
A.
McClain and Blake align their arguments with the reasoning of the panel in
McClain
,
B.
The issue before us is one of statutory interpretation. We must determine whether, under N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), an employee who voluntarily quits her current employment to accept an equal or better offer of new employment is entitled to UI benefits when the new employer rescinds the offer. Several canons of statutory construction guide our analysis.
Our objective in interpreting any statute is to give effect to the Legislature's intent.
Frugis v. Bracigliano
,
In reviewing a final agency decision, such as that of the Board of Review, we defer to factfindings that are supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record.
Brady v. Bd. of Review
,
With those precepts in mind, we turn first to an overview of the Unemployment Compensation Law, N.J.S.A. 43:21-1 to -71.
**457 C.
In enacting the Unemployment Compensation Law in 1936, the Legislature clearly expressed the public policy underlying the Act. N.J.S.A. 43:21-2 ("Declaration of state public policy"). It declared that "economic insecurity due to unemployment is a serious menace to the health, morals, and welfare of the people of this state ... [and] often falls with crushing force upon the unemployed worker and his family."
The UCL is "social legislation that provides financial assistance to eligible workers suffering the distress and dislocation caused by unemployment."
Utley
,
Against that backdrop, we must construe the statute at issue.
D.
The general rule under the UCL is that an employee who leaves "work voluntarily without good cause attributable to such work" is disqualified from receiving UI benefits until she is reemployed for a defined number of weeks. See **458 N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). Before 2015, that general exclusion of UI benefits for a voluntary quit extended to an employee who held a long-term job and left it for an equal or better *361 employment opportunity, only to be terminated shortly after beginning work. See N.J.A.C. 12:17-9.1(e)(9) ("An individual's separation from employment shall be reviewed as a voluntarily leaving work issue where the separation was ... [t]o accept other work[.]"). To ameliorate that harsh result, in 2015, the Legislature amended N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) to protect employees who accept new employment set to begin within seven days of leaving their former employer.
N.J.S.A. 43:21-5, as amended, provides in relevant part:
An individual shall be disqualified for benefits:
(a) For the week in which the individual has left work voluntarily without good cause attributable to such work, and for each week thereafter until the individual becomes reemployed and works eight weeks in employment, which may include employment for the federal government, and has earned in employment at least ten times the individual's weekly benefit rate, as determined in each case.... This subsection shall not apply to an individual who voluntarily leaves work with one employer to accept from another employer employment which commences not more than seven days after the individual leaves employment with the first employer, if the employment with the second employer has weekly hours or pay not less than the hours or pay of the employment of the first employer, except that if the individual gives notice to the first employer that the individual will leave employment on a specified date and the first employer terminates the individual before that date, the seven-day period will commence from the specified date.
[ N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) (emphasis denoting the 2015 amendment).]
The Board of Review and McClain and Blake give dueling plain-language interpretations of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). In the Board's view, the triggering event for UI benefit eligibility is the commencement of the new employment; in McClain and Blake's view, it is the acceptance of new employment. The Board contends that, under the statute, entitlement to UI benefits requires that the employee actually begin work with the new employer within seven days. The Board asks us to read N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) in the following way: "This subsection shall not apply to an individual who voluntarily leaves work with one employer to accept from another employer employment which [ actually ] commences not **459 more than seven days after the individual leaves employment with the first employer ...."
McClain and Blake claim that entitlement to UI benefits merely requires that an employee accept an offer of employment scheduled to begin seven days after leaving her former employment. They ask us to read N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) in the following fashion: "This subsection shall not apply to an individual who voluntarily leaves work with one employer to accept from another employer employment which [ is scheduled to ] commence[ ] not more than seven days after the individual leaves employment with the first employer ...." That interpretation allows for the granting of UI benefits when the new employer rescinds the offer before the employee begins work.
To accept either of the parties' divergent interpretations of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), we would have to write into the statute qualifying language, a task that is beyond the purview of this Court.
See
DiProspero
,
Although we may look to extrinsic sources in an attempt to divine the interpretation *362 intended by the Legislature, a review of the legislative history provides no decisive answer.
E.
Before passage of the 2015 amendment, Senator Fred H. Madden, Jr., the amendment's sponsor, issued a statement in support of the Senate Bill. See Sponsor's Statement to S. 2082 30-31 (May 19, 2014). The Statement provided:
Current law disqualifies any worker who voluntarily leaves a job from receiving UI benefits and requires the worker to become reemployed and work at least eight weeks, earning at least 10 times the workers weekly UI benefit rate, before again being eligible for UI benefits. This bill would make an exception from that requirement for a worker who leaves one job to accept a subsequent job at least equal in hours or pay, but is laid off from the subsequent job.
[ Ibid. ]
**460 At the June 5, 2014 hearing of the Senate Labor Committee, Senator Madden indicated that the bill responded to "real life" situations, such as one in which an employee worked for three years at a job, voluntarily left for new employment, and then became unemployed four weeks later when the new employer went bankrupt. Hearing on S. Comm. Substitute for S. 2082 before the S. Labor Comm. 3-4 (June 5, 2014) (statement of Sen. Madden).
Under the then-law, as Senator Madden explained, the employee was disqualified from receiving UI benefits because, upon starting her new job, the "clock reset[ ] to zero" and she had not worked the requisite number of weeks or reached the earned income threshold to qualify for UI benefits. Id. at 4-5. Senator Madden's example makes clear that one express purpose of the amendment was to fill in a gap in the law that deprived an employee who had earned UI eligibility at one job from accessing UI benefits after she voluntarily left for equal or better employment and then was terminated shortly afterwards at her new job. Senator Madden observed at the Senate hearing that when drafting a bill he tries to evaluate "the different angles of how to make the bill do everything that we intend it to do without missing anybody." Id. at 8-9.
Merely because the plight of an employee denied UI benefits resulting from rescission of an employment offer was not explicitly discussed at the hearing does not mean the Legislature intended to exclude such an employee from the protection of the amendment. The example given by Senator Madden does not necessarily define the full reach of the amendment or address the full range of inequities that the new law was intended to address.
See
City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.
,
Based on the legislative history, we cannot conclude that the Legislature intended to disqualify UI benefit protection to the class of employees, such as McClain and Blake, who earned UI benefit eligibility at their former jobs but were rendered unemployed through no fault of their own because of the rescission of an accepted offer of new employment that was scheduled to commence within seven days.
In summary, the legislative history does not provide the necessary clarity to give meaning to the disputed language of the statute.
IV.
A.
We are presented with ambiguous statutory language and inconclusive legislative history that leads to two plausible interpretations of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). This seeming stalemate is resolved by looking to the underlying objective of the Unemployment Compensation Law and the equitable purpose of the amendment.
The UCL is social legislation intended to provide financial relief to an employee who is out of work through no fault of her own and "is to be liberally construed in favor of claimants to effectuate its remedial purposes."
**462
Brady
,
Cast in that light, McClain and Blake fall within the category of workers the Legislature intended to protect by the amendment. Under the Blake panel's interpretation, McClain and Blake could have collected UI benefits if they had commenced their new jobs and were fired the next day, but instead they are disqualified from collecting benefits because their offers were rescinded just days before starting their new jobs. That absurd result is not one that the Legislature likely envisioned or intended and is completely at odds with the enlightened purposes of the UCL.
B.
The facts are not in dispute. McClain and Blake both tendered their resignations upon accepting an offer of work with a new employer. They both accepted positions that promised higher hourly wages than their old jobs. Their new employment, moreover, was scheduled to commence within seven days of their final day at their old jobs. The only remaining issue is whether their new employers' rescission of their accepted job offers before the start date disqualified them from receiving UI benefits under N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). Based on our interpretation of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), we conclude that McClain and Blake are entitled to UI benefits because (1) they qualified for UI benefits at their former employment at the time of their departure, (2) they were scheduled to commence their new jobs within seven days of leaving their former employment, and (3) their new job offers were rescinded through no fault of their own before the start date.
C.
We emphasize that the
Blake
panel mistakenly believed that the "first employer would bear the financial consequences of any
**463
benefits awarded" if the new employer rescinded the offer before the employee's start date.
See
*364
an employer's account shall not be charged for benefits paid to a claimant if the claimant's employment by that employer was ended in any way which, pursuant to subsection (a), (b), (c), (f), (g) or (h) of [ N.J.S.A. 43:21-5 ], would have disqualified the claimant for benefits if the claimant had applied for benefits at the time when that employment ended.
That statute makes clear that an employer's UI account is not charged when an employee voluntarily quits her employment. 2 Accordingly, the first employer will not be charged under the amendment if the second employer rescinds the offer before the employee begins the second job or if the employee is laid off after one week of work. 3
We also reject the
Blake
panel's conclusion that the last clause of the amendment is inconsistent with an interpretation of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) that extends UI benefits to employees whose
**464
accepted job offers are rescinded before the start date.
See
The quoted language addresses a scenario illustrated by the following example: on January 1, an employee gives notice to her employer that she will resign on January 14 to accept a new job beginning on January 17 -- within seven days of her resignation. In response, the first employer terminates her employment effective immediately, preventing her from starting her job within the seven-day period contemplated by the statute. The statute's protective language makes the operative date for calculating the seven-day period January 14 and thus safeguards the employee from losing UI benefits through the unilateral action of the first employer. Similarly, when an employee intends to begin working at the second job within seven days, but has her offer rescinded through *365 no fault of her own, the unilateral action by the second employer does not disqualify the employee from receiving unemployment benefits. Read in that way, N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) protects the employee's right to UI benefits from the unilateral action of either the first or second employer.
Last, we do not harbor the concerns expressed by the
Blake
panel about the difficulty of exposing the hypothetical employee who might feign a rescinded offer to qualify for UI benefits.
See
Blake
,
**465 V.
For the reasons expressed, in accordance with N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), we hold that McClain and Blake are entitled to UI benefits. We therefore affirm the judgment of the McClain panel, reverse the judgment of the Blake panel, and remand to the Board of Review for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, SOLOMON, and TIMPONE join in JUSTICE ALBIN's opinion.
Blake continued to work at Laurel part-time every other weekend.
Notably, the Senate Labor Committee's Statement to the bill enacted as N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) indicated that the new law did not have to explain the financial impact on the first employer's UI account because "[a]nother portion of current law, [N.J.S.A. 43:21-7(c)(1) ], provides that an employer's UI account is not charged for UI benefits paid to a claimant if the employee's employment with the employer ended in any way which would have disqualified the claimant from UI benefits." S. Labor Comm. Statement to S. Comm. Statement to 2082 , 1-2 (June 5, 2014); see also A. Labor Comm. Statement to S. Comm. Substitute for S. 2082 , 1-2 (Sept. 11, 2014); A. Appropriations Comm. Statement to S. Comm. Substitute for S. 2082 , 1-2 (Feb. 5, 2015). Thus, the Committee reasoned, "under those provisions of the current law, that employer's account would not be charged when the claimant leaves work with that employer to accept employment from another employer." S. Labor Comm. Statement to S. Comm. Substitute for S. 2082 , 1-2.
UI benefit payments come from the Unemployment Trust Fund, which is funded through contributions made by employers and employees. N.J.S.A. 43:21-7 to -9. As amicus NELA indicates, N.J.S.A. 43:21-3(d)(1)(B)(ii) and N.J.S.A. 43:21-19(c)(1) establish that the second employer will not be charged either.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Patricia J. MCCLAIN, Appellant-Respondent, v. BOARD OF REVIEW, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, Respondent-Appellant, and Learning Edge Academy, Inc., and Kids Choice Academy, Respondent. Cynthia M. Blake, Appellant-Appellant, v. Board of Review, Department of Labor, Respondent-Respondent, and Laurel Healthcare, LLC, Respondent.
- Cited By
- 19 cases
- Status
- Published