delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from dismissal, in the Chancery Court of Marshall County, of a petition for compensation benefits under the Unemployment Compensation Law, Chap. 1, Public Acts of Extra Session of 1936, as amended, now Williams’ Code, secs. 6901.1 through 6901.24. The appellant Ezell is herein referred to as petitioner, and ap-pellee Hake as commissioner.
In July 1945, on account of the closing of the Marshall Stove Company, a*war industrial plant, at Lewisburg, petitioner was laid off from his employment as an electrical truck operator, and about a week later filed claim for unemployment compensation benefits under the Unemployment Compensation Law. The claim was rejected
The first assignment of error is that the chancellor erred in setting aside the pro confesso and permitting the filing of a sworn answer; and a certified transcript of the
The next assignment is that the chancellor erred in permitting the filing of the transcript of the proceedings had before the Board of Review, because they were not properly certified. The documents in the transcript are in their original form, signed by the deponents before the Board of Review, including those documents signed and presented by the petitioner himself. The entire transcript is signed by one of the members of the Board, and certified by him to be all the proceedings and correctly to present the matters heard by the Board of Review. The transcript is further authenticated by the incorporation by reference of the transcript in the sworn answer of the commissioner. It is not suggested by petitioner that the' transcript was incomplete, nor that he was prejudiced by the filing of the transcript as it was filed, except that it was so filed after the pro confesso was taken. As we said of the first assignment, the chancellor’s consideration of the transcript of the proceedings before the Board of Review was as necessary for petitioner as it was for respondent. For these reasons we find no merit in this assignment and it is overruled.
The other assignments seek a review in this Court of questions of fact upon which there has been a concurrence below. It is insisted that the chancellor erréd in
In this Court, since the concurrence of the chancellor with the Board of Review, we think these questions of fact have been conclusively determined against petitioner’s contention. National Optical Stores, Inc., v. Bryant, 181 Tenn. 266, 181 S. W. (2d) 139; Dale v. Hartman, 157 Tenn. 60, 6 S. W. (2d) 319; Code sec. 10620.
The commissioner suggests that the phrases “available for work” and “suitable work” have not previously been defined by this court. We think the question of the definition of the two phrases is presented here only to the extent that we should say that both were correctly applied to the facts of this case by the Board of Review and the chancellor. We think in determining when a claimant is “available for work” and what is “suitable work,” that each case must largely rest upon - its own facts. Code, sec. 6901.5 (c) (1), Williams’ Code. Haynes v. Unemployment Compensation Commission, 353 Mo. 540, 183 S. W. (2d) 77.
All assignments of error are overruled and the decree is affirmed.