Bell v. Idaho Department of Labor ( 2014 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 41592
    CHARLES C. BELL,                        )
    )
    Claimant-Appellant,                  )
    )
    Boise, December 2014 Term
    v.                                      )
    )
    2014 Opinion No. 138
    IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF LABOR,              )
    )
    Filed: December 18, 2014
    Respondent-Respondent on Appeal,     )
    )
    Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
    and                                     )
    )
    SEARS,                                  )
    )
    Respondent.                          )
    _______________________________________ )
    Appeal from the Idaho Industrial Commission.
    The decision of the Industrial Commission is affirmed.
    Charles C. Bell, pro se appellant.
    Honorable Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General, Boise, for Respondent.
    _____________________
    J. JONES, Justice
    Charles C. Bell appeals a decision of the Idaho Industrial Commission holding that he
    willfully made false statements or willfully failed to report material facts for the purpose of
    obtaining unemployment benefits. Because the Commission’s decision is supported by
    substantial and competent evidence, we affirm.
    I.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Charles C. Bell was employed by Sears from September 25, 2012, to May 16, 2013.
    During that period, Bell regularly filed for unemployment benefits with the Idaho Department of
    Labor (“DOL”). He received benefits for each week beginning with the week ending on Sept. 29,
    2012, through the week ending on March 23, 2013. On March 26, 2013, the DOL discovered
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    discrepancies between the weekly gross wages reported by Bell in his unemployment filings and
    the gross wages reported to the DOL by Sears. The DOL requested additional information from
    Sears and Bell concerning his weekly gross wages and the hours he worked each week. The
    DOL relied upon the information provided by Bell to calculate his actual weekly gross wages
    because Sears provided only bi-weekly, rather than weekly, gross wage information. Based on
    the information provided by Bell, the DOL determined that Bell willfully misstated his gross
    wages for nineteen weeks in which he received benefits and that he was ineligible for benefits for
    nine weeks in which he claimed to have worked part-time hours despite working at least forty
    hours. Bell was disqualified from receiving benefits for fifty-two weeks, ordered to repay
    benefits he received for the relevant periods, and ordered to pay penalties for willfully
    misrepresenting his gross wages and the hours he worked in particular weeks.
    Bell filed a protest of the DOL’s initial determination and a hearing was held before a
    DOL appeals examiner. During that hearing Bell did not dispute that he worked at least forty
    hours during the weeks identified by the DOL or that he inaccurately represented his gross wages
    in the manner determined by the DOL. Instead, Bell argued that the misrepresentations were
    honest errors and that he should therefore not be subject to penalties. According to Bell, Sears
    represented to him that he was a part-time employee despite working full-time hours during
    certain weeks and Bell relied upon that representation when he stated that he worked part-time
    hours even during weeks in which he worked in excess of forty hours. Bell claimed he erred in
    reporting his weekly gross wages because Sears paid him bi-weekly with direct deposits into his
    bank account, which deposits did not provide information regarding his gross wages, much less
    his weekly gross wages. Bell stated that he estimated his gross wages for each week by
    multiplying his hourly rate by the number of hours he was scheduled to work that week, without
    later updating the DOL with more accurate wage information.
    The DOL appeals examiner affirmed the DOL’s initial determination. Bell then appealed
    to the Idaho Industrial Commission (“Commission”). As in the hearing before the appeals
    examiner, Bell did not dispute that he misrepresented his gross wages or that he worked at least
    forty hours in certain weeks in which he claimed to have worked part-time hours, but argued
    only that the misrepresentations were not willful.
    The Commission issued a decision and order after conducting a de novo review of the
    record. It found that there was no dispute that Bell worked at least forty hours during certain
    2
    weeks in which he received benefits, though he claimed to have worked part-time hours during
    those weeks. It also found that Bell was aware of the requirement to update the DOL with
    accurate information regarding weekly gross wages if he initially estimated those wages when
    filing for benefits. Because Bell estimated his gross wages and knew of the requirement to
    update the DOL with accurate information, but made no attempt to do so, the Commission found
    that Bell willfully made false statements or failed to disclose material facts for the purpose of
    securing unemployment benefits. 1 The Commission concluded that Bell was not entitled to a
    waiver of the obligation to repay benefits that he received but to which he was not entitled, and
    that Bell was subject to penalties as a result of his misrepresentations.
    Bell subsequently filed a request for a new hearing, repeating his argument that the
    misrepresentations were not willful. The Commission issued an order denying reconsideration
    and Bell timely filed a notice of appeal. The only issue on appeal is whether there is substantial
    and competent evidence in the record to support the Commission’s finding that Bell willfully
    made false statements or willfully failed to report material facts for the purpose of obtaining
    unemployment benefits.
    II.
    ANALYSIS
    A. Standard of Review
    “When this Court reviews a decision from the Industrial Commission, we exercise free
    review over questions of law, but review questions of fact only to determine whether the
    Commission’s findings are supported by substantial and competent evidence.” Uhl v. Ballard
    Med. Products, Inc., 
    138 Idaho 653
    , 657, 
    67 P.3d 1265
    , 1269 (2003). “Substantial and competent
    evidence is relevant evidence that a reasonable mind might accept to support a conclusion.” 
    Id.
    “[T]his Court does not re-weigh the evidence or consider whether it would have reached a
    different conclusion from the evidence presented.” Hughen v. Highland Estates, 
    137 Idaho 349
    ,
    351, 
    48 P.3d 1238
    , 1240 (2002). “The Industrial Commission’s conclusions regarding the
    credibility and weight of evidence will not be disturbed unless the conclusions are clearly
    erroneous.” 
    Id.
     “[T]his Court views all the facts and inferences in the light most favorable to the
    1
    With respect to one of the weeks at issue, however, the Commission reversed the DOL appeals examiner. For the
    week ending October 13, 2012, the difference between the weekly gross wages Bell reported and the weekly gross
    wages he actually earned was $4.35. The Commission concluded that given “the nominal nature of the difference in
    reported wages,” it “is not inclined to find that Claimant willfully made a false statement during this week.”
    3
    party who prevailed before the Industrial Commission.” Neihart v. Universal Joint Auto Parts,
    Inc., 
    141 Idaho 801
    , 802–03, 
    118 P.3d 133
    , 134–35 (2005).
    B. The Commission’s conclusion that Bell willfully made false statements or
    willfully failed to report material facts in order to secure unemployment benefits
    is supported by substantial and competent evidence.
    Idaho Code section 72-1366(12) provides that “[a] claimant shall not be entitled to
    benefits for a period of fifty-two (52) weeks if it is determined that he has willfully made a false
    statement or willfully failed to report a material fact in order to obtain benefits.” Such a claimant
    must “repay any sums received for any week for which the claimant received waiting week
    credit or benefits as a result of having willfully made a false statement or willfully failed to
    report a material fact,” 
    id.,
     and is liable for penalties “for each determination in which the
    claimant is found to have made a false statement, misrepresentation, or failed to report a material
    fact to the department . . . .” I.C. § 72-1369(2).
    Bell does not argue that his weekly gross wages or the number of hours he worked in
    particular weeks were immaterial. A fact is material if it “is relevant to the determination of a
    claimant’s right to benefits . . . .” Meyer v. Skyline Mobile Homes, 
    99 Idaho 754
    , 760, 
    589 P.2d 89
    , 95 (1979). Idaho Code section 72-1312(1) conditions the availability of benefits for a
    particular week on the claimant working less than full-time during that week. Idaho Code
    sections 72-1312(4) and 72-1367(4) tie the benefits to which a claimant is entitled during a
    particular week, if any, to the gross wages the claimant earned during that week. As a result,
    Bell’s wages and the hours he worked during the weeks for which he claimed benefits are
    material facts. See McNulty v. Sinclair Oil Corp., 
    152 Idaho 582
    , 586, 
    272 P.3d 554
    , 558 (2012)
    (holding that the amount the claimant earned working part-time was “material because his
    earnings were relevant to the determination of . . . [the claimant’s] right to benefits and could
    have affected the amount of benefits . . . [the claimant] was entitled to receive”).
    Nor does Bell dispute the Commission’s conclusion that his unemployment filings
    included misrepresentations regarding his weekly gross wages and whether he worked part or
    full-time hours during certain weeks. As to both, Bell acknowledges that his unemployment
    filings contained misrepresentations but claims that “[a]ny/all acknowledged reporting errors
    were and remain strictly inadvertent and accidental” and that he was not “willfully trying to get
    compensation that was not rightfully [his] . . . .” The only issue on appeal, then, is whether Bell
    acted willfully when he made false statements or failed to disclose material facts regarding his
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    weekly gross wages and the hours he worked during particular weeks.
    [Willfully] implies simply a purpose or willingness to commit the act or make the
    omission referred to. It does not require any intent to violate law, in the sense of
    having an evil or corrupt motive or intent. It does imply a conscious wrong, and
    may be distinguished from an act maliciously or corruptly done, in that it does not
    necessarily imply an evil mind, but is more nearly synonymous with
    “intentionally,” “designedly,” “without lawful excuse,” and therefore not
    accidental.
    Meyer, 99 Idaho at 761, 589 P.2d at 96 (quoting Archbold v. Huntington, 
    34 Idaho 558
    , 565, 
    201 P. 1041
    , 1043 (1921)). Enactment of “provisions penalizing claimants who willfully fail to report
    material facts in order to obtain benefits. . . . suggests that [the Legislature] intended to disqualify
    those claimants who purposely, intentionally, consciously, or knowingly fail to report a material
    fact, not those whose omission is accidental because of negligence, misunderstanding or other
    cause.” 
    Id.
     See also Smith v. State, Dept. of Employment, 
    107 Idaho 625
    , 628, 
    691 P.2d 1240
    ,
    1243 (1984).
    The Commission’s findings regarding Bell’s misrepresentation of his weekly gross wages
    are supported by substantial and competent evidence in the record. Between 2005 and 2012, Bell
    made initial filings for unemployment benefits on nine separate occasions. According to the
    DOL, Bell would have received a copy of its pamphlet, “Unemployment Insurance Claimant
    Benefit Rights, Responsibilities and Filing Instructions,” on each occasion. That pamphlet makes
    clear that benefit amounts are determined by weekly gross wages and that “[i]f wages have been
    reported incorrectly, you MUST contact your local office immediately.” The pamphlet states that
    “[i]f you cannot determine the exact amount you earned, you must estimate weekly earnings as
    close as possible. If you do estimate earnings, you must contact your local office when you
    receive the correct earnings information.” The pamphlet says that “[m]aking false statements or
    failing to report material facts, including weekly earnings” constitutes fraud. Bell argues that he
    did not receive the DOL’s pamphlet each time he initiated a new unemployment claim, but
    acknowledges that he “most likely” received it in the past. Bell filed electronically for
    unemployment benefits during the period at issue here. That process required Bell to certify that
    he had read the DOL’s pamphlet and that the information he provided, including information
    regarding his weekly gross wages, was accurate. Finally, Bell knew how to contact the DOL with
    updated information. Bell previously called the DOL to correct information in his weekly
    unemployment filings on several occasions. On each such occasion, the correction secured Bell
    5
    additional benefits.
    Bell knew that he was required to correct inaccurate information with the DOL and how
    to do so. He blames the information provided by Sears for his failure to satisfy this obligation.
    Bell claims that he received only bi-weekly payments directly deposited by Sears into his
    checking account and those direct deposits provided only his bi-weekly net wages, not his
    weekly gross wages. So, he claims “he had no way of reasonably, rationally, or logically
    knowing he received benefits to which he was not entitled.” Bell knew, however, that he merely
    estimated his weekly gross wages each week and that, as mere estimates, the amounts he
    provided the DOL were likely inaccurate. Bell claims that he estimated his weekly gross wages
    in his unemployment filings by determining the number of hours he was scheduled in a given
    week and multiplying that number by his hourly wage. Such a method is bound to result in
    inaccuracy where, as is surely common, an employee occasionally clocks in early, stays late, or
    picks up additional hours here and there. Bell does not explain why he did not personally keep
    track of the hours he actually worked during the course of a week. While doing so might still
    have resulted in some inaccuracy, it would have been significantly more accurate than the means
    by which Bell chose to estimate his weekly gross wages. Assuming that the figures provided by
    the DOL are accurate, Bell’s estimates were often more than just slightly off. For the weeks
    ending November 10th and November 17th, for instance, Bell’s actual weekly gross wages were
    nearly twice what he reported in his unemployment filings for those weeks. Bell presumably
    should have realized at that point, if he somehow failed to realize earlier, that his estimates were
    substantially inaccurate.
    Bell does not explain his failure to investigate his actual weekly gross wages prior to the
    DOL’s request for additional information. Bell accessed additional payroll information through
    Sears’ “My Personal Information” website and recovered his bi-weekly gross wages in response
    to the DOL’s request, but apparently made no attempt to seek out this information prior to the
    DOL’s request. As Bell notes, even this information did not include his weekly gross wages. But,
    had Bell accessed the information earlier, he could have compared the bi-weekly gross wages
    reported by Sears with the gross wages he reported to the DOL over the corresponding two-week
    periods and noted the discrepancies with the DOL. Bell likewise does not explain why he did not
    contact Sears directly to request weekly gross wage information or contact the DOL for advice
    concerning how to proceed in the absence of that information.
    6
    On the hours-worked issue, Bell argues that when he reported he worked part-time hours
    during weeks in which he worked in excess of forty hours, he relied upon Sears’ representation
    that he was a part-time employee because, though he might occasionally work forty hours in a
    week, he was not guaranteed forty hours each week. When Bell filled out an unemployment
    claim each week, he answered the question: “Did you work full time hours for the entire week?”
    Even if Sears categorized Bell as a part-time employee, that fact has no obvious relevance to the
    question whether Bell worked “full-time hours” in particular weeks. As Bell was allegedly
    understanding “part-time employee,” part-time employees might work full-time hours in
    particular weeks. The DOL asked Bell whether he worked full-time hours in particular weeks,
    not how Sears categorized him as an employee. Bell acknowledges that he never sought
    clarification from the DOL concerning what it meant by “full-time hours.” “[A] finding that a
    benefit claimant knew or thought it highly probable that he or she did not know what information
    a question solicited but nevertheless deliberately chose to respond without pursuing clarification
    would ordinarily support a conclusion of willful falsehood or concealment.” Meyer, 99 Idaho at
    762, 589 P.2d at 97. At the very least, Bell should have been uncertain whether he could work in
    excess of forty hours in a week without working “full-time hours” in that week.
    There is substantial and competent evidence in the record to support the Commission’s
    findings that Bell willfully made false statements regarding the hours-worked issue and that he
    failed to report material facts regarding his actual weekly gross wages for the purpose of
    securing unemployment benefits. Bell argues that he did not intend to defraud the DOL. Though
    that may be so, willful conduct “does not require any intent to violate law . . . .” Id. at 761, 589
    P.2d at 96. The evidence in the record supports the conclusion that Bell knew of his obligation to
    correctly report his actual hours worked, on the one hand. And, on the other, he knew he was
    required to update the DOL if he initially reported inaccurate information, he knew the
    information he initially reported was inaccurate, and he made no attempt to provide the DOL
    with accurate information or notify the DOL that the information he provided was inaccurate.
    C. The Court will not consider issues raised for the first time in Bell’s reply brief.
    While Bell’s opening brief focuses exclusively on the claim that he did not willfully
    make false statements or fail to disclose material facts, Bell’s reply brief states eight “issues on
    appeal.” Six of those asserted issues relate to the propriety of the Commission’s decision while
    two of the issues were not raised below. First, this Court “will not consider issues that are raised
    7
    for the first time on appeal.” Sadid v. Idaho State Univ., 
    151 Idaho 932
    , 941, 
    265 P.3d 1144
    ,
    1153 (2011). Second, we “will not consider arguments raised for the first time in the appellant’s
    reply brief.” Myers v. Workmen’s Auto Ins. Co., 
    140 Idaho 495
    , 508, 
    95 P.3d 977
    , 990 (2004).
    “A reviewing court looks only to the initial brief on appeal for the issues presented because those
    are the arguments and authority to which the respondent has an opportunity to respond in the
    respondent’s brief.” Suitts v. Nix, 
    141 Idaho 706
    , 708, 
    117 P.3d 120
    , 122 (2005). Though he is a
    pro se appellant, Bell is “held to the same standards and rules as . . . [an appellant] represented
    by an attorney.” Twin Falls Cnty. v. Coates, 
    139 Idaho 442
    , 445, 
    80 P.3d 1043
    , 1046 (2003).
    Because Bell did not raise these issues below or in his opening brief, they are not properly before
    the Court.
    III.
    CONCLUSION
    We affirm the Commission’s decision and award costs to the Department of Labor.
    Chief Justice BURDICK, and Justices EISMANN, HORTON, and Justice Pro Tem
    WALTERS CONCUR.
    8