Filed Date: 2/15/1979
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
— Appeal from a decision of the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board, filed November 7, 1977. By an initial determination, claimant was denied benefits under the Emergency Compensation Act of 1974 upon the ground that he had failed to actively engage in seeking work. Claimant sought review and was the only witness to testify at the hearing. The referee sustained the initial determination. The board affirmed, and this appeal ensued. We agree with claimant’s contention that the board’s determination cannot be affirmed on this record. The referee, whose findings of fact and opinion were adopted by the board, based his conclusion that claimant failed to engage in a systematic and sustained effort to obtain work during the week commencing August 1, 1977, upon a finding that "claimant does not identify any job contacts during the week in issue”. At the hearing, the referee’s inquiry on this issue was limited to the following questions, with claimant’s answers. "Q. Where did you go that week? A. I went to Bowlmore. Q. The same place where you used to work? A. Yes, and I went down to 23rd Street. There’s a bowling alley there. I went to Mid-City lanes. I’ve been there. They haven’t got nothing there, either, I went to Times Square Lanes. Q. When did you go there? A. It’s a bowling alley. Usually, bowling alley is my type of job. Q. When did you go, though? A. I went, I went Monday there, Tuesday. I went a lot of times there.” Apparently recognizing that this testimony does not support a finding that claimant failed to identify any job contacts during the week in issue, the board argues that pursuant to its power to determine the