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Batey v. Employment Security Department

Wash. Ct. App.March 12, 2007No. No. 57513-9-ICited 4 times
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Becker
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The court struck down the unemployment insurance statute that denied Batey benefits, finding the legislation violated the state constitutional subject-in-title requirement. The case was remanded to the Employment Security Department to reconsider Batey's claim under the discretionary good cause standard that existed before the unconstitutional amendments.

What This Ruling Means

**Batey v. Employment Security Department: Court Rules in Favor of Unemployed Worker** This case involved a worker named Batey who was denied unemployment benefits by Washington State's Employment Security Department. Batey had left her job at the Snohomish County Center for Battered Women and applied for unemployment insurance, but the state denied her claim under a law that restricted when people could receive benefits after voluntarily leaving work. The court ruled in Batey's favor, but not on the merits of whether she deserved benefits. Instead, the court found that the state law denying her benefits was unconstitutional. The law violated Washington's constitutional requirement that legislation must have a clear title that accurately describes what the law covers (called the "subject-in-title" requirement). Because the law was struck down as unconstitutional, the court sent Batey's case back to the Employment Security Department to reconsider her claim under older, more flexible rules that gave the agency discretion to approve benefits for "good cause." **What this means for workers:** This decision protects workers by ensuring that laws affecting unemployment benefits must be properly written and constitutional. It also restored a more worker-friendly standard that allows for individual consideration of circumstances when someone leaves their job.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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