Dock Farish v. Department of Talent and Economic Development ( 2018 )


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  •                            STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DOCK FARISH, KEBEH GIBSON, MILLIE                                    UNPUBLISHED
    NICHOLS, and All Others Similarly Situated,                          December 11, 2018
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v                                                                    No. 341350
    Court of Claims
    DEPARTMENT OF TALENT AND ECONOMIC                                    LC No. 17-000035-MZ
    DEVELOPMENT,
    Defendant-Appellee,
    and
    TALENT INVESTMENT AGENCY,
    UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE AGENCY,
    DIRECTOR OF DEPARTMENT OF TALENT
    AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,
    DIRECTOR OF TALENT INVESTMENT
    AGENCY, and ACTING DIRECTOR OF
    UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE AGENCY,
    Defendants.
    Before: METER, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and GLEICHER, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    In this case involving the recoupment of unemployment-benefit overpayments and
    associated penalties and interest, plaintiffs appeal as of right the trial court’s order granting
    defendants’ motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8). Because the trial court
    did not address the applicability of administrative guidance concerning plaintiffs’ claim that
    recoupment of penalties and interest violated 42 USC 503(g), we reverse the grant of summary
    disposition with respect to plaintiffs’ claim under that statute and also reverse, in part, the grant
    of summary disposition concerning conversion. We remand this case for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    -1-
    I. BACKGROUND
    Plaintiffs, Dock Farish, Kebeh Gibson, and Millie Nichols,1 sued defendants in order to
    recover unemployment-insurance benefits that the Unemployment Insurance Agency (UIA)
    “unlawfully deducted from their entitlements.” Each plaintiff had been determined eligible for
    benefits by the UIA, but had seen those benefits reduced for the recoupment of overpayments,
    interest, and penalties. Farish’s and Nichols’s unemployment benefits had been deducted at
    times in their entirety and Gibson’s benefits had been reduced by an unknown percentage.
    Plaintiffs alleged that these deductions violated MCL 421.62(a) of the Michigan
    Employment Security Act (MESA) MCL 421.1 et seq., which states, in part, that “[d]eduction
    from benefits or wages payable to the individual is limited to not more than 50% of each
    payment due the claimant.” They also alleged violations of federal law, including 42 USC
    503(g) of the Social Security Act and 42 USC 1983. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged that the
    UIA’s deduction of benefits to recover not only overpayment, but also penalties and interest, was
    an unlawful expansion of 42 USC 503(g)(1), which authorizes state agencies to collect only
    overpayment of benefits. They also claimed that the UIA’s procedures for recouping benefits
    did not provide adequate notice or an opportunity for a hearing in violation of both 42 USC 503
    and 42 USC 1983. Additionally, plaintiffs claimed that defendants committed statutory
    conversion and common-law conversion by recouping the benefits, and they requested equitable
    relief in the form of a remittance of “unlawfully seized benefits” or the issuance of an injunction
    prohibiting defendants from seizing future benefits. In response, defendants filed a motion for
    summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(4), (7), and (8) based on lack of subject-matter
    jurisdiction, governmental immunity, and failure to state a claim on which relief could be
    granted. The Court of Claims granted defendants’ motion pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8).
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review de novo the grant or denial of summary disposition. Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 118; 597 NW2d 817 (1999).
    A motion under MCR 2.116(C)(8) tests the legal sufficiency of the
    complaint. All well-pleaded factual allegations are accepted as true and construed
    in a light most favorable to the nonmovant. A motion under MCR 2.116(C)(8)
    may be granted only where the claims alleged are so clearly unenforceable as a
    matter of law that no factual development could possibly justify recovery. When
    deciding a motion brought under this section, a court considers only the pleadings.
    MCR 2.116(G)(5). [Id. at 119-120 (quotation marks and citations omitted).]
    III. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF STATE UNEMPLOYMENT LAW
    Under the MESA, “[i]f the unemployment agency determines that an individual has
    obtained benefits to which the individual is not entitled, . . . the agency may recover a sum equal
    1
    Although the action was filed as a class action, plaintiffs never received class certification.
    -2-
    to the amount received plus interest . . . .” MCL 421.62(a). It may do this through “deduction
    from benefits or wages payable to the individual[.]” 
    Id.
     It may also, in some circumstances,
    collect administrative fines or penalties. MCL 421.54(b). Pursuant to MCL 421.62(a), the
    “[d]eduction from benefits or wages payable to the individual is limited to not more than 50% of
    each payment due the claimant.”
    Plaintiffs argue that defendants violated the statutory cap on benefit deduction in MCL
    421.62(a) because the UIA reduced benefit payments by more than 50% of each payment to
    recoup overpayments, interests, and penalties. However, although there is a 50% cap in MCL
    421.62(a), the next subsection provides that “[i]f the unemployment agency determines that a
    claimant has intentionally made a false statement or misrepresentation or has concealed material
    information to obtain benefits,” the “[r]estitution resulting from the intentional false statement,
    misrepresentation, or concealment of material information is not subject to the 50% limitation in
    subsection (a).” MCL 421.62(b) (emphasis added).
    The Court of Claims noted that, under MCL 421.54, the penalties imposed under the
    MESA are imposed for fraud, false statements, misrepresentations, or the failure to disclose
    material information. Further, the Court of Claims found that plaintiffs, “by pleading that they
    were subject to penalties, [had] pled the requisite facts that would permit the UIA to collect more
    than 50% of benefit payments under MCL 421.62(b).” Therefore, “accepting as true the
    allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint,” the Court of Claims concluded that “plaintiffs . . . failed to
    state a claim with regard to the 50% prohibition contained in MCL 421.62(a).” Plaintiffs argue
    that they alleged in their complaint only that “defendants unlawfully assessed them with
    fraudulent conduct penalties,” which was insufficient to “serve as an admission that defendants
    properly imposed those penalties in the first place.” However, a review of plaintiffs’ complaint
    evidences that they did not allege that defendants unlawfully assessed penalties; instead, they
    factually stated that defendants were deducting monies from their benefits, in part, to recover
    penalties.2 In considering defendants’ MCR 2.116(C)(8) motion, the trial court was required to
    accept all well-pleaded factual allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint as true. Maiden, 
    461 Mich at 2
     In other words, plaintiffs are not claiming that the penalties were not allowed to be imposed;
    they are claiming, instead, that the UIA was not allowed to deduct money from plaintiffs’ checks
    to satisfy the penalties. Plaintiffs did not sufficiently plead in avoidance of MCL 421.62(b), even
    as they repeatedly admit that the UIA was deducting monies to recover, in part, penalties.
    Plaintiffs specifically state that at issue is the “process by which UIA seeks to recoup . . .
    penalties.” (Emphasis added.) We note that, while “fraud” is generally considered an
    affirmative defense, here the issue of misrepresentation is directly tied in with plaintiffs’ cause of
    action under the statute, because MCL 421.62 as a whole clearly provides that the UIA is
    allowed to deduct more than 50% of benefits if the circumstances are apt. Plaintiffs cannot show
    a violation of the 50% rule without even pleading that the UIA made an incorrect determination
    regarding the issue of penalties. The dissent concludes that such a determination must be
    undertaken in further proceedings, but plaintiffs themselves state in the complaint that
    “individualized determinations concerning the reasons for the benefit overpayment are not
    necessary to evaluate whether Defendants violated [the law].”
    -3-
    119. Accepting as true plaintiffs’ allegation that they were being assessed penalties, the cap in
    MCL 421.62(a) did not apply to them; therefore, the trial court properly determined that
    plaintiffs failed to state a valid claim of a violation of MCL 421.62(a).
    Further, whether the UIA lawfully assessed penalties is not a question that was properly
    before the Court of Claims. When the UIA determines that an overpayment has occurred, it
    “shall issue a determination requiring restitution . . . .” MCL 421.62(a). Determinations made
    by the UIA are challengeable pursuant to the administrative procedures outlined in MCL
    421.32a. A claimant may protest the determination, and the UIA must review it and “issue a
    redetermination affirming, modifying, or reversing the prior determination . . . .” MCL
    421.32a(1). The claimant may appeal an unfavorable redetermination to an administrative law
    judge (ALJ). MCL 421.33(1). If he or she disagrees with the ALJ’s conclusion, the claimant
    may appeal that decision to the appellate commission and then to the circuit court. MCL
    421.34(2); MCL 421.38. It appears that plaintiffs took no action in accordance with these
    provisions. Because they failed to exhaust administrative remedies, they may not collaterally
    attack the determination, including the penalty assessment. Papas v Gaming Control Bd, 
    257 Mich App 647
    , 656, 665; 669 NW2d 326 (2003) (holding that a court does not have jurisdiction
    over a claim if the party failed to exhaust administrative remedies).
    IV. ALLEGED VIOLATIONS OF FEDERAL LAW
    Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court’s dismissal of their claim that the UIA violated 42
    USC 503(g) was contradictory to federal law. 42 USC 503 contains requirements for state laws
    governing unemployment-compensation administration. Specifically, 42 USC 503(g)(1)
    provides:
    A State shall deduct from unemployment benefits otherwise payable to an
    individual an amount equal to any overpayment made to such individual under an
    unemployment benefit program of the United States or of any other State, and not
    previously recovered. The amount so deducted shall be paid to the jurisdiction
    under whose program such overpayment was made. Any such deduction shall be
    made only in accordance with the same procedures relating to notice and
    opportunity for a hearing as apply to the recovery of overpayments of regular
    unemployment compensation paid by such State. [Emphasis added.]
    The statute is silent regarding the recovery of penalties or interest.
    Plaintiffs argue that by reducing benefits to recoup interest and penalties, the UIA
    violated the “explicit limitation” of 42 USC 503(g) that recovery of benefits can only be for an
    “amount equal to any overpayment.” The trial court rejected this argument, concluding that it
    was an attempt to read into the statute a limitation not present in its plain language, and further
    concluding that simply because the statute provides for the deduction of overpayments does not
    foreclose the recovery of statutory penalties and interest. This was a reasonable conclusion. See
    Haynes v Neshewat, 
    477 Mich 29
    , 38; 729 NW2d 488 (2007) (holding that courts should “not
    read into [a] statute a limitation that is not there”).
    -4-
    However, plaintiffs cite guidance provided by the United States Department of Labor
    (USDOL) that contradicts the trial court’s finding. In an Unemployment Insurance Program
    Letter released on August 11, 1989,3 state employment-security agencies were advised as
    follows:
    5. Specific Situations in which Deductions May or Must be made from
    Unemployment Compensation. A State law may (or must) include provision for
    deducting and withholding any sum from compensation payable to an individual
    only if specifically permitted (or required) by Federal law. These exceptions are
    limited to the following circumstances:
    a. If the claimant is legally liable to repay an overpayment of
    compensation made from the State’s unemployment fund, that amount owed may
    be deducted from compensation currently payable from such fund. This is
    permissible because the amount previously overpaid is tantamount to a
    prepayment of compensation currently due the claimant.
    * * *
    Deductions to recover overpayments are limited to the offset of the
    overpayment itself. Offset may not be used to recover additional interest or
    penalties due under State law as these additional amounts do not constitute a
    prepayment of compensation. [USDOL Unemployment Insurance Program Letter
    No. 89-45 (emphasis added).]
    In particular, plaintiffs point to the Unemployment Insurance Program Letter’s explanation that
    withholding any sum from benefit compensation must be specifically permitted or required by
    federal law and that deductions must be limited to the offset of the overpayment only.
    “[T]he construction given to a statute by those charged with the duty of executing it is
    always entitled to most respectful consideration and ought not to be overruled without cogent
    reasons.” Port Sheldon Beach Ass’n v Dep’t of Environmental Quality, 
    318 Mich App 300
    , 307;
    896 NW2d 496 (2016) (quotation marks and citations omitted). “If a statute is silent or
    ambiguous regarding congressional intent, a court may look into an agency’s regulations for
    guidance in interpreting congressional intent.” Walker v Johnson & Johnson Vision Prods, Inc,
    
    217 Mich App 705
    , 713; 552 NW2d 679 (1996). “The court should defer to a federal agency’s
    construction of the statute unless the agency’s interpretation is unreasonable.” 
    Id.
    3
    The memo stated that its expiration date is August 31, 1990; however, it appears that the
    USDOL has determined that it remained in effect past then. See United States Department of
    Labor, Active Unemployment Compensation Program Letters and Active Unemployment
    Insurance Program Letters as of July 28, 2016  (accessed August 27, 2018).
    -5-
    The Court of Claims did not address whether the USDOL’s interpretation applied in this
    case; nor did it determine that it was “unreasonable,” 
    id. at 713
    , or provide a “cogent reason[]”
    for overruling its interpretation, Port Sheldon Beach Ass’n, 318 Mich App at 307 (quotation
    marks and citations omitted). Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order to the extent that it
    granted summary disposition to defendants with respect to plaintiffs’ claim under 42 USC
    503(g), and we remand to the trial court to reconsider this issue and to give the parties notice and
    a fair chance to prepare responses. See Haji v Prevention Ins Agency, Inc, 
    196 Mich App 84
    , 88-
    90; 492 NW2d 460 (1992) (CORRIGAN, J., concurring) (discussing, in general, the desirability of
    allowing parties to prepare a response). We note, however, that plaintiffs, in their reply to
    defendants’ motion for summary disposition, explicitly abandoned their claims against the
    individual defendants; accordingly, only the agency defendants remain in play.
    Plaintiffs also argue that they are entitled to notice and the opportunity for a hearing
    every time that the UIA deducts from their benefits any overpayments, interest, or penalties. As
    discussed above, there is already a mechanism in place under MESA that provides claimants the
    rights to notice and an opportunity to be heard. The Court of Claims concluded that this was
    sufficient, and we agree. Plaintiffs do not cite any persuasive authority that would compel a
    contrary result. For this reason, we affirm the dismissal of plaintiffs’ due process claim under 42
    USC 1983.
    V. CONVERSION
    Plaintiffs next argue that defendants committed conversion. Conversion is “any distinct
    act of dominion wrongfully exerted over another person’s personal property in denial of or
    inconsistent with his rights therein.” Aroma Wines & Equip, Inc v Columbian Distribution
    Servs, Inc, 
    497 Mich 337
    , 351-352; 871 NW2d 136 (2015) (quotation marks and citations
    omitted). Statutory conversion is similar to common-law conversion, except that it includes a
    requirement that the defendant converted the property for his or her own use. MCL
    600.2919a(1)(a); Aroma Wines, 497 Mich at 359 (to support a claim under MCL
    600.2919a(1)(a), a plaintiff “must show that the defendant employed the converted property for
    some purpose personal to the defendant’s interests”). Defendants argue that even assuming that
    the benefits are plaintiffs’ personal property, the UIA’s deduction of monies from those benefits
    to recoup previous overpayments, penalties, and interest is not inconsistent with their rights.
    They point to state unemployment law in which the Legislature expressly permitted the UIA to
    recover overpayments and enforce interest and penalties, which they argue establishes that
    plaintiffs do not have an “unfettered right” to the benefits.
    Plaintiffs counter that 42 USC 503(a) states that they are “entitled to the full payment of
    unemployment compensation when due[.]” However, this provision does not state that claimants
    have an inalienable right to unemployment benefits, only that the state should administer benefits
    “when due[.]” 42 USC 503(a)(1). Further, it does not foreclose the recoupment of benefits
    wrongfully paid, and, under 42 USC 503(g)(1), “[a] State shall deduct from unemployment
    benefits . . . any overpayment made to . . . an individual . . . .” (Emphasis added.) Accordingly,
    defendants did not wrongfully exercise power over plaintiffs’ benefits inconsistent with their
    rights with respect to the recoupment of overpayments.
    -6-
    Plaintiffs counter that if any other of their claims (e.g., the claim under 42 USC 503[g]
    concerning interest and penalties) remains viable, the conversion claims must also remain viable.
    We acknowledge that we are remanding for further findings regarding 42 USC 503(g) and the
    withholding of funds for interest and penalties. Nevertheless, the conversion claims do not, as
    argued by plaintiffs in their reply brief, remain viable as applied to the individual defendants.
    First, as noted, plaintiffs explicitly abandoned their claims against the individual defendants and
    thus should not have made appellate arguments concerning them. Second, any possible claim of
    conversion, an intentional tort, would be subject to governmental immunity as applied to the
    individual defendants.4 Indeed, the acts of withholding were undertaken during the course of
    employment and the individuals were acting within the scope of their authority, there is no
    evidence that the acts were undertaken in bad faith, and the acts were discretionary. See Odom v
    Wayne Co, 
    482 Mich 459
    , 472-476, 480; 760 NW2d 217 (2008).
    Plaintiffs cite statutory law and caselaw in support of their argument that the agency
    defendants were not entitled to governmental immunity with respect to the conversion claims.
    We direct the trial court to consider this argument, as necessary, in conjunction with the analysis
    of 42 USC 503(g) and the retention of monies for interest and penalties.
    VI. EQUITABLE RELIEF
    Finally, plaintiffs allege that they are entitled to equitable relief. The Court of Claims
    held that plaintiffs asserted “a type of relief, not a stand-alone cause of action.” We agree. The
    Michigan Supreme Court has explained that “[i]t is not the remedy that supports the cause of
    action, but rather the cause of action that supports a remedy.” Henry v Dow Chem Co, 
    473 Mich 63
    , 96-97; 701 NW2d 684 (2005) (quotation marks and citation omitted). Plaintiffs did not
    adequately plead such a claim in their complaint, nor did they adequately defend an equitable
    cause of action in their appeal brief. Summary disposition of plaintiffs’ equitable-relief claim
    was proper under MCR 2.116(C)(8).
    We reverse the grant of summary disposition with respect to plaintiffs’ claim regarding
    interest and penalties under 42 USC 503(g) and with respect to related conversion claims against
    the agency defendants, and we remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion. In all other respects, the trial court’s judgment is affirmed. We do not retain
    jurisdiction.
    /s/ Patrick M. Meter
    /s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
    4
    See Burise v Pontiac, 
    282 Mich App 646
    , 652 n 3; 766 NW2d 311 (2009) (“[w]hen a trial court
    reaches the right result for the wrong reason, the ruling will not be disturbed”).
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 341350

Filed Date: 12/11/2018

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/18/2021