Life Pittsburgh v. UCBR ( 2015 )


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  •          IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Life Pittsburgh,                              :
    :
    Petitioner               :
    :
    v.                              : No. 230 C.D. 2015
    : Submitted: August 14, 2015
    Unemployment Compensation                     :
    Board of Review,                              :
    :
    Respondent               :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge
    HONORABLE ROBERT SIMPSON, Judge
    HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    SENIOR JUDGE COLINS                                        FILED: November 20, 2015
    Life Pittsburgh (Employer) petitions for review of the January 28,
    2015 order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board)
    concluding that Kayla D. Johnson (Claimant) was not ineligible for unemployment
    compensation benefits under Section 402(b) of the Unemployment Compensation
    Law (Law)1 because she had cause of a necessitous and compelling nature for
    leaving her employment with Employer. We affirm.
    1
    Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. § 802(b).
    Section 402(b) of the Law provides, in relevant part, that an employee shall be ineligible for
    compensation for any week in which his or her unemployment is due to voluntarily leaving work
    without cause of a necessitous and compelling nature.
    Claimant filed for unemployment compensation benefits following
    her departure from employment as a Certified Nurses Assistant with Employer and
    a Notice of Determination was issued on September 19, 2014 concluding that
    Claimant was not disqualified from receiving benefits by Section 402(b) of the
    Law. (Record Item (R. Item) 3, Notice of Determination; R. Item 16, Board’s
    Decision and Order, Findings of Fact (F.F.) ¶1.) Employer appealed and a hearing
    was held before the Referee on October 22, 2014. (R. Item 4, Employer’s Appeal;
    R. Item 7, Hearing Transcript (H.T.).) At the hearing, Claimant appeared and
    offered testimony, and Aaron Krchmar, Senior Director of Operations, Johanna
    Dickman, Director of Participant Services, and Terrence Brady, Director of Human
    Resources, appeared for Employer but did not offer any testimony. (R. Item 7,
    H.T. at 1-2.) Following the hearing, the Referee issued an October 29, 2014
    decision and order with findings of fact that concluded that Claimant was ineligible
    to receive unemployment compensation benefits because she had failed to afford
    Employer a reasonable opportunity to remedy the problem prior to resigning. (R.
    Item 8, Referee’s Decision and Order.) Claimant appealed to the Board and the
    Board reversed the Referee. (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order.)
    In its decision, the Board made the following findings of fact:
    2. On August 1, 2014, [Claimant] went to a going away party for a
    coworker which was at a hotel.
    3. One of the attendees at the party was the grandson of one of the
    participants for whom [Claimant] provided care.
    4. The grandson approached [Claimant] and made complaints about
    [Claimant] not taking proper care of his grandfather, and he
    threatened to get [Claimant] fired, and also to break her face.
    2
    5. When [Claimant] informed hotel security, they [sic] called the
    police on the participant’s grandson and the police came to the hotel.
    6. [Claimant] informed [Employer] of the incident.        [Employer]
    removed the participant from [Claimant’s] care.
    7. On August 13, 2014, [Claimant] was in the home of one of her
    patients and was taking care of the patient.
    8. When [Claimant] was in the patient’s home, the landlord
    confronted [Claimant], called her the “n” word, said that she and her
    coworkers were dumb a** bi* * *es, and screamed that he wanted to
    kill [Claimant].
    9. [Claimant] called the police on this landlord.
    l0. [Claimant] informed [Employer] of the incident.
    11. [Employer] removed the participant from [Claimant’s] care and
    added the participant whose grandson had threatened [Claimant].
    12. [Claimant] was dissatisfied because she did not believe that she
    had adequate time to take care of her patients, given the schedule of
    times when the vans would arrive to pick them up.
    13. On the weekend proceeding September 1, 2014, [Claimant] was
    at the Pittsburgh Rib Fest when she saw the grandson of the
    participant who had previously threatened her.
    14. She believed that the grandson of the participant was following
    her, and she became afraid.
    15. On September 1, 2014, [Claimant] wrote a resignation letter
    which she delivered to the employer on September 2, 2014.
    (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶2-15.) Based on these findings,
    the Board concluded that:
    [Claimant] faced threats and harassment as the result of her
    employment. Those threats were realistic and caused [Claimant]
    3
    reasonable anxiety.       Although [Employer] was not directly
    responsible for the actions of the participants’ grandson and landlord,
    [Employer] did not take any effective action to deal with the problem.
    There is no evidence that [Employer] contacted anyone about the
    situations or investigated the incidents. In fact, [Employer] returned
    the participant whose grandson had threatened [Claimant] to her
    schedule.
    It can be expected that someone in [Claimant’s] position might be
    required to deal with difficult individuals. However, physical threats
    and profane verbal abuse by parties other than the participants is not
    something that an employee should be expected to tolerate.
    [Claimant] has shown that she had an intolerable working
    environment, which created cause of a necessitous and compelling
    nature for her to voluntarily quit.
    (Id. at 3.) Employer petitioned this Court for review of the Board’s order.
    Whether a claimant had a cause of a necessitous and compelling
    nature to resign from employment is a question of law over which this Court has
    plenary review.    Western and Southern Life Insurance Co. v. Unemployment
    Compensation Board of Review, 
    913 A.2d 331
    , 335 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). When a
    claimant has voluntarily terminated employment, the burden to prove cause of a
    necessitous and compelling nature is shouldered by the claimant. PECO Energy
    Co. v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    682 A.2d 58
    , 60 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 1996). Neither Section 402(b) nor other provisions in the Law define the
    terms necessitous and compelling; however, the courts have interpreted the
    statutory language to require that a claimant demonstrate that: (1) circumstances
    existed which produced real and substantial pressure to terminate employment; (2)
    such circumstances would compel a reasonable person to act in the same manner;
    (3) the claimant acted with ordinary common sense; and, (4) the claimant made a
    reasonable effort to preserve the employment. Diversified Care Management, LLC
    v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    885 A.2d 130
    , 136 (Pa.
    4
    Cmwlth. 2005).       Where issues of workplace safety are alleged to have produced
    real or actual pressure to voluntarily resign from employment, a claimant must
    present objective evidence to demonstrate that the claimant’s fear or belief that
    conditions were unsafe was more than just speculative. Green Tree School v.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    982 A.2d 573
    , 578 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2009); Hoy v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    391 A.2d 1144
    ,
    1145 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1978). In addition, the claimant must show that a reasonable
    attempt was made to advise the employer of the problem and permit the employer
    the opportunity to solve the problem but that the employer’s response gave the
    claimant no choice but to resign. Department of Corrections v. Unemployment
    Compensation Board of Review, 
    547 A.2d 470
    , 474 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1988).
    In the instant matter, the Board found that Claimant delivered her
    resignation to Employer one day after she encountered the grandson of a
    participant at a public event who had previously threatened her. (R. Item 16,
    Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶13-15.) Employer argues that the Board’s
    factual findings should have been limited to this event and Claimant’s subsequent
    resignation, and that by examining events from the preceding month the Board
    went beyond the factual matrix at the time of separation. We disagree. 2
    Employer relies upon Hussey Copper Ltd. v. Unemployment
    Compensation Board of Review, 
    718 A.2d 894
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998), where we held
    that the claimant failed to establish a cause of a necessitous and compelling reason
    2
    In an unemployment compensation appeal, this Court’s scope of review is limited to
    determining whether an error of law was committed, whether constitutional rights were violated,
    or whether necessary findings of facts are supported by substantial evidence. Section 704 of the
    Administrative Agency Law, 2 Pa. C.S. § 704; On Line Inc. v. Unemployment Compensation
    Board of Review, 
    941 A.2d 786
    , 788 n.7 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008).
    5
    for her voluntary termination from employment and was therefore ineligible for
    benefits under Section 402(b) of the Law. In Hussey, this Court concluded that
    when an employee is “terminated or quits, the ‘factual matrix at the time of
    separation governs’ as to whether the claimant is entitled to benefits, and the
    relevant inquiry in determining the cause of a claimant’s unemployment is
    confined to the surrounding circumstances existing at the time of the claimant’s
    departure.” 
    Id. at 899.
    The claimant in Hussey sought to establish a necessary and
    compelling reason for separating from employment by referencing incidents that
    had taken place over the course of her employment, but which she had not
    previously addressed with her employer even though a grievance system was
    available to the claimant. 
    Id. at 900.
                 In contrast, in the instant matter the Board found that the events which
    led to Claimant’s resignation did not take place over years or even months but over
    the period of a single month and Claimant did seek to remedy the problems
    through available channels. Cf., Umedman v. Unemployment Compensation Board
    of Review, 
    52 A.3d 558
    , 564 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (two-month delay between
    incident and discharge for willful misconduct was not too temporally remote to bar
    denial of benefits). The Board further found that the last incident—Claimant’s
    credible belief that the participant’s grandson who had previously threatened her
    was following her at a public event—was not in and of itself the precipitating event
    for her resignation, but the culmination of a pattern of events that produced real
    and substantial pressure upon Claimant and which Employer failed to address.
    Collier Stone Co. v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    876 A.2d 481
    ,
    485 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005) (the claimant need not notify the employer of each and
    6
    every incident of sexual harassment so long as a claimant has given the employer
    the opportunity to understand the problem and take steps to resolve it).
    Moreover, the factual findings made by the Board examining the
    entire month rather than the days surrounding the final incident go directly to the
    burden placed upon Claimant to demonstrate that she made a reasonable effort to
    maintain employment by advising Employer of the conditions of her employment
    putting her at risk, that she provided Employer with the opportunity to resolve the
    problems, and that Employer failed to do so. The purpose of the rule that the
    Board restrict itself to the “factual matrix at the time of separation,” is to prohibit
    both parties from introducing into the Board’s inquiry events, facts or issues from
    the entirety of the employment relationship regardless of how irrelevant or
    removed from the time of separation. 
    Hussey, 718 A.2d at 900
    ; Lehigh County
    Community College v. Unemployment Board of Review, 
    473 A.2d 727
    , 729-730
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1984).
    Under Employer’s interpretation of the rule, which would focus only
    on the events immediately preceding termination from employment, claimants and
    employers would be severely inhibited in their ability to satisfy or rebut their
    respective evidentiary burdens by an arbitrarily restrictive temporal window.
    Employer’s interpretation would also bar claimants from receiving unemployment
    compensation who have a necessitous and compelling cause to leave employment
    based upon a pattern of harassment. Taylor v. Unemployment Board of Review,
    
    378 A.2d 829
    (Pa. 1977) (pattern of racial abuse created continuing racial tension
    that compelled claimant to leave employment); Mercy Hospital of Pittsburgh v.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    654 A.2d 264
    , 266 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1995) (years of verbal harassment by co-workers that employer could not alleviate
    7
    compelled claimant to leave employment); Tedesco Manufacturing Co., Inc. v.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    552 A.2d 754
    , 756 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1989) (claimant who was sexually harassed for six months had a necessitous and
    compelling cause to leave employment). Employer’s interpretation is contrary to
    the text, intent, and structure of the Law and the precedent of this Court and our
    Supreme Court. The Board restricted its inquiry to the factual matrix existing at
    the time of separation and did not err by going beyond the circumstances
    surrounding Claimant’s resignation in its factual findings.
    Next, Employer argues that Claimant failed to show by substantial
    evidence that she took reasonable steps to preserve her employment, that Employer
    did not adequately address her concerns, and that her fears regarding her safety
    were objective.
    Claimant testified that she was initially threatened by the participant’s
    grandson at a going away party for one of Claimant’s coworkers because the
    grandson believed that Employer’s employees were not taking proper care of his
    grandfather; security for the venue ultimately called the police. (R. Item 16,
    Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶2-5; R. Item 7, H.T. at 6, 17.) The following
    day, Claimant informed her supervisor of the incident and her supervisor assured
    Claimant that the participant would be taken off Claimant’s schedule. (R. Item 16,
    Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶2-4; R. Item 7, H.T. at 6.) Employer did not
    take any other steps to address the problem with the participant’s grandson,
    although Employer does have an interdisciplinary team to address issues with
    participants’ families and Claimant requested mediation or other intervention. (R.
    Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶6, Discussion at 3; R. Item 7, H.T. at 8,
    22, 23.)
    8
    Claimant testified that on August 13, 2014, ten days after the incident
    with the participant’s grandson, Claimant was assisting another participant when
    she was harassed and threatened by the participant’s landlord.         (R. Item 16,
    Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶7-8; R. Item 7, H.T. at 8.) Claimant called her
    supervisor and the police. (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶9-10;
    R. Item 7, H.T. at 9.) Claimant had previously advised her supervisor that the
    participant’s landlord hounded her when she was providing care to the participant
    and behaved strangely but no action had been taken by Employer to address the
    situation. (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order, Discussion at 3; R. Item 7,
    H.T. at 6.)
    Directly following the incident with the landlord, Claimant spoke with
    her supervisor and Ms. Dickman, the Director of Participant Services, and was
    assured that the participant would be taken off her schedule and that Ms. Dickman
    would contact the participant and his landlord to address what happened. (R. Item
    16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶11; R. Item 7, H.T. at 10.) Claimant was
    then issued a new schedule; however, in place of the participant whose landlord
    had threatened her, Claimant was scheduled to again provide service for the
    participant whose grandson had threatened her. (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and
    Order, F.F. ¶11; R. Item 7, H.T. at 10.) Claimant raised this issue with her
    supervisor and was instructed to bring it to the attention of the scheduler, which
    Claimant promptly did, at which point Claimant was instructed to speak with the
    scheduling supervisor; the scheduling supervisor subsequently provided Claimant
    with a new schedule that did not include the participant whose grandson had
    threatened her or the participant whose landlord had threatened her. (R. Item 16,
    Board’s Decision and Order, Discussion at 3; R. Item 7, H.T. at 11.)
    9
    In addition to the specific threats, Claimant raised what she believed
    was the underlying issue with Employer—that the participants were scheduled too
    close together, preventing Claimant and her coworkers from having sufficient time
    to provide the proper care and leading the participants’ families to take their
    frustrations out on Employer’s employees. (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and
    Order, F.F. ¶12; R. Item 7, H.T. at 13-15.) On August 19, 2014, Claimant met
    with Employer’s Chief Officer and explained the threats and the scheduling
    difficulties; Claimant was informed that the scheduling problem was being
    addressed and was asked to give Employer time to fix the problem. (R. Item 16,
    Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶ 12, Discussion at 3; R. Item 7, H.T. at 13-14,
    20.)   Although Employer issued new schedules following this meeting, the
    schedules did not fix the problem. (R. Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶
    12, Discussion at 3; R. Item 7, H.T. at 21.)
    Finally, on September 1, 2014, Claimant encountered the participant’s
    grandson who had previously threatened her at the Pittsburgh Rib Fest. (R. Item
    16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶¶13-14; R. Item 7, H.T. at 18-19, 22.) Later
    that night, Claimant wrote her resignation letter and the next day, after discussing
    the issues with her supervisor, Claimant submitted her letter of resignation. (R.
    Item 16, Board’s Decision and Order, F.F. ¶15; R. Item 7, H.T. at 19.)
    Although Ms. Dickman was present at the hearing, neither she nor any
    other witness for Employer offered testimony or other evidence to rebut Claimant’s
    testimony. (R. Item 7, H.T. at 2, 20, 24.) The Board found Claimant to be
    credible. The facts found by the Board clearly show that Claimant was threatened,
    Claimant attempted to seek assistance from Employer to address the threats, and
    Employer failed to provide adequate assistance or support to Claimant. Each fact
    10
    is supported by substantial evidence in the form of Claimant’s credible testimony.
    In addition, Employer’s acknowledgement of the physical and verbal threats as
    well as the actions it did take, the repetition, and the police response support the
    Board’s finding that Claimant’s belief that her working conditions were unsafe was
    not speculative. Compare Green Tree 
    School, 982 A.2d at 578
    (subjective fear
    that autistic students may become unruly with a reduced behavioral management
    staff was insufficient to establish real, objective safety fears); 
    Hoy, 391 A.2d at 1145
    (claimants’ concern for their safety was real and substantial where employer
    failed to institute adequate safety measures at convenience store following string of
    robbery-homicides at similar businesses in the area); Rapid Pallet v.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    707 A.2d 636
    , 638 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1998) (faulty condition of employer’s truck constituted safety concerns that created
    real and substantial pressure to resign from employment). The Board did not err in
    concluding that Claimant satisfied her burden to demonstrate cause of a
    necessitous and compelling nature to voluntarily resign her employment.
    The Board is the ultimate finder of fact, empowered to determine
    credibility, and weigh and resolve conflicts in the evidence.               Peak v.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    501 A.2d 1383
    , 1388 (Pa. 1985);
    Collier 
    Stone, 876 A.2d at 483
    . This Court’s review of Board’s factual findings
    requires an examination of whether the record contains relevant evidence that a
    reasonable mind might consider adequate to support a conclusion; this Court’s
    review does not permit it to invade the province of the Board and substitute our
    own findings for those made by the Board. 
    Peak, 501 A.2d at 1388
    ; Fitzpatrick v.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    616 A.2d 110
    , 111 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1992). Employer did not challenge any individual factual findings made by the
    11
    Board. However, distilled to their essence, Employer’s arguments ask this Court to
    make our own factual findings, specifically findings that would accept Employer’s
    narrative and reject Claimant’s testimony, and based upon these findings to reverse
    the Board. This we neither can nor will do.
    Accordingly, the order of the Board is affirmed.
    __________ ___________________________
    JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge
    Judge Leadbetter dissents.
    12
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Life Pittsburgh,                    :
    :
    Petitioner       :
    :
    v.                     : No. 230 C.D. 2015
    :
    Unemployment Compensation           :
    Board of Review,                    :
    :
    Respondent       :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 20th day of November, 2015, the order of the
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review in the above-captioned matter is
    AFFIRMED.
    __________ ___________________________
    JAMES GARDNER COLINS, Senior Judge