Okay, the problem is NOT with your drawing unemployment after being misclassified as a 1099. You have already been determined to be misclassified as a 1099, have been determined to be a regular employee, and thus monetarily eligible for unemployment benefits if otherwise approved. The rest of this issue the agency will work out with your former employer.
And since you were a 1099, you were supposed to be able to set your own hours. But you were terminated for a reason that would be applicable to a regular employee, which was tardiness. So it sounds as though you should have been pretty much a slam dunk to be approved, at least in the initial decision. Is this what happened?
But then you lost me. It appears there was an appeal, and there was a hearing, and that first decision was overturned and you were denied, right? Am I following this progression correctly? And you filed your appeal of this denial several days late, due to, as you claim, medical reasons. So the claim was denied. Right?
Now you have appealed the fact that the appeal was filed late, citing medical reasons, right? And they have either said yes you have the right to file an appeal, or no you do not file the appeal timely, because you did not file the appeal timely, the reason wasn't extreme enough, or you didn't submit enough documentation.
But you have me totally completely confused. There is NO reason you should be talking about how you want to send this to the supreme court(?????) No way you could do this anyhow. The phrase they use is "superior court." The next appeal level would be to the superior court. What this usually means is that the appeal has gone through all the steps of the in-agency hearings, initial decision, second decision after a hearing and appeal to the board of review.
And anyone who wishes to pursue this claim further would need to take it into the regular courts. And I can assure you that if the benefits have not been approved in the agency, the chances are very very slim that the outcome would be any different in a regular court. Even if you had the best attorney in the world, they can't change unemployment law. And the unemployment system will have its own attorneys to defend their decision.
Frankly, the only genuine medical reason I could see for anyone to be late in filing an appeal to a claim decision would be if you were in a coma or something. All you had to do was send in the paperwork requesting an appeal. You did not have to be anywhere, or produce any paperwork or argument or present your case or anything of that nature. Are you telling us you missed a hearing due to health reasons, or that you just were a couple of days late filing the appeal? If you were, regardless of how good your arguments were, you'll probably be denied your opportunity to appeal. It's hard to imagine somebody being too sick to mail an envelope unless they were involved in a really serious health crisis or accident or something of that nature.
And your last sentence "current medical issues preventing me from means of obtaining money. It's either I fix this health mess, which is a mess as well, or I work, exacerbate the issue and hire a lawyer that I can't afford" has got me totally mystified.
If you have a chance to work, you need to be working instead of drawing unemployment. If your health is such that working is not a possibility for you, then you wouldn't be eligible to receive unemployment anyway, even if you'd been approved every way in the world. Unemployment insurance is in no way a disability insurance. In order to receive unemployment, which only lasts 26 weeks maximum in any state anyhow, you must be able, available and actively seeking work every week you file for it.
Why are you wandering around talking about going back to work, hiring a lawyer and appealing this? Appealing what?
Other than making any appeals that you need to make, which you can do by simply saying, "I wish to appeal this decision" I'd forget unemployment, is what my advice to you would be at this point.

