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Silverberg v. Industrial Comm

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Jun 2, 1964
128 N.W.2d 674 (Wis. 1964)

Opinion

April 28, 1964 —

June 2, 1964.

APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Dane county: EDWIN M. WILKIE, Circuit Judge. Reversed.

For the appellant there was a brief by Glassner, Clancy Glassner of Milwaukee, and oral argument by William E. Glassner, Jr.

For the respondent Industrial Commission the cause was argued by Beatrice Lampert, assistant attorney general, with whom on the brief was George Thompson, attorney general.



The Industrial Commission denied the petitioner-appellant's application for a license to operate as an employment agent for compensation under ch. 105, Stats.

The circuit court upon review reversed the order of the commission for procedural errors and remanded the matter to the commission.

Petitioner operates a temporary-help service in Madison under franchise from Manpower, Inc., a Delaware corporation. In this business, Manpower contracts to furnish service to employers upon a temporary basis. The employees are employees of Manpower and are paid by Manpower.

Petitioner made application to the Industrial Commission for an employment agency license so that he could operate an agency placing applicants as permanent employees for others as well as his temporary-help service. Incident to its investigation of petitioner's application, the Industrial Commission held public hearings in which Commissioners Rouse and Schimenz participated. At these hearings petitioner produced 15 witnesses in addition to himself.

The main thrust of petitioner's testimony was that by reason of his experience in the temporary-help field, his personalized handling of each application, and psychological tests which he proposed to administer, he could make a definite contribution to the economy of the city of Madison by placing individuals in jobs where their talents would be utilized to the highest degree. He contemplated restricting his service to "white collar workers."

He admitted that in the coming years there was going to be a definite shortage of the technical and clerical workers he proposed to place; he characterized this as the so-called "hour-glass" problem, — a labor force narrow in the middle at the ages where its members would ordinarily be most productive. He felt that the short supply of potential employees intensified the need for his proposed service.

Nine professional people testified to the satisfactory results they had experienced with petitioner's temporary-help service. They felt there was need in the community for the type of service petitioner proposed to offer, especially with reference to his individualized handling of prospective employees and employers.

Five witnesses offered by petitioner testified to their dissatisfaction with the methods of operation of the public and private employment agencies presently operating in the Madison community. Their testimony was based upon individual, adverse experiences. One of these witnesses was the wife of a university student who testified that she was not interested in getting "just any job." A single girl who had experience with IBM punch-card operations, but wanted to leave that field, fell into the same category. Another was a professionally trained individual with a background in management who was looking for a job in the "over $10,000 bracket."

The fourth witness had a one-semester background in accounting at the Madison Vocational School. He had six years' experience in general office procedure. He was unemployed at the time but felt that the petitioner could have placed him if the petitioner had held a license to operate an employment agency.

Petitioner's final witness expressing dissatisfaction with the existing employment facilities was a lady who worked for him as the office manager of his temporary-help service.

Petitioner proposed to do extensive testing and some training of job applicants. The person who would administer the tests testified for the petitioner. She holds a Master's degree in psychology with a minor in statistics. She is married and has one child. She described in detail the tests which petitioner proposed to administer. It was established that she was the only person associated with petitioner in any way who had received clearance from the publisher to administer those tests which were considered "restricted." She had an understanding that she would join petitioner's organization after he received his license. She also testified that she had looked for full-time employment at one time in her professional field but neither the state employment service nor the state personnel office could help her. She testified that she also told the state employment service that she would consider doing certain types of office work "which involved more than just pounding a typewriter." But she was told that the service did not like to place anyone with special qualifications in such a field.

Two representatives of the existing private employment agency in Madison testified in opposition to the granting of the license. Both indicated that in their opinion the needs of the community were sufficiently met by the existing agencies, public and private. One of these individuals holds a Master's degree in clinical psychology. He had worked for the other private employment agency for approximately ten days. He testified that this agency has various aptitude tests which he administers selectively at the request of the employer. It was his opinion that the contemplated psychological-testing program was highly impractical. His experience was in the Freudian school of psychology. He also testified that there were definite advantages to be gained from operating a temporary-help service in connection with an employment agency.

A representative of the Wisconsin State Employment Service testified regarding the operations of that agency and the testing program which it carries out; he also offered voluminous statistics on the labor force in the Madison area and the results of the state employment service's operation in past years. He was not asked whether there was a need in the Madison community for the type of service contemplated by the petitioner.

Two representatives of labor also testified. Both felt that the state employment service and the unions adequately handled the needs of the Madison community and that it was wrong for one person to take a fee in return for finding another a job. Union placements were limited to jobs within scope of the existent union activities and not in conflict with placements as contemplated by the petitioner.

After the hearings the commission entered an order signed by Commissioners Schimenz and Knutson denying petitioner's application. Why the order was not also signed by Commissioner Rouse does not appear from the record. The findings of fact on which the order was based were:

"1. The applicant Joseph H. Silverberg is a person who is fit to operate a private employment agency in the State of Wisconsin.

"2. That the premises located at 23 South Webster Street at the City of Madison which are proposed as the premises in which the applicant would operate a private employment agency, are premises which are fit and adequate for the conduct of a private employment agency.

"3. That the private employment agencies which are now licensed to do business in the City of Madison and the State of Wisconsin and the Wisconsin State Employment Service are sufficient to supply the needs of the employers and employes in the area intended to be served by said Joseph H. Silverberg in the operation of a private employment agency."

Petitioner appealed from the order to the circuit court for Dane county. The circuit court held that Commissioner Knutson did not participate in the decision to a sufficient degree so that he could sign the order and thereby make it the action of the commission. This was true, the court felt, because no transcript of the testimony was available at the time the order was signed and entered. The trial court viewed this as a failure to comply with sec. 227.12, Stats. The trial court concluded that this was a "contested case" to which the statutory "fair play" requirements attached. The trial court also noted that the findings of fact did not address themselves to the sufficiency of employment agencies in the Madison community. Accordingly, the record was remanded to the Industrial Commission. The trial court felt that the commission was not foreclosed from taking further testimony, considering documentary matter on employment conditions currently available to it, or taking notice of present employment conditions as distinguished from those prevailing at the time of application.

After receipt of the trial court's opinion but prior to receipt of its mandate, the Industrial Commission entered another order as a preamble to which it was recited that the commission, which was now composed of Commissioners Schimenz, Knutson, and Lauri, had studied the transcript, considered the evidence presented, and reviewed material and employment conditions at the time of the application as well as present employment conditions. The findings of fact were identical with those upon which the first order was based except that Finding 3 made it clear that the area intended to be served by the applicant was the area considered by the commission.

This order was the basis of a motion by petitioner for review of the trial court's decision. The trial court refused to consider the order on the ground that it was new matter and not properly before the court. Petitioner appeals from a judgment entered in accordance with the trial court's first decision.


The petitioner contends he is entitled to an employment agent's license; the commission contends that the application should be denied. Both parties to this appeal agree that the disputed issues should be resolved upon the record as it now appears and that the matter should not be remanded to the commission for further evidentiary consideration.

The principal statute involved is sec. 105.13:

"REFUSAL TO ISSUE AND REVOCATION OF LICENSE. It shall be the duty of the industrial commission, and it shall have power, jurisdiction and authority to issue licenses to employment agents, and to refuse to issue such license whenever, after due investigation, the commission or a majority of the members thereof finds that the character of the applicant makes him unfit to be an employment agent, or when the premises for conducting the business of an employment agent is found upon investigation to be unfit for such use, or whenever, upon investigation by the commission, it is found and determined that the number of licensed employment agents or that the employment agency operated by the United States, the state or by the municipality or by two or more thereof jointly in the community in which the applicant for a permit proposes to operate is sufficient to supply the needs of employers and employes. Any such license granted by the commission may also be revoked by it upon due notice to the holder of said license, and upon due cause shown. Failure to comply with the duties, terms, conditions or provisions of sections 105.01 to 105.15, inclusive, of the statutes, or with any lawful orders of the commission, shall be deemed due cause to revoke such license."

The statute directs the commission to issue a license and to refuse to do so if after investigation the commission or a majority of the members find (1) the character of applicant makes him unfit, or (2) the premises for conducting the business are unfit, or (3) that the number of licensed agencies, including state, federal, or municipal agencies operating in the community, is sufficient to meet the needs of employers and employees.

The first grounds for refusal were resolved in favor of the petitioner and are not in dispute. Our consideration is limited to the third ground of refusal under the statute, i.e., whether the needs of employees and employers are sufficiently supplied.

The court has considered this portion of the statute on previous occasions. In Graebner v. Industrial Comm. (1955), 269 Wis. 252, 68 N.W.2d 714, we decided that the statute was constitutional in that it did not violate the due-process clause of the Fourteenth amendment and that it was a valid delegation of legislative authority.

"The business of conducting an employment agency is a legitimate one in which all persons similarly situated are lawfully entitled to engage, but it is one which is so far concerned with the welfare of the public that it is within the police power of the state to regulate it. State v. Howard W. Russell, Inc., 181 Wis. 76, 194 N.W. 43. Such power carries with it the right to require that one who desires to engage in the business shall have a license therefor. It is also the established law that a legislative act may validly confer upon an agency of the government authority to grant or to withhold a license, provided that, where discretion is to be exercised by such agency, proper standards or guides for the use of the discretion are established by the act and that the act may not be construed as conferring upon the agency the power to exercise its discretion unreasonably, arbitrarily, or capriciously. Mehlos v. Milwaukee, 156 Wis. 591, 146 N.W. 882. (p. 255.)

". . .

"The statute involved in the instant case must be given similar construction. The standards prescribed are that the license is to be refused if the character of the applicant makes him unfit to be an employment agent or when the premises whereon he purports to operate is found to be unfit for use, or if the community in which he proposed to operate is adequately served by existing agencies. Upon the authority of the Wisconsin cases to which we have referred we must hold that the statute, in so far as it empowers the commission to grant or to refuse a license under the circumstances prescribed, is valid." (p. 257.)

In oral argument petitioner has asked us to re-examine and overrule the Graebner Case, supra. While we are not precluded from a re-examination of a former case upon request at oral argument, we determine upon the record before us, it is inappropriate to do so in this instance.

The controlling case here is Harding v. Industrial Comm. (1961), 12 Wis.2d 274, 107 N.W.2d 273, 108 N.W.2d 155.

In the Harding Case we determined that a public hearing was required before an application for an employment agency license could be denied and reasserted the standards to be used by the commission as set forth in Graebner.

"If, on the other hand, the refusal of a license under sec. 105.13, Stats., be considered the final decision of the commission, without any possibility of gaining a hearing under sec. 101.15, sec. 105.13 should be construed as requiring a hearing before refusal of a license. Notwithstanding the use of the term `investigation' as the basis for the findings, the commission has proceeded in the past as if the word were `hearing.' Doubts would arise as to the validity of excluding persons from a lawful business by reason of determinations of fact reached without a hearing. Both the administrative practice, and the doubts referred to would support the construction that the investigation must take the form of a hearing.

"In this case, we are concerned only with the third ground for refusal specified in sec. 105.13, Stats., i.e., whether the needs of employers and employees in the Milwaukee community are sufficiently supplied.

"The validity of empowering the Industrial Commission to refuse a license upon a finding that such needs are sufficiently supplied by existing agencies was sustained in Graebner v. Industrial Comm. (1955), 269 Wis. 252, 68 N.W.2d 714. In discussing the standard for the exercise of the commission's power, the court said, at page 258:

"`We agree that the commission shall consider both the quality and the quantity of the service rendered and whether or not that would be improved by the grant of additional permits.'" (pp. 277, 278.)

The scope of review of administrative agency findings and the problems in respect thereto have been recently stated in Copland v. Department of Taxation (1962), 16 Wis.2d 543, 553-555, 114 N.W.2d 858.

"The majority and dissenting members of this court are in full agreement as to the principles of law governing the scope of judicial review of an agency's findings of fact under the Wisconsin Administrative Procedure Act (ch. 227, Stats.). The controlling statute is sec. 227.20(1)(d), which authorizes a reviewing court to reverse or modify an agency decision if substantial rights of the aggrieved party have been prejudiced as a result of the administrative findings being `unsupported by substantial evidence in view the entire record as submitted.' (Italics supplied.)

"Thus, to apply this standard we must first determine what is meant by `substantial evidence.' E. Blythe Stason, in an article entitled `Substantial Evidence' in Administrative Law, 89 University of Pennsylvania Law Review (1941), 1026, 1038, states:

"`[T]he term "substantial evidence" should be construed to confer finality upon an administrative decision on the facts when, upon an examination of the entire record, the evidence, including the inferences therefrom, is found to be such that a reasonable man, acting reasonably, might have reached the decision; but, on the other hand, if a reasonable man, acting reasonably, could not have reached the decision from the evidence and its inferences then the decision is not supported by substantial evidence and it should be set aside.'

"This court, in Gateway City Transfer Co. v. Public Service Comm. (1948), 253 Wis. 397, 405, 406, 34 N.W.2d 238, quoted from Consolidated Edison Co. v. National L. R. Board (1938), 305 U.S. 197, 59 Sup. Ct. 206, 83 L.Ed. 126, to the effect that `substantial evidence' is `such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.' (Emphasis supplied.)

"We deem that the test of reasonableness is implicit in the statutory words `substantial evidence.' However, in applying this test the crucial question is whether a reviewing court is only to consider the evidence which tends to support the agency's findings, or whether it is also to consider the evidence which controverts, explains, or impeaches the former. Use of the statutory words `in view of the entire record as submitted' strongly suggests that the test of reasonableness is to be applied to the evidence as a whole, not merely to that part which tends to support the agency's findings. This court so interpreted sec. 227.20(1) (d), Stats., in Albrent Freight Storage Co. v. Public Service Comm. (1953), 263 Wis. 119, 128, 56 N.W.2d 846, 58 N.W.2d 410, and Motor Transport Co. v. Public Service Comm. (1953), 263 Wis. 31, 45, 56 N.W.2d 548. See also 4 Davis, Administrative Law Treatise, pp. 129, 130, sec. 29.03.

"It is a commonly accepted principle that a reviewing court should not pass on the credibility of witnesses nor the weight of the evidence, because these lie exclusively within the province of the agency. Likewise, a reviewing court is not to substitute its judgment for that of the agency where, in evaluating conflicting evidence in a field in which the agency possesses expertise which the court does not, the agency probably has employed its expert knowledge. However, in reviewing an agency finding, drawing a line between a weighing of the evidence and the evaluation of its reasonableness presents an illusive problem."

In applying the "substantial evidence" rule to the standard that the commission shall "consider both the quality and the quantity of the service rendered and whether or not that would be improved by the grant of additional permits," we conclude in view of the entire record reasonable minds must agree that the quality and quantity of service rendered would be improved and as such be beneficial to the needs of employers and employees.

Graebner v. Industrial Comm., supra, p. 258.

The words of the statute are that the license is to be denied if existing agencies are "sufficient to supply the needs of employers and employes." We conclude the legislature intended that competent and well-regulated employment agencies which would add to the quality and quantity of employment services so as to supply a need sought by employers or employees should be granted an employment agency license.

Applying these tests to the entire record before us, we conclude that the petitioner has established that the employment services he proposes to render will improve the quality and quantity of employment services to a significant number of prospective employers and employees. The fact that services now available may to some degree overlap those proposed by the petitioner does not negate the inference that the quality and quantity of the services to be offered will be beneficial to employers and employees. Nor does this record permit a reasonable inference that detrimental or unfair competition will result. An employment agent's license should be granted to the petitioner.

An amicus curiae brief has been filed. The brief seeks to challenge the validity of testimony in the record by statements and assertions. This is not a proper function of amicus curiae. The brief is, therefore, stricken from the record.

By the Court. — Judgment reversed, cause remanded with directions to reverse the decision of the Industrial Commission and to remand the proceeding to the commission for further proceedings, not inconsistent with the opinion filed herein. The brief amicus curiae will be stricken from the record.

WILKIE, J., took no part.


Summaries of

Silverberg v. Industrial Comm

Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Jun 2, 1964
128 N.W.2d 674 (Wis. 1964)
Case details for

Silverberg v. Industrial Comm

Case Details

Full title:SILVERBERG, Appellant, v. INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION, Respondent

Court:Supreme Court of Wisconsin

Date published: Jun 2, 1964

Citations

128 N.W.2d 674 (Wis. 1964)
128 N.W.2d 674

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