[No. 42942. En Banc. Supreme Court August 22, 1974.]
DANIEL L. GLUCK et al., Respondents, v. THE EMPLOYMENT
SECURITY DEPARTMENT, Appellant.
[1] Unemployment Compensation - Nature - Legislative Classification. Legislative classifications as to recipients of unemployment benefits are not inherently suspect, nor is there any vested right to such benefits. The legislature is permitted wide discretion in classifying recipients, and a classification on a reasonable basis is valid.
[2] Constitutional Law - Equal Protection - Class Legislation - Distinction Based on Effective Date of Law. Different treatment of persons on the basis of the effective date of a legislative amendment which accomplishes a valid change in the law is not an arbitrary classification even though the impact of change might have been lessened in the legislation.
[3] Unemployment Compensation - Limitations - Consecutive Benefit Years - Validity. RCW 50.20.010 (5)(b), which limits the eligibility to receive two consecutive benefit years, does not violate the equal protection clauses of the state and federal constitutions.
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court for King County, No. 745856, George H. Revelle, J., entered August 8, 1973. Reversed.
Action to review a decision of the Employment Security Department. The defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.
[See 48 Am. Jur., Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, and Retirement Funds (1st ed. 3).]
Aug. 1974] GLUCK v. EMPLOYMENT SECURITY 317
Slade Gorton, Attorney General, and Joseph M. Littlemore, Assistant, for appellant.
Steve Fredrickson, of Legal Services Center (Seattle), for respondents.
BRACHTENBACH, J. -
This case involves eligibility for unemployment compensation benefits. Some background is necessary to put the precise issue in context. A worker's unemployment compensation benefits depend on his earnings in covered employment during a period of time called the "base year." The duration of his benefits is known as his "benefit year." Before the 1970 amendments to the Employment Security Act (Laws of 1970, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 2), a worker could exhaust benefits for one benefit year, and without intervening employment, be entitled to a second year of benefits.
To remedy this situation, commonly referred to as "the double dip," the legislature enacted the 1970 amendments. The only part which we face here is the requalification proviso which reads:
Provided, however, That if the base year wages of the individual's current benefit year, for any benefit year beginning after July 3, 1971, include wages earned prior to the establishment of a prior benefit year, the individual shall not be eligible for benefits, unless, in addition to the other requirements of this section, he has earned wages in the last six months of his base year equal to at least six times the weekly benefit amount to which he would otherwise have been entitled . . . RCW
50.20.010
(5)(b).
Each respondent had applied for benefits prior to July 4, 1971. When their first benefit year expired, each respondent sought to establish a second benefit year based on wages earned before commencement of each initial benefit year. All respondents sought to establish this new benefit year after July 3, 1971.
Were it not for the requalification proviso, each respondent would have been eligible for benefits for a second
318 GLUCK v. EMPLOYMENT SECURITY [Aug. 1974
consecutive benefit year. The Employment Security Department, applying the requalification proviso, denied benefits. Respondents appealed to the superior court which held the proviso unconstitutional and reversed the decisions of the Commissioner of the Employment Security Department. We reverse.
The trial court held that the requalification proviso violated respondents' rights to equal protection under the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution and under article 1, section 12 of the state constitution. The court reasoned that there was no reasonable basis to deny benefits to petitioners merely because they sought to establish eligibility after July 3, 1971, while allowing benefits for a second consecutive year to those persons who established eligibility prior to July 3, 1971.
[1] In analyzing this equal protection issue, we must bear in mind that we are not dealing with a suspect classification such as one based on sex, as was the case of Hanson v. Hutt,
83 Wn.2d 195
, 517 P.2d 599 (1973), also involving unemployment compensation. Nor is there a vested right to unemployment compensation. Needham Packing Co. v. Iowa Employment Sec. Comm'n, 255 Iowa 437, 123 N.W.2d 1 (1963).
Consequently, the legislature is allowed a wide discretion in its selection of classes. If the classification has a reasonable basis, it is valid.
It is recognized that classifications must be made and that in making them, dividing lines must be drawn some place. Thus, the question is not whether there is in fact some discrimination, but rather whether the discrimination is justified. State v. Persinger,
62 Wn.2d 362
, 368, 382 P.2d 497 (1963).
[2] Given the premise that the legislature can structure the unemployment security scheme in any rational manner which it deems wise, it obviously had the power to adopt the requalification proviso. When it did so, it necessarily follows that those who had applied for benefits prior to the effective date were to be treated differently from those who
84 Wn.2d 316, 525 P.2d 768
84 Wn.2d 316, 525 P.2d 768