(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for
the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized).
GARIBALDI, J., writing for a majority of the Court.
The issue on appeal is whether claimants, who elected to participate in an early retirement plan,
voluntarily left work without good cause attributable to such work, thereby rendering them ineligible for
unemployment benefits, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a).
Claimants are former employees of the Inland Fisher Guide Division of the General Motors
Corporation (GM), located in Trenton, New Jersey (the Trenton plant). In December 1992, the Trenton
plant announced to its employees that GM intended to close the plant by the end of 1993. A short time
later, GM announced it was offering a special accelerated retirement plan for eligible employees nationwide.
The offering of this retirement incentive program was not related to the projected closing of the Trenton
plant. To be eligible for the retirement initiative, workers were required to have at least ten years of service
with GM and be at least fifty years of age.
From December 1992 until the end of February 1993, various statements about the anticipated
Trenton plant closing were issued that stressed that the plant would in fact be closing. In February 1993, a
memo was issued describing the projected layoff schedule, with the first large layoff set to occur in May or
June of 1993. Layoffs were to be based on seniority status, with the most senior displacing those with lesser
seniority.
Two days after the March 1, 1993 deadline for electing early retirement, GM announced that the
Trenton plant would remain open. No layoffs occurred. Had the plant shut down, laid off employees could
have applied for unemployment benefits and also would have received Supplemental Unemployment Benefits
(SUB) provided by GM until early retirement was available at the age of fifty-five or until SUB ran out of
funds. During this time, the workers' medical benefits, except dental coverage, would have continued.
After accepting the early retirement package, claimants filed separate claims for unemployment
benefits. The Deputy Director of the Division of Unemployment and Disability Insurance (Deputy) found
claimants eligible for benefits, reasoning that claimants left work with good cause attributable to the work
because the layoffs were imminent when they elected early retirement. GM filed a mass appeal from the
Deputy's determination and the Appeal Tribunal affirmed.
GM appealed to the Board of Review, Department of Labor (Board). The Board reversed, rejecting
the premise that GM had placed such a strong temptation in front of the workers that it was the only
prudent course of action available. The Board emphasized that had the claimants opted not to retire and
eventually had been laid off, they would have been in essentially the same situation as they were after
accepting early retirement. Because they did not stand to suffer financially by not accepting the incentive
package, claimants were not in a position of having had no reasonable choice but to retire. The Board
distinguished this case from Trupo v. Board of Review, wherein the Appellate Division reasoned that a
worker facing the daily fear of future employment layoff may have good cause to leave if the fear of
imminent layoff and loss of future medical benefits were based upon definitive objective facts. The Board
found that the prospective layoff at the Trenton plant was not imminent given the substantial amount of time
that claimants could have continued to work based on their seniority status.
The Appellate Division reversed the decision of the Board, finding that claimants' fear of layoff was based on the unequivocal statements made by GM that the plant would be closing by the end of 1993. The court observed that by not accepting the incentive package the claimants would have been required to give up complete health insurance coverage and pension and that there was no assurance of any transfer rights to other GM facilities by the deadline for selecting the incentive package. According to the Appellate Division, the Board's decision that claimants voluntarily left work without good cause attributable to such work
could not be sustained on the record. The court also held that to avoid double recovery, the award of
unemployment benefits had to be reduced by the amount of pension or retirement pay received by claimants.
The Supreme Court granted certification.
HELD: Claimants, who elected to participate in an early retirement plan, voluntarily left work without
good cause attributable to such work, thereby rendering them ineligible for unemployment benefits.
1. If an agency's factual findings are supported by credible evidence, a court must accept them. A court
can intervene only when the agency action is clearly inconsistent with its statutory mission or with other State
policy. Here, the Court addresses whether the Board's action violated the express or implied legislative
policies of New Jersey's Unemployment Compensation Act (Act), and whether, in applying those legislative
policies, the Board erred in reaching its conclusion. (pp. 12-14)
2. The underlying mission of the Act is to afford protection to workers against the hazards of economic
insecurity due to involuntary unemployment. Although the Act is to be liberally construed, the
unemployment insurance trust fund is to be preserved against claims by those not intended to share in its
benefits. (pp. 14-16)
3. The legislative history of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) supports the conclusion that claimants are not entitled to
unemployment benefits. In 1961, the statute was amended to specifically disqualify claimants who left work
for purely personal reasons. Good cause is construed to mean cause sufficient to justify an employee's
voluntarily leaving the ranks of the employed and joining the ranks of the unemployed. The test of ordinary
common sense and prudence applies to determine whether an employee's decision to leave work
constitutes good cause. Good cause is shown when the employee demonstrates: a subjective fear of
imminent layoff based on definitive objective facts; and that he or she would suffer a substantial economic
loss. (pp. 16-22)
4. Claimants bear the burden of proving that they left work voluntarily with good cause attributable to such
work. Based on their seniority and associated bumping rights, claimants would have been given a
substantial amount of time to continue working at the Trenton plant. Those contractual seniority rights and
the additional transfer rights undermine the finding that the layoffs were imminent. While claimants may
have had a subjective fear of layoff, that fear was not based on definitive objective facts. (pp. 23-25)
5. Claimants have not established that they would have suffered significant economic harm if they elected
not to retire. The Board's determination that claimants would not incur a substantial economic loss or loss
of medical benefits is supported by the substantial credible evidence in the record. That conclusion coupled
with the finding that the layoffs were not imminent disqualified claimants from receiving unemployment
benefits. (pp. 25-27)
6. Claimants are not the type of workers the Act is designed to protect. They were not involuntarily laid off
and receiving no income. The decision of the employees to accept the incentive package was an entirely
personal one. The findings of the Board were supported by sufficient credible evidence in the record, were
not arbitrary or capricious, and comport with public policy and the legislative history of the Act, specifically,
N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). (pp. 27-29)
Judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED and the decision of the Board of Review is
REINSTATED.
JUSTICE COLEMAN, dissenting, in which JUSTICE STEIN joins, is of the view that, under these
circumstances, claimants established a reasonable belief of a real, substantial, and imminent risk of losing
their jobs. Furthermore, a finding that claimants are eligible to collect unemployment benefits would not
result in double recovery because the statute requires a set-off based on pension or retirement payments
received by claimants.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK and O'HERN join in
JUSTICE GARIBALDI'S opinion. JUSTICE COLEMAN filed a separate dissenting opinion in which
JUSTICE STEIN joins.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-28/
29 September Term 1997
WILLIAM F. BRADY, JR., SYLVIA ALBARRAN,
HERBERT ALEXANDER, CARMEN ALICEA, FREDERICK ALLEN,
BEATRICE AMISON, GERALD AMISON, SHIRLEY G.
ANDERSON, JOSEPH ANDREWS, JR.,
MARY L. ARCAMONE, MARY AUSTIN,
JAMES BAILEY, DUDLEY BARCALOW,
JOSE J. BEAYCHAMPS, MARIETTA BERENATO,
JOSEFA BIELSKI, ANNA BIJACSKO,
JOHN BLACK, HAROLD BODDEN, SHIRLEY
BOTTREL, LEON BOYER, RAYMOND BOYZATH,
FREDDIE BRIMLEY, HERBERT BROOKER,
JAMES H. BROWNE, ROBERT W. BRYNER,
AUGUSTA BUDD, HECTOR G. BURGOS, JOHN E.
BURRIS, JAMES CALDWELL, MARIE CAPRIOTTI,
ROBERT CASE, MARGARET CHAMBUS, PATRICIA
CHARYAK, MATTEO CIPRIANO, BENJAMIN COLE,
THOMAS J. COLEMAN, FRED COMO, WILLIAM R.
CRAFT, JOANN CREA, LUZ CRUZ, MARY L. CZAP,
JOSEPH DALY, SOPHIE DARDZINSKI, KARL H.
DEIBLER, BARBARA A. DERRY, MARGAREE
DILLARD, EDWARD DOROTA, ANTHONY DOTO,
ANATOL DOWBNIA, DAVID J. DOWNING,
CHARLES P. DRAGOS, JAMES J. DUNCAN,
MARY F. EALY, KURT E. EDER, CUSTODIA FEIJO,
SYLVIA FERGUSON, ANTHONY FERRARE,
JUAN FLORES, RAFAEL GARCIA, LESTER
GLASCOE, DELORES GLAZEWSKI, ELFRIEDE
HALKO, MURRAY A. HALPERN, GERALDINE
HAMBLEY, BARBARA A. HARDEN, CHARLOTTE
HAYDEN, WALTER HEARNS, ROBERT G.
HENNESSEE, THOMAS HORAN, EDWARD HUGO,
RICHARD HUTCHINSON, VINCENT IMMORDINO,
SARAH C. INNISS, JENA IORIO, BENNIE ISOM,
ANDRENA L. JOHNSON, RONALD KASA, DOROTHEA
KATO, MARGARET M. KENNEDY, JOHN KOVACH,
MARIVA KUHN, SAM LAGARES, RONALD LAWRENCE,
CHANG LEE, ANDY LEONARSKI, WALTER LOMAX,
ARMAND LORETUCCI, JACQ. MARINELLO,
CHARLES B. MARKS, DOLORES MARLIN,
MARGARET MASON, JOHN MCELLINNEY,
JUAN MEDINA, JOHN MELLODGE, MARY
MEROVICH, EUGENE J. MINICH, MINERVA
MONTERO, HECTER M. MORALES, MINERVA MORALES,
CORNELIUS MORROW, MARY A. MURPHY,
CARMELA C. NICKELS, PETER NICOALI,
STANLEY OLSCHEWSKI, EDWARD J. PALLAY,
RONALD J. PALMIERI, JAMES S. PETRUCELLI,
HARRY PHILLIPS, MATHEW PIERRE, FREYA
POLIZIANA, ARTHUR S. POPP, WILFRED W.
POWERS, FRANK PRASAK, ROCHELLE PRITCHARD,
GIUSEPPE PUGLISI, CARMEN QUILES, ALICIA
QUINONES, FREDERICK RAINER, EVELYN RAMSEY,
RAYMOND R. RAWA, STANISTAW REMBOWSKI,
ASTEN L. RICHARDSON, ROBERT R. ROBINSON,
MINNIE SANDERS, ROMAN SATURNINO,
KENNETH SCHNEIDER, ANTHONY SCOTT,
JASPER SCOTT, JOSEPHINE SECKINGER,
THOMAS P. SEHENUK, JOSEPH SEROCK,
ELIZABETH SMITH, FRANK SMITH,
DOLORES STEWART, WALTER STREHLOW,
TAMMY STRYCHARZ, BARBARA SYKES, IDA R.
TAYLOR, ANTHONY TESTA, MARY THOMAS,
GILBERT TILTON, GEORGE TITUS,
EMANUEL TRAMONTANA, EVELYN L. TREIBLY,
JOHN TRIPA, FRANK TUCCILLO, EMMA M.
TWYMAN, ELIZ. O. VANDEWATER, JAMES L.
VANDEWATER, PATRICIA VELEZ, GEORGE VOILAS,
ROBERT WALKER, MARIE WALSH, JOHN WALTER,
LORETTA WASHINGTON, DELES WATSON,
GLADYS WILLIAMS, LIZZIE WILLIAMS,
MARGARET WILLIAMS, SHIRLEY WILLIAMS,
THOMAS WILLIAMS, ROSE WINROW, GEORGE M.
WOODWARD, BONNIE L. WRIGHT and ROSCOE N. WRIGHT,
Claimants-Respondents,
v.
BOARD OF REVIEW AND GENERAL MOTORS
CORPORATION, INLAND FISHER GUIDE
DIVISION,
Respondents-Appellants.
Argued October 6, 1997 -- Decided December 22, 1997
On certification to the Superior Court, Appellate
Division.
Alan C. Stephens, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
cause for appellant Board of Review (Peter Verniero,
Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney; Mary C.
Jacobson, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel).
Laurence Reich argued the cause for appellant General
Motors Corporation, Inland Fisher Guide Division
(Carpenter, Bennett & Morrissey, attorneys).
David Tykulsker argued the cause for respondents.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
GARIBALDI, J.
At issue in this appeal is whether claimants, who elected to
participate in an early retirement plan, voluntarily left work
without good cause attributable to such work, N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), thereby rendering them ineligible for unemployment
benefits. Claimants are former employees of the Inland Fisher
Guide Division of the General Motors Corporation (GM), located in
Trenton, New Jersey (Trenton plant). In December 1992, the
Trenton plant announced to its employees that GM was offering a
special accelerated retirement plan for eligible employees
nationwide. After receiving notice from management that GM
intended to close the Trenton plant by the end of 1993, claimants
accepted the early retirement plans. Subsequently, they sought
and were granted unemployment compensation benefits. Although
the Board of Review reversed the award of benefits, finding that
claimants were disqualified under N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) because
they "left work voluntarily without good cause attributable to
such work," the Appellate Division concluded that claimants
established "good cause" and thus were qualified for unemployment
benefits. We granted certification to both parties,
148 N.J. 462
(1997);
148 N.J. 463 (1997), and now hold that claimants are
disqualified from collecting benefits.
employer-paid lifetime comprehensive medical care. The medical
coverage was subject to the governing collective bargaining
agreement between GM and the United Auto Workers Union (UAW),
which was periodically renegotiated upon the expiration of a
governing contract. Retired employees received approximately $60
per week for each year of service. The representative claimant,
who retired at the age of fifty-two with more than fifteen years
of service, testified before the Appeal Tribunal that he would
receive approximately $940 a month. An additional feature of the
package was that there was no outside earnings limitation.
Retired workers could seek employment elsewhere at any wage rate
without any effect on the pension. Approximately 300 employees
in that category accepted early retirement.
Under the second category, workers aged sixty-two or older
received the same retirement benefits as the previous category
plus $10,000 toward the purchase of a new GM car. Approximately
seventy employees who chose to accept the incentive fell into
that category. All employees who elected to take the retirement
package were obliged to retire on February 1, 1993 or March 1,
1993. Their applications could be withdrawn at any time prior to
those dates. Numerous employees who initially accepted the early
retirement offer withdrew their applications before March 1,
1993.
From December 1992 until the end of February 1993, various
statements about the anticipated plant closing were issued. On
December 23, 1992, a "Message from the Manager" to the employees
included the following:
For those of you with doubts - yes, the plant
is closing. The time table by product line
and who the new sources will be are being
defined now. I would hope by January 15th,
we would have a good firm idea on where our
products are going. This will then tell us
how many job opportunities are available to
move with the jobs. So do not contact labor
relations until at least January 18th, for
relocation job opportunities with GM. We
will try and keep everyone informed in the
Tribune and Message from the Manager. I can
only say for now for sure that we are working
on the closure plan and some job
opportunities will be available.
The announcement further encouraged employees not to forego the
accelerated retirement plan based on speculation that the Trenton
plant might remain open:
There are rumors circulating about plans and
efforts to save the plant. Let me give you
my opinion of what I know. Since our
announcement of December 3, I have spoken to
our divisional offices executives many times.
Believe me when I say that all talk about
potentially keeping Trenton open is false
optimism originating right from this plant.
No one at our divisional executive level is
actively working on a scenario that could
possibly keep Trenton open. In fact, most of
their calls involve giving them timing about
when products will leave. I know I'm being
blunt, but I know there are many people
making difficult decisions regarding
retirement. I would not want any rumors
influencing those decisions. The worst thing
anyone could do would be to turn down one of
the best mutual retirement programs available
because of a rumor and then later lose what
is available when the plant closes.
In response to the company's December 23, 1992 Message to the Manager, the union published an undated "Special Update" to
inform its members of the union's efforts to keep the plant open
and of alternative job opportunities. The Special Update stated:
If our work is transferred to another GM
plant the International Union will have to
negotiate the number of moves we would be
entitled to within the Corporation. Our
members would move with full seniority unless
mutually agreed to by the parties. This is
Paragraph 96 of the National Agreement and
can be found on page 77 of the Agreement.
We were told by Steve Yokich that the SUB
[Supplemental Unemployment Benefits] Fund
should make it for the life of the Agreement
(Sept. 14, 1993). If any one is laid off
they will collect unemployment and SUB. If
your unemployment runs out you will be
collecting all SUB. As of today, the SUB
fund has nearly $700 million dollars. If
these monies run out, the SUB program would
revert back to the way it did in 1987 with
the credit system. As of January 4th, 1993
we were informed that the JOBS Bank will
continue to be funded until March 1st, 1993.
On February 9, 1993, the employees of the Trenton plant were
given a tentative plan for the plant closing in another Message
from the Manager. That Message began:
Let me leave no doubt -- the plant is
closing. Many people take the absence of
visible movement of jobs, tools, and
equipment as a sign that something is up.
Not so! The closing of this large facility
is a complex process which takes significant
planning . . . Trenton closing will now be
aggressively planned . . .
The Message further indicated that a small number of workers would be laid off in March 1993 and that the first large layoff would occur in May or June 1993, perhaps involving as many as 500 workers. The next large layoff was scheduled for September with the rest of the employees to be terminated by the end of the
year. Anticipated layoffs would be based upon seniority status
with workers having greater seniority displacing those with
lesser seniority.
On February 25, 1993, Personnel Director Theodore A. Cannon
posted Bulletin Board Notice 93-9 in the Trenton plant:
In the future, there may be opportunities for
extended preferential employment
opportunities available to our employees as a
result of the December 3, 1992 [closure]
announcement. Under the National Agreement
provisions the parties may mutually agree
that certain seniority employees may be
eligible for extended preferential employment
consideration in specified area hire areas or
plants represented by UAW which may not be in
such areas.
It is our understanding that, in the future
there may be additional employment
opportunities in Baltimore. To determine the
number of employees who are interested in
these opportunities, we are conducting a
survey. Employees who desire to apply for
the prospective opportunities should report
to the Employment Office and include their
name on the survey list prior to March 5,
1993.
Two days after the March 1, 1993 deadline for electing early
retirement, GM announced its decision to keep the Trenton plant
open in the hopes of negotiating a sale to another corporation.
Currently, the Trenton plant remains open and no layoffs
occurred.
Had the plant shut down, laid off employees could have
applied for unemployment and also would have received
Supplemental Unemployment Benefits (SUB) provided by GM until
early retirement was available at the age of fifty-fiveSee footnote 1 or
until SUB ran out of funds. During this time, the workers'
medical benefits, except dental coverage, would have continued.
Under the SUB program, a worker would have received approximately
$450 on a weekly basis. Once the SUB benefits were exhausted,
the workers would have received payments under the Guaranteed
Income Strain (GIS) program equaling approximately $346 per week.
Under the GIS program, the workers' employer-paid hearing,
vision, and prescription drug coverage would have ended after
twenty-five months. In the event of a layoff, claimants
maintained contractual seniority rights that would have afforded
them protected status and, thus, the opportunity for continued
work at the Trenton plant through any initial layoffs. Those
contractual transfer rights also offered claimants the
opportunity to apply for positions at other GM facilities.
Employees at the Trenton plant were informed of possible
positions at GM facilities in Maryland and Tennessee. On January
27 and 28, 1993, representatives of GM's Tennessee plant visited
the Trenton plant and accepted applications for transfer. No
claimant, however, received a response to his or her transfer
application before March 1, 1993. Some 200 employees at the
Trenton Plant were accepted for transfer.
After accepting the early retirement package, claimants
filed separate claims for unemployment benefits. The Deputy
Director of the Division of Unemployment and Disability Insurance
(Deputy) found claimants eligible for benefits, reasoning that
claimants left work with good cause attributable to work because
the layoffs were imminent when they elected early retirement. GM
filed a mass appeal from the Deputy's determination and the
Appeal Tribunal affirmed. Only one of the claimants, George
Titus, testified before the Appeal Tribunal. As stated earlier,
Titus elected to retire early at the age of fifty-two with more
than fifteen years seniority, and received a pension of
approximately $940 per week. Titus testified that he decided to
accept the retirement package because he had no doubt that the
plant would be closing. He also noted that he wanted to maintain
medical coverage that was included as part of the plan.
GM appealed to the Board of Review, Department of Labor
(Board). The Board conducted a supplemental hearing and
reversed, rejecting the premise that GM placed such a strong
temptation in front of the workers that it was the only prudent
course of action available. The Board emphasized that had the
claimants opted not to retire and if they were eventually laid
off, they would have been in essentially the same situation as
they found themselves after accepting early retirement. Because
they did not stand to suffer financially by not accepting the
incentive package, this was not a case where the claimants had no
reasonable choice but to retire.
Moreover, the Board noted that had the claimants remained at
the Trenton plant they could have continued to work for at least
six months prior to the planned closing. That conclusion was
based on the fact that each claimant had at least ten years
seniority with GM and would not have been among the initial
employees let go if the plant had closed as anticipated. Thus,
the Board concluded, claimants did not leave work because of
imminent layoff. The Board distinguished this case from Trupo v.
Board of Review,
268 N.J. Super. 54 (App. Div. 1993), where the
Appellate Division reasoned that a worker facing "the daily fear
of a future employment layoff," id. at 60, might have good cause
to leave if her fear of imminent layoff or loss of medical
coverage were based upon "definitive objective facts." Id. at
61. Here, the Board found that the prospect of layoff was not
imminent given the substantial amount of time that the claimants
could have continued to work. Based on that determination, the
Board concluded the claimants left work voluntarily without good
cause.
The Appellate Division disagreed. Relying on Trupo, supra,
the court found that claimants' fear of layoff was based on the
unequivocal statements made by GM that the plant would be closing
by the end of 1993. Addressing the issue of whether the
claimants who elected to participate in the early retirement
program "voluntarily" left work "without good cause attributable
to such work," N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), the Appellate Division
observed that by not accepting the incentive package the
claimants would have been required to relinquish complete health
insurance coverage and pension. Furthermore, there was no
assurance of any transfer rights to other GM facilities by the
March 1, 1993 deadline for electing early retirement. The court
concluded that the Board's decision could not be sustained on the
record. Noting that the Trupo standard did not permit double
recovery, the court further held that N.J.S.A. 43:21-5a required
that the award of unemployment benefits be reduced by the amount
of pension or retirement pay received by the workers.
result.") (citations omitted). If the Board's factual findings
are supported by sufficient credible evidence, courts are
obliged to accept them. Self v. Board of Review,
91 N.J. 453,
459 (1982); Goodman v. London Metals Exchange, Inc.,
86 N.J. 19,
28-29 (1981) (same).
Unless a Court finds that the agency's action was arbitrary,
capricious, or unreasonable, the agency's ruling should not be
disturbed. See In re Warren,
117 N.J. 295, 296 (1989). The
Court can intervene only in those rare circumstances in which an
agency action is clearly inconsistent with its statutory mission
or with other State policy. George Harms Constr. v. Turnpike
Auth.,
137 N.J. 8, 27 (1994). Under that standard, the scope of
judicial review of an agency's action is restricted to four
inquiries:
(1) whether the agency's decision offends the
State or Federal Constitution;
(2) whether the agency's action violates
express or implied legislative policies;
(3) whether the record contains substantial
evidence to support the findings on which the
agency based its action; and
(4) whether in applying the legislative
policies to the facts, the agency clearly
erred in reaching a conclusion that could not
reasonably have been made on a showing of the
relevant factors.
[George Harms Constr., supra, 137 N.J. at 27
(citing Campbell v. Department of Civil
Serv.,
39 N.J. 556, 562 (1963); In re Larsen,
17 N.J. Super. 564, 570 (App. Div. 1952)).]
We address in this opinion only the second and fourth factors, i.e., whether the Board's action violated the express or implied
legislative policies of New Jersey's Unemployment Compensation
Act, N.J.S.A. 43:21-1 to -56 (Act), or whether in applying those
legislative policies the Board erred in reaching its conclusion.
To ascertain the underlying legislative policies of the Act, we
examine the Act's declaration of public policy and its
legislative history.
Through this declaration of public policy, the Legislature
indicated that the underlying mission of the Act is "to afford
protection against the hazards of economic insecurity due to
involuntary unemployment." Yardville Supply Co. v. Board of
Review,
114 N.J. 371, 374 (citing Krauss v. A. & M. Karagheusian,
13 N.J. 447, 455 (1953); Schock v. Board of Review,
89 N.J.
Super. 118, 125 (App. Div. 1965), aff'd,
48 N.J. 121 (1966)).
This Court has recognized that the primary purpose of the
Act is "to provide a cushion for the workers of New Jersey
'against the shocks and rigors of unemployment.'" Carpet Remnant
Warehouse v. N.J. Dep't of Labor,
125 N.J. 567, 581 (1991)
(citing Provident Inst. for Sav. v. Division of Emp't. Sec.,
32 N.J. 585, 590 (1960)). Furthermore, "'[t]he purpose of the [A]ct
is to provide some income for the worker earning nothing, because
he is out of work through no fault or act of his own.'"
Yardville, supra, 114 N.J. at 375 (quoting Schock, supra, 89 N.J.
Super. at 125); see also Battaglia v. Board of Review,
14 N.J.
Super. 24, 27 (App. Div. 1951) (same).
Although the Act is to be liberally construed in favor of
claimants to effectuate its remedial purposes, Yardville, supra,
114 N.J. at 374; Sporn v. Celebrity, Inc.,
129 N.J. Super. 449,
459 (Law Div. 1974), we have emphasized that "it is also
important to preserve the [unemployment insurance trust] fund
against claims by those not intended to share in its benefits.
The basic policy of the law is advanced as well when benefits are
denied in improper cases as when they are allowed in proper
cases." Yardville, supra, 114 N.J. at 374 (citing Krauss, supra,
13 N.J. at 455-56; Schock, supra, 89 N.J. Super. at 125). The
Act, then, is designed to serve not simply the interest of the
unemployed, but also the interest of the general public. See
Sporn, supra, 129 N.J. Super. at 459; Stonco Elec. Products Co.
v. Board of Review,
106 N.J. Super. 6, 9 (App. Div. 1969);
Zielenski v. Board of Review,
85 N.J. Super. 46, 52 (App. Div.
1964). "To give [the] correct interpretation" of this policy,
the Court "must carry in mind the dire and distressing situations
against which the statute, as a matter of stated public policy,
is directed." W.T. Grant Co. v. Board of Review,
129 N.J.L. 402,
405 (1943).
The legislative history of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) supports the
conclusion that claimants are not entitled to unemployment
benefits. Prior to 1961, that statute did not disqualify
individuals who left work for "good cause" from receiving
unemployment compensation benefits, regardless of whether such
cause was attributable to work or for personal reasons.
Yardville, supra, 114 N.J. at 374; see also Krauss, supra, 13
N.J. at 464 ("The Legislature contemplated that when an
individual voluntarily leaves a job under the pressure of
circumstances which may reasonably be viewed as having compelled
him to do so, the termination of his employment is involuntary
for the purposes of the [A]ct."). In construing the pre-amendment Act, this Court observed that "good cause" may "lie in
extraneous factors exerting compulsive pressure upon the claimant
and causing him to quit." Krauss, supra, 13 N.J. at 464.
The Legislature, however, amended the statute in 1961 to
disqualify claimants who left work for purely personal reasons.
See Stauhs v. Board of Review,
93 N.J. Super. 451, 457 (App. Div.
1967) ("[T]he intention of the Legislature in passing the 1961
amendment was to exclude from the term "good cause" . . . all
causes personal to a claimant which are not connected with the
work."); Self, supra, 91 N.J. at 457 (noting that purpose of
amendment was to "eliminate the eligibility of persons who leave
work for good, but personal causes"); Rider College v. Board of
Review,
167 N.J. Super. 42, 46 (App. Div. 1979) ("[C]auses
personal to a claimant . . . come within the disqualification of
the statute.").
The current statutory language provides that a claimant
shall be disqualified from receiving unemployment compensation
benefits "[f]or 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 . .
. ." N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) (emphasis added). In applying section
43:21-5(a), a court must "differentiate between (1) a voluntary
quit with good cause attributable to the work and (2) a voluntary
quit without good cause attributable to the work." Self, supra,
91 N.J. at 457 (citing DeLorenzo v. Board of Review,
54 N.J. 361,
363 (1969)); see, e.g., Morgan, supra, 77 N.J. Super. at 214
(finding that leaving work because of commuting problems was a
good, but personal reason); Pagan v. Board of Review,
296 N.J.
Super. 539, 543 (App. Div.), certif. denied,
150 N.J. 24
(1997)(finding that leaving work because of domestic violence,
although a compelling reason, was a personal decision
disqualifying claimant from benefits); DeSantis v. Board of
Review,
149 N.J. Super. 35, 38 (App. Div. 1977) (holding that
employee's quitting due to frustration and disappointment in not
receiving raise was not cause attributable to work).
Although "good cause" is not statutorily defined, New Jersey
courts have construed the phrase to mean "'cause sufficient to
justify an employee's voluntarily leaving the ranks of the
employed and joining the ranks of the unemployed.'" Domenico v.
Board of Review,
192 N.J. Super. 284, 287 (App. Div. 1983)
(quoting Condo v. Board of Review,
158 N.J. Super. 172, 174 (App.
Div. 1978)); see also Associated Utility Serv. v. Board of
Review,
131 N.J. Super. 584, 586 (App. Div. 1974) (quoting
Goebelbecker v. State,
53 N.J. Super. 53, 57 (App. Div. 1958));
Zielenski, supra, 85 N.J. Super. at 52 (same); Morgan, supra, 77
N.J. Super. at 213 (same). The test of ordinary common sense
and prudence must be utilized to determine whether an employee's
decision to leave work constitutes good cause. Zielenski, supra,
85 N.J. Super. at 52. Such cause "must be compelled by real,
substantial and reasonable circumstances not imaginary, trifling
and whimsical ones." Domenico, supra, 192 N.J. Super. at 288
(citing Krauss, supra, 13 N.J. at 464). A claimant has the
"'responsibility to do whatever is necessary and reasonable in
order to remain employed.'" Heulitt v. Board of Review,
300 N.J.
Super. 407, 414 (App. Div. 1997) (quoting Zielenski, supra, 85
N.J. Super. at 53-54); see also Condo, supra, 158 N.J. Super. at
175 (same).
The Appellate Division in two cases has addressed the issue
of unemployment benefits in the context of early retirement,
first in Trupo, supra,
268 N.J. Super. 54, and more recently in
Fernandez v. Board of Review, ___ N.J. Super. ___ (1997) (slip
op. at 1). In both cases, the Appellate Division considered
whether the claimants voluntarily quit without good cause
attributable to their employment. In Trupo, the claimant, at the
age of sixty-one, accepted an early retirement package offered by
her employer as an effort to reduce its work force. Trupo,
supra, 268 N.J. Super. at 56. There, the claimant admitted that
her employer neither specified which positions would be
terminated nor decided which employees would be laid off or which
workers would be transferred. Ibid. Trupo testified that she
feared that she would become unemployed and medically uninsured
if she did not accept the retirement package. Ibid. Because she
was sixty-one years old and the head of her household, Trupo
asserted that she "believed she had no choice but to accept the
early retirement proposal," and that fear constituted good cause
attributable to her work. Ibid.
In dictum, the Trupo court set forth two requirements that
the claimants had to meet to collect unemployment benefits: (1)
that claimants' "subjective fear [of imminent layoff] was based
upon definitive objective facts . . . to buttress [the] belief
that [their] job[s] would actually be eliminated in the impending
work reduction," and (2) that claimants would suffer a
substantial economic loss. Id. at 61. The Appellate Division
found that Trupo failed to satisfy her burden to meet those two
prongs. Accordingly, the court affirmed the Board's decision
denying Trupo unemployment benefits. The court reasoned that
[a]lthough we perceive Trupo's decision as
subjectively prudent and based upon common
sense, we cannot conclude based upon an
absence of objective proof in the record,
that the disqualification decision was
reversible as a matter of law.
In Fernandez, supra, ___ N.J.Super. at ___ (slip op. at 2-3), the Appellate Division found that an American Telephone and
Telegraph (AT&T) employee's early retirement based on a general
letter sent to all employees in his division, which informed them
that they could choose an early retirement plan because AT&T was
in the process of restructuring and noted that there were many
more people in [his division] than there [would] be following
the reorganization, was insufficient to establish good cause.
The Appellate Division held that an employee's acceptance of a
'severance package' or 'early retirement incentive package' bars
him from receiving unemployment benefits unless he shows he
accepted the package because of a real, imminent, and substantial
risk of losing his job. Id. at ___(slip op. at 4). The court
observed that that standard comports with decisions of other
jurisdictions. Ibid. Both opinions are illustrative of some of
the factors that the Board should consider in determining whether
an employee who accepts an early retirement package has good
cause to leave work. Moreover, both opinions agree with the
public policy and legislative history as to what constitutes good
cause in the context of an employee's acceptance of an early
retirement incentive.
Whether a particular state awards unemployment benefits to
an employee who elects early retirement depends on the laws of
that state. Nonetheless, most other jurisdictions have reached similar results. See, e.g., In re Astrom, 362 So.2d 312, 315 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1978) (reasoning that although claimant's election of early retirement was reasonable in light of the impending close of operations, the employer never ascertained the date that employees would be terminated and "work was available at the time that the claimants elected to accept the benefits offered for early retirement"); In re Fontaine, 657 N.Y.S.2d 216, 216 (N.Y. App. Div. 1997) (finding that claimant who accepted early retirement incentive from Air Force in face of downsizing but who was never told her position would be abolished had voluntarily left her employment without cause); Appleman v. Commissioner of Labor, 621 N.Y.S.2d 232, 233 (N.Y. App. Div. 1995) (finding that legal secretary who left her employment to take advantage of employer's early retirement benefit, who was told her remaining employment could not be guaranteed but was not told she would be laid off if she did not accept the retirement plan, was disqualified from accepting unemployment benefits); Staub v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review, 673 A.2d 434, 439 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1996) (denying unemployment benefits to claimant because continuing work was available had he not accepted early retirement); Goewert v. Anheuser Busch, Inc., 919 P.2d 106, 110 (Wash. Ct. App. 1996), rev. denied, 932 P.2d 644 (Wash. 1997) (denying benefits to employee whose employer announced intention to reduce work force and could not guarantee alternative position before deadline to participate in retirement program). But see
Reserve Mining Co. v. Anderson,
377 N.W.2d 494, 497-98 (Minn. Ct.
App. 1986) (awarding unemployment benefits to employee who chose
early retirement after employer notified her that her position
was being eliminated); Philadelphia Parking Auth. v. Unemployment
Comp. Bd. of Review,
654 A.2d 280, 283-84 (Pa. Commw. Ct. 1995)
(awarding benefits to an employee who was notified by his
employer that it intended to make a serious effort to downsize
its operation and that the employee's name was on a list of
people who could be laid off); Terry v. Employment Sec. Dep't,
919 P.2d 111, 115 (Wash. Ct. App. 1996) (awarding unemployment
benefits to employee who chose early retirement after employer
notified her by letter that she needed to find other work in the
company at reduced pay or she would be laid off).
In New Jersey, the Department of Labor, pursuant to
Executive Order No. 66 (1978), has proposed regulations to amend
N.J.A.C. 12:17, the rules enacted pursuant to the Unemployment
Compensation Act. The proposed regulations only differ from the
current rules in that they are more detailed and express the
Department's longstanding policies regarding benefit eligibility
and disqualification which were not previously codified . . . but
practiced by the Department.
28 N.J. Reg. 4759. More
specifically, the proposed regulations emphasize that the new
rules "provide philosophical emphasis that unemployment is an
insurance program rather than an entitlement program" and
"tighten eligibility procedures for voluntary separations" from
employment. Ibid. "In addition, the proposed new rules will
better protect the interests of workers and employers who
contribute to the Unemployment Insurance Trust Fund by ensuring
that only eligible individuals receive benefits."
28 N.J. Reg. 4760. Relevant to our discussion, the regulations provide that
employees notified of an impending layoff will qualify for
unemployment benefits if they leave work voluntarily within four
weeks of the discharge date.
28 N.J. Reg. 4768 at 12:17-9.5.
The new regulations provide guidance as to how far off
termination must be to be "imminent."See footnote 2
imminent. The management notices, however, indicate only that
the plant was anticipated to be closed by the end of 1993; they
do not specifically target particular employees. The workers
were notified that the closing of the plant was an extensive,
complicated process that could not take place quickly. Based on
the projected timeline and claimants' "bumping" rights due to
seniority, claimants would have been afforded a substantial
amount of time to continue working at the Trenton plant. Those
contractual seniority rights in addition to transfer rights
undermine the finding that claimants' layoffs were indeed
imminent. Furthermore, the notices do not establish a definite
closing date, and therefore, do not support claimants' contention
that their layoffs were imminent.
Based upon its own supplemental hearing and its expertise in
the employment field, the Board determined that claimants here
did not elect early retirement in lieu of imminent layoff. While
faced with a tough decision, claimants ultimately made a personal
one to accept the retirement package.
There is no dispute that claimants took early retirement
more than four weeks before any layoffs began. Although
claimants' counsel argues that such a conclusion is made with the
benefit of hindsight, it was clear even before March 1, 1993
that, according to the tentative closing schedule, claimants
would be terminated at the earliest in September 1993. No
definite closing date was ever established. Based on that
timeline and claimants' level of seniority, they could have
continued to work for several months. While claimants may have
had a subjective fear of layoff, such fear was not based upon
definitive objective facts. Trupo, supra, 268 N.J. Super. at
61; see also In re Astrom,
362 So.2d 312, 315 (Fla. Dist. Ct.
App. 1978) (holding in a similar situation that impending layoffs
were not imminent although "[t]here was certainty of the eventual
lay off [because] work was available at the time that the
claimants elected to accept the benefits offered for early
retirement").
constituted good cause to leave his work. Id. at 369; see also
LeCroy v. Unemployment Appeals Comm'n,
654 So.2d 1054, 1056 (Fla.
Dist. Ct. App. 1995) (finding that substantial decrease in
claimants' pay afforded them with good cause); Mangan v.
Bernardi,
477 N.E.2d 13, 16 (Ill. App. Ct. 1985) (holding that
substantial reduction in wages and loss of fringe benefits,
including medical insurance, constituted good cause to leave
work); Cook v. Playworks,
541 N.W.2d 366, 368 (Minn. Ct. App.
1996) (recognizing that a substantial reduction in wages may
provide employee with good cause to quit). The court upheld the
Board's determination, emphasizing that the Board's finding was
supported by the substantial evidence in the record and that its
decision was "entitled to particular weight because of the
administrative tribunal's familiarity with and expertise in
employment matters." Johns-Manville, supra, 122 N.J. Super. at
369-70. Although the issue in Johns-Manville, supra, involved a
substantial reduction in wages, an analogous rationale applies to
a substantial loss in the context of early retirement.
Claimants suffered no substantial economic loss. Rather, in
exchange for their early resignations, employees accepted a
mutually beneficial retirement package. To be eligible for the
incentive retirement plan, claimants were required to be at least
fifty years of age. If they had elected to remain at the Trenton
plant and it had closed as planned, those who were fifty-five
would have received the same unreduced pension package, as
provided by Article II, section 2(b) of the General Motors
Hourly-Rate Employees Pension Plan. Those between the ages of
fifty and fifty-five would have received SUB and GIS income with
no appreciable loss of medical benefits. The record demonstrates
that, under SUB, a worker would have received $450 per week, an
amount equivalent to a pension for an employee with thirty years
of service (calculated at $60 per week per year of service). In
the event that the SUB funds were depleted, laid off employees
would have received $346 per week through GIS, an amount
equivalent to a pension for an employee with twenty-five years of
service. Both of those amounts exceeded the maximum weekly
unemployment compensation benefit rate in 1993. As such,
claimants would receive no economic benefit from an award of
unemployment benefits.
The Board's determination that claimants would not incur a
substantial economic loss or loss of medical benefits is
supported by the substantial credible evidence in the record.
That conclusion coupled with the finding that the layoffs were
not imminent disqualified claimants from receiving unemployment
benefits.
accept the incentive retirement plan, such encouragement did not
amount to coercion. The strongest words from management
encouraging workers to take advantage of the incentive retirement
program came in late December 1992, noting that "[t]he worst
thing anyone could do would be to turn down one of the best
mutual retirement programs available because of a rumor [that the
plant might remain open] and then later lose what is available
when the plant closes." Although the employees' response to
management's advice was an understandable reaction, it was not
the result of coercion or the lack of essential information.
Moreover, the workers were able to consider their choice with the
help of their union representatives. The employees made a
difficult decision, but nonetheless a personal one, to accept the
early retirement package.
Unemployment compensation is an insurance, not an
entitlement, program designed to provide a cushion for workers
who are involuntarily unemployed through no fault or act of their
own. N.J.S.A. 43:21-2; Yardville, supra, 114 N.J. at 375. Here,
claimants did not do "whatever is necessary and reasonable" in
order to remain employed. Heulitt, supra, 300 N.J. Super. at
414.
supported by sufficient, credible evidence in the record. Those
findings were neither arbitrary nor capricious. Further, those
findings comport with the public policy and legislative history
of the Act and specifically, N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). Under the
appropriate standard of review, the Board's decision not only
furthered the express legislative policies of the Act, but also
reached a reasonable result based on the relevant factors in this
case.
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate
Division, thereby reinstating the decision of the Board of
Review.
CHIEF JUSTICE PORITZ and JUSTICES HANDLER, POLLOCK and
O'HERN join in JUSTICE GARIBALDI'S opinion. JUSTICE COLEMAN
filed a separate dissenting opinion in which JUSTICE STEIN joins.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-28/
29 September Term 1997
WILLIAM F. BRADY, JR., SYLVIA ALBARRAN,
HERBERT ALEXANDER, CARMEN ALICEA, FREDERICK ALLEN,
BEATRICE AMISON, GERALD AMISON, SHIRLEY G.
ANDERSON, JOSEPH ANDREWS, JR.,
MARY L. ARCAMONE, MARY AUSTIN,
JAMES BAILEY, DUDLEY BARCALOW,
JOSE J. BEAYCHAMPS, MARIETTA BERENATO,
JOSEFA BIELSKI, ANNA BIJACSKO,
JOHN BLACK, HAROLD BODDEN, SHIRLEY
BOTTREL, LEON BOYER, RAYMOND BOYZATH,
FREDDIE BRIMLEY, HERBERT BROOKER,
JAMES H. BROWNE, ROBERT W. BRYNER,
AUGUSTA BUDD, HECTOR G. BURGOS, JOHN E.
BURRIS, JAMES CALDWELL, MARIE CAPRIOTTI,
ROBERT CASE, MARGARET CHAMBUS, PATRICIA
CHARYAK, MATTEO CIPRIANO, BENJAMIN COLE,
THOMAS J. COLEMAN, FRED COMO, WILLIAM R.
CRAFT, JOANN CREA, LUZ CRUZ, MARY L. CZAP,
JOSEPH DALY, SOPHIE DARDZINSKI, KARL H.
DEIBLER, BARBARA A. DERRY, MARGAREE
DILLARD, EDWARD DOROTA, ANTHONY DOTO,
ANATOL DOWBNIA, DAVID J. DOWNING,
CHARLES P. DRAGOS, JAMES J. DUNCAN,
MARY F. EALY, KURT E. EDER, CUSTODIA FEIJO,
SYLVIA FERGUSON, ANTHONY FERRARE,
JUAN FLORES, RAFAEL GARCIA, LESTER
GLASCOE, DELORES GLAZEWSKI, ELFRIEDE
HALKO, MURRAY A. HALPERN, GERALDINE
HAMBLEY, BARBARA A. HARDEN, CHARLOTTE
HAYDEN, WALTER HEARNS, ROBERT G.
HENNESSEE, THOMAS HORAN, EDWARD HUGO,
RICHARD HUTCHINSON, VINCENT IMMORDINO,
SARAH C. INNISS, JENA IORIO, BENNIE ISOM,
ANDRENA L. JOHNSON, RONALD KASA, DOROTHEA
KATO, MARGARET M. KENNEDY, JOHN KOVACH,
MARIVA KUHN, SAM LAGARES, RONALD LAWRENCE,
CHANG LEE, ANDY LEONARSKI, WALTER LOMAX,
ARMAND LORETUCCI, JACQ. MARINELLO,
CHARLES B. MARKS, DOLORES MARLIN,
MARGARET MASON, JOHN MCELLINNEY,
JUAN MEDINA, JOHN MELLODGE, MARY
MEROVICH, EUGENE J. MINICH, MINERVA
MONTERO, HECTER M. MORALES, MINERVA MORALES,
CORNELIUS MORROW, MARY A. MURPHY,
CARMELA C. NICKELS, PETER NICOALI,
STANLEY OLSCHEWSKI, EDWARD J. PALLAY,
RONALD J. PALMIERI, JAMES S. PETRUCELLI,
HARRY PHILLIPS, MATHEW PIERRE, FREYA
POLIZIANA, ARTHUR S. POPP, WILFRED W.
POWERS, FRANK PRASAK, ROCHELLE PRITCHARD,
GIUSEPPE PUGLISI, CARMEN QUILES, ALICIA
QUINONES, FREDERICK RAINER, EVELYN RAMSEY,
RAYMOND R. RAWA, STANISTAW REMBOWSKI,
ASTEN L. RICHARDSON, ROBERT R. ROBINSON,
MINNIE SANDERS, ROMAN SATURNINO,
KENNETH SCHNEIDER, ANTHONY SCOTT,
JASPER SCOTT, JOSEPHINE SECKINGER,
THOMAS P. SEHENUK, JOSEPH SEROCK,
ELIZABETH SMITH, FRANK SMITH,
DOLORES STEWART, WALTER STREHLOW,
TAMMY STRYCHARZ, BARBARA SYKES, IDA R.
TAYLOR, ANTHONY TESTA, MARY THOMAS,
GILBERT TILTON, GEORGE TITUS,
EMANUEL TRAMONTANA, EVELYN L. TREIBLY,
JOHN TRIPA, FRANK TUCCILLO, EMMA M.
TWYMAN, ELIZ. O. VANDEWATER, JAMES L.
VANDEWATER, PATRICIA VELEZ, GEORGE VOILAS,
ROBERT WALKER, MARIE WALSH, JOHN WALTER,
LORETTA WASHINGTON, DELES WATSON,
GLADYS WILLIAMS, LIZZIE WILLIAMS,
MARGARET WILLIAMS, SHIRLEY WILLIAMS,
THOMAS WILLIAMS, ROSE WINROW, GEORGE M.
WOODWARD, BONNIE L. WRIGHT and ROSCOE N. WRIGHT,
Claimants-Respondents,
v.
BOARD OF REVIEW AND GENERAL MOTORS
CORPORATION, INLAND FISHER GUIDE
DIVISION,
Respondents-Appellants.
COLEMAN, J., dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment below finding that claimants are eligible for unemployment benefits substantially for the reasons stated by the Appellate Division. General Motors's communications to its employees that the plant was closing were unequivocal and unyielding. It persisted in those communications until two days after the deadline to file for early retirement had passed. Under the totality of circumstances, claimants
established a reasonable belief of a real, substantial, and
imminent risk of losing their jobs.
Furthermore, a finding that claimants are eligible to
collect unemployment benefits will not result in a double
recovery because N.J.S.A. 43:21-5a requires a set-off based on
pension or retirement payments received by claimants.
Consequently, I dissent.
Justice Stein joins in this opinion.
NO. A-28/29 SEPTEMBER TERM 1997
ON APPEAL FROM
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
WILLIAM F. BRADY, JR., et al.,
Claimants-Respondents,
v.
BOARD OF REVIEW, et al.,
Respondents-Appellants.
DECIDED December 22, 1997
Chief Justice Poritz PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Garibaldi
CONCURRING OPINION BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY