Court Opinion

ID: 6606238
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:12:51.646438+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:30:53.296497
License: Public Domain

FaiRChild, J.
Barry is seeking a portion of the unemployment reserve account built up out of Ball’s past contributions to the unemployment reserve fund. Barry claims that part of Ball’s business was transferred to it and that it is Ball’s successor to that extent. Under sec. 108.16 (8) (a), Stats., if the business of any employer is transferred in whole or in part, the transferee shall be deemed a successor for the purposes of ch. 108, Stats., and takes over all or the corresponding part of the transferor’s unemployment reserve account. If Barry is not a successor, it must build up its own reserve account. It must contribute 2.7 per cent of its pay roll for each of three calendar years. After that its contribution rate may vary between 0 and 4 per cent depending upon the ratio between its reserve account and one year’s pay roll. On the other hand, if Barry is a successor, its rate will immediately be dependent upon the balance in *57the account transferred. Presumably, Barry will enjoy a substantial advantage by way of reduced contributions if it takes over the account. Conversely, Ball has an obvious interest in holding down its own contributions by retaining its entire account, particularly if it obtains new customers and increases its pay roll in order to serve them.
It is clear that what happened here was not a transfer of part of Ball’s business in the ordinary sense of the term. Roundy’s evidently negotiated with Barry and found Barry willing to make some arrangement more satisfactory than the one it had with Ball. Roundy’s and Barry made a contract, and Roundy’s notified Ball. Ball transferred nothing until two months later. Then it seemed to Barry that there was enough advantage in the breadth of Ball’s license to justify an offer of $1,000, which Ball accepted.
The only question arises by virtue of a part of sec. 108.16 (8) (a), Stats., which provides:
“. . . In case of the transfer of any of the assets of a covered employer’s business by any means whatever, otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade, such transfer shall be deemed a transfer of business and shall constitute the transferee a successor hereunder, unless the commission, on it own motion or on application of an interested party, finds that all the following conditions exist:
“1. The transferee has not assumed any of the transferor’s obligations; and
“2. The transferee has not acquired any of the transferor’s good will; and
“3. The transferee has not continued or resumed the business of the transferor, either in the same establishment or elsewhere; and
“4. The transferee has not employed substantially the same employees as those the transferor had employed in connection with the assets transferred.”
Under the quoted language, a transfer of any of the assets of a covered employer’s business, otherwise than in the ordi*58nary course of trade, creates a presumption that there is a transfer of business. The presumption can be rebutted only by establishing all four of the negative propositions listed. They cannot all be established in this case. Hence the sole question is whether the license, standing alone, fulfils the phrase “any of the assets of the employer’s business.”
The appeal tribunal concluded that the license was a business asset and the assignment raised a presumption that was not rebutted. The commission concluded that the statute contemplated assets of significant value, necessary to the operation of a business and that the license did not qualify. The circuit court held that the commission could properly find that the license was not a business asset of the trans-feror, having no value to anyone except Barry.
It is clear that the assignment of the license was not essential to service of Roundy’s by Barry. If Ball had not assigned it, Barry would have started to perform as agreed two months before and there could have been no thought that Barry was entitled to any part of Ball’s unemployment reserve account. It is significant that Ball retained the equipment it used in its business. It parted only with the license which the transactions of others had rendered useless to it. If Ball should obtain new customers, the equipment would be a material consideration, but the license could not be.
In framing sec. 108.16 (8) (a), Stats., the legislature endeavored to set a reasonable standard by which to regulate successor ship to unemployment reserve accounts. If a business continues, but ownership changes, there is sound reason for identifying the account with the business rather than the former owner. If a business be divided, the same is true as to its parts. Five elements were considered: Transfer of assets of the transferor’s business; assumption of the trans-feror’s obligations; acquisition of the transferor’s good will; continuation of the transferor’s business; employment of the *59transferor’s employees. Transfer of assets was given prime importance. There was to be successorship whenever there was transfer of assets plus any one or more of the other elements. The legislature recognized that there would be transfers of business where less than all the assets would be transferred, and that is doubtless the reason for saying “any of the assets.” We do not think those words were intended to apply where the only asset transferred was a license which had previously lost all usefulness in the owner’s business and where the owner retained assets of substantial value, material to the continuation of his business.
It has been suggested that it was conceivable that a situation might arise where the employees would be deprived of benefits if Barry were not recognized as Ball’s successor and therefore that it would be good policy to recognize successor-ship. The answer is that the legislature made transfer of assets the essential condition, without which continuity of the force of employees is immaterial.
By the Court.- — Judgment affirmed.