R.A. Naborn v. UCBR ( 2021 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Robert A. Naborn,                               :
    Petitioner        :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    Unemployment Compensation                       :
    Board of Review,                                :   No. 542 C.D. 2020
    Respondent                  :   Submitted: December 18, 2020
    BEFORE:        HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, President Judge1
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    OPINION BY
    JUDGE COVEY                                                  FILED: February 19, 2021
    Robert A. Naborn (Claimant), pro se, petitions this Court for review of
    the Unemployment Compensation (UC) Board of Review’s (UCBR) May 1, 2020
    order affirming the Referee’s decision denying Claimant’s request to backdate his
    UC benefit claims pursuant to Section 401(c) of the UC Law (Law)2 and Section
    65.43a of the Department of Labor and Industry’s (Department) Regulations
    (Regulations).3 Essentially, there is one issue before this Court: whether the UCBR
    erred by upholding the Referee’s decision.4 After review, this Court affirms.
    1
    This case was assigned to the opinion writer before January 4, 2021, when Judge Leavitt
    completed her term as President Judge.
    2
    Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. §
    801(c) (relating to qualifications required to secure compensation).
    3
    
    34 Pa. Code § 65
    .43a (relating to extended filing).
    4
    Claimant presents ten issues in his Statement of the Questions Involved: (1) whether
    Claimant timely applied for UC benefits; (2) whether Claimant was entitled to UC benefits; (3)
    whether the UC Service Center promised to and did mail a letter; (4) whether the UC website
    mentions that the claim reopening process looks exactly the same as the initial claim process; (5)
    whether Claimant filed an initial claim or a request to reopen a claim; (6) whether Claimant was
    provided a Pennsylvania UC Handbook (UC Handbook); (7) whether Claimant read the UC
    Handbook; (8) whether Claimant knew his initial claim was good for one year; (9) whether the UC
    Handbook explains that initial UC claims are good for one year; and (10) whether the UC
    The facts of this case are undisputed. Claimant filed a UC benefit
    application on June 9, 2019, and received UC benefits after he was separated from
    his employment with Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. Claimant had also been
    employed as an instructor by Temple University (Temple) and the University of
    Pennsylvania (Penn) during the spring 2019 semester. Claimant was reemployed as
    an instructor at Temple and Penn for the fall 2019 semester, which ended on
    December 5, 2019. On December 11, 2019, Claimant filed a new UC benefit
    application.
    On January 29, 2020, Claimant filed a “Claimant Questionnaire
    Reporting Requirements Backdating” (Backdating Questionnaire), Certified Record
    (C.R.) Item 2 at 1, with the Department’s Office of UC Benefits Policy, therein
    seeking to have his UC benefit claims for claim weeks ending December 14, 2019,
    through January 11, 2020,5 backdated, asserting:
    I DID FILE A NEW CLAIM ON [DECEMBER 11, 2019]. I
    RECEIVED AN EMAIL STATING I WOULD BE RECEIVING 3
    LETTERS WITHIN 10-12 DAYS, INCLUDING A PIN NUMBER. I
    NEVER RECEIVED THEM. WITH THE HOLIDAYS, I THOUGHT
    THE MAIL MAY BE DELAYED AND IT WAS NOT ON MY MIND
    [AND] THEN I WENT BACK TO WORK IN JANUARY[.]
    ....
    AND NOW I REALIZED I DIDN’T FILE. VERBAL CERTIFICATION
    TAKEN FOR WEEKS ENDING [DECEMBER 14, 2019 THROUGH
    JANUARY 11, 2020]. FOR ALL WEEKS, NO WORK, NO
    VACATION/HOLIDAY PAY, NO REFUSAL OF WORK, ABLE AND
    AVAILABLE.
    Handbook addresses reopening a claim in the proper context. See Claimant Br. at 6. Because
    these issues are subsumed in this Court’s analysis of whether the UCBR erred by upholding the
    Referee’s decision denying Claimant’s request to backdate his UC benefit claims, they have been
    combined and will be addressed accordingly herein.
    5
    Claimant seeks backdated UC benefits for the five claim weeks ending December 14,
    December 21 and December 28, 2019, and January 4 and January 11, 2020.
    2
    Backdating Questionnaire at 2.
    On February 4, 2020, the UC Service Center determined that Claimant
    was not eligible for UC benefits because “[C]laimant’s reason for backdating did not
    meet the requirements under which backdating for a week or weeks could be
    allowed. As such, the compensable weeks at issue cannot be backdated under
    [S]ection 401(c) [of the Law].” C.R. Item 3, Notice of Determination, at 1. Claimant
    appealed, and a Referee held a hearing on March 4, 2020.6
    At the hearing, Claimant testified:
    R[eferee] Okay. Now you filed your application the week
    of June 9, 2019?
    C[laimant] Right. That’s per a misunderstanding. I did
    not know that this claim in December was still linked to
    the claim in June because they are totally different
    reason[s] for the claim in June.
    R[eferee] But the claim -- the [a]pplication is valid for one
    year.
    C[laimant] Oh.
    R[eferee] So that’s - anything that happens within that one
    year goes to the original claim.
    C[laimant] Given that I didn’t know that.
    C.R. Item 7, Notes of Testimony (N.T.), at 2. Claimant explained that, after he filed
    the December 11, 2019 application, he received the following email from the
    Department:
    This email serves as confirmation that your application for
    [UC] benefits has been received by the [Department] and
    is being processed. If there is any missing information, or
    if any additional information is needed to process your
    claim, you will be contacted by the UC Service Center at
    6
    Claimant was unrepresented at the hearing, and neither Temple nor Penn appeared.
    3
    the phone number or mailing address provided on your
    application.
    ....
    You will receive a Notice of Financial Determination and
    a Claim Confirmation Letter which contains your
    confidential [p]ersonal [i]dentification [n]umber or PIN in
    the mail within the next 10-12 days. If you do not receive
    these mailings after 12 days, contact the Department by
    calling 888-313-7284. Please refer to the above filing date
    and time, in addition to your name and social security
    number, in any communications with the Department.
    You must file biweekly claims for the weeks you are
    totally or partially unemployed. . . .
    N.T. Ex. CL-1; see also N.T. at 3.
    Claimant recalled that he never received any paperwork from the
    Department, but assumed the delay was due to the holidays. See N.T. at 6. Claimant
    explained that he began working again in January 2020 and realized, after he began
    thinking about taxes, that he never received anything from the Department. See N.T.
    at 6-7. Claimant declared that he filed a new application in December 2019 because
    he did not see the connection to his June 2019 application, and he was not informed
    otherwise, until he called the UC Service Center on January 29, 2020. See N.T. at
    4-8. When asked if he received the Pennsylvania UC Handbook (UC Handbook)
    when he filed his June 2019 application, Claimant responded: “I don’t know[,] it
    was just paperwork but not a book.”7 N.T. at 5.
    7
    The UC Handbook was not admitted into evidence at the hearing. Rather, the UCBR
    attached a copy of the UC Handbook to its brief to this Court as Appendix 2. Notwithstanding,
    this Court has taken judicial notice of the UC Handbook. See Hollingsworth v. Unemployment
    Comp. Bd. of Rev., 
    189 A.3d 1109
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018); see also Ciccolini v. Unemployment Comp.
    Bd. of Rev. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1796 C.D. 2016, filed August 3, 2017). This Court acknowledges
    that its unreported memorandum opinions may only be cited “for [their] persuasive value, but not
    as binding precedent.” Section 414(a) of the Commonwealth Court’s Internal Operating
    Procedures, 
    210 Pa. Code § 69.414
    (a). The unreported cases are cited herein for their persuasive
    value.
    4
    On March 5, 2020, the Referee found, in pertinent part: “The
    Department informed Claimant in writing in various documents such as the [UC]
    Handbook and in the financial determination that an application is open for a year.”
    C.R. Item 8, Referee Dec., Finding of Fact (FOF) 5, at 2. Relying on Section 401(c)
    of the Law and Section 65.43a of the Regulations, the Referee concluded:
    Claimant testified he filed a new application, because he
    didn’t realize he should submit the claims under his
    original application filed in June 2019. The Department
    notified Claimant in writing through documentation such
    as the [UC H]andbook and the financial determination that
    an application is open for a year. [] Claimant’s testimony
    regarding the reason he did not submit his claims for
    benefits for the weeks at issue when due, does not fall
    within any of the justifying reason[s] set forth in the
    [R]egulations set forth above that permits the backdating
    of [a] claim week. Accordingly, [] Claimant’s request
    must be denied.
    Referee Dec. at 4. Claimant appealed to the UCBR, which adopted and incorporated
    the Referee’s findings of fact and conclusions, but added the following factual
    finding: “On June 14, 2019, [] [C]laimant filed a claim via the [I]nternet and certified
    that he was responsible for reading the UC Handbook.” C.R. Item 10, UCBR Order,
    at 1. Claimant appealed to this Court.8
    Claimant argues that the UCBR erred by upholding the Referee’s
    decision denying his request to backdate his UC benefit claims for the claim weeks
    ending December 14, 2019 through January 11, 2020. Claimant specifically asserts
    that the Referee erroneously relied on the UC Handbook, rather than his testimony
    8
    “‘Our scope of review is limited to determining whether constitutional rights were
    violated, whether an error of law was committed, or whether the findings of fact were unsupported
    by substantial evidence.’ Miller v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev[.], 
    83 A.3d 484
    , 486 n.2 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2014).” Talty v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev., 
    197 A.3d 842
    , 843 n.4 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2018).
    5
    that he anticipated new claim paperwork or notice from the Department that he
    improperly filed a new application. He further contends that, although he read the
    UC Handbook, see Claimant Br. at 11, “[n]owhere does the UC Handbook mention
    that there is a distinction between re-applying for or re-opening an existing claim on
    the one hand and opening a new claim on the other[.]” Claimant Br. at 12.
    The UCBR retorts that, when Claimant opened his June 2019 claim, he
    “certified that he[] [was] responsible to read UCP-1 [(the UC Handbook)].” C.R.
    Item 1, Claim Record, at 3; see also UCBR Br. at 3. “The [UCBR] concedes that
    [FOF] 5 is not supported by the record. No financial determination is in the record
    and the [] UC Handbook does not explain that an application for benefits is open for
    a year. However, even excluding this finding, the [UCBR’s] decision is correct.”
    UCBR Br. at 3 n.3. The UCBR adds:
    Admittedly, the UC Handbook does not explain the 52-
    week benefit year or the difference between filing a new
    application and reopening an old one. However, the [UC
    H]andbook is a guide and not a comprehensive treatise.
    The UC Law and [R]egulations are available online, and
    the [Department] website does explain the benefit year and
    how and when to reopen an existing claim.[9]
    UCBR Br. at 13 n.12.
    Initially, Section 401(c) of the Law states, in relevant part:
    Compensation shall be payable to any employe who is or
    becomes unemployed, and who-
    ....
    (c) Has made a valid application for benefits with respect
    to the benefit year for which compensation is claimed and
    9
    See       https://www.uc.pa.gov/unemployment-benefits/Am-I-Eligible/Pages/am-I-
    eligible.aspx (last visited 2/17/2021); https://www.uc.pa.gov/unemployment-benefits/file/Pages/
    Reopen-an-Existing-Claim.aspx (last visited 2/17/2021).
    6
    has made a claim for compensation in the proper manner
    and on the form prescribed by the [D]epartment[.]
    43 P.S. § 801(c). Section 4(w)(1) of the Law specifies:
    A ‘Valid Application for Benefits’ means an application
    for benefits on a form prescribed by the [D]epartment,
    which is filed by an individual, as of a day not included in
    the benefit year previously established by such individual,
    who (1) has been separated from his work or who during
    the week commencing on the Sunday previous to such day
    has worked less than his full time due to lack of work and
    (2) is qualified under the provisions of [S]ection [401](a),
    (b) and (d)[, 43 P.S. § 401(a), (b), (d)].
    43 P.S. § 753(w)(1) (emphasis omitted). Section 4(b) of the Law provides:
    ‘Benefit Year’ with respect to an individual who files or
    has filed a ‘Valid Application for Benefits’ means the
    fifty-two consecutive week period beginning with the day
    as of which such ‘Valid Application for Benefits’ is filed,
    and thereafter the fifty-two consecutive week period
    beginning with the day as of which such individual next
    files a ‘Valid Application for Benefits’ after the
    termination of his last preceding benefit year.
    43 P.S. § 753(b) (emphasis omitted).
    The UC Handbook explains:
    This [UC] Handbook, will answer many of your
    questions about the benefits available to you and provide
    information about your responsibilities as a participant in
    the program. Read this booklet carefully and retain it for
    reference for one year.* Visit www.uc.pa.gov for
    additional information, including answers to Frequently
    Asked Questions.
    * This booklet is not an official statement of the
    Law. Statements in this handbook are intended for
    informational purposes only. If there is a conflict
    between information in this booklet and the
    provisions of the Law, the Law controls.
    7
    UCBR Br. App. 2 at 2. The UC Handbook further states: “You will receive a Notice
    of Financial Determination [] from the [D]epartment that will state whether you
    are financially eligible and, if you are, the amount of benefits you may receive. Your
    Notice of Financial Determination will be accompanied by an insert that fully
    explains financial eligibility.” Id. at 3 (italic emphasis added). In addition, the UC
    Handbook directs that a claimant “must file a claim for each week in which [he is]
    totally or partially unemployed,” id. at 4, and that his “biweekly claim must be filed
    during the week (Sunday through Friday) immediately following the two weeks [he
    is] claiming.” Id. at 5.
    The UC Handbook further explains:
    If You Forget To File
    If you fail to file your biweekly claim at the proper time,
    you may be denied benefits for those weeks and your UC
    claim will become ‘inactive.’ You must contact your UC
    [S]ervice [C]enter to reactivate your claim. If you return
    to work but then become unemployed again, visit
    www.uc.pa.gov or call the UC [S]ervice [C]enter to
    reopen your claim.
    REMEMBER! If you are waiting for the [D]epartment
    to determine whether you are eligible for benefits,
    continue to file your biweekly claims. If you are
    determined to be eligible, you will only get benefits for the
    weeks for which you filed claims.
    Id. (italic emphasis added). In addition, the UC Handbook explains: “If you received
    UC benefits on a prior claim by direct deposit within a year before you filed your
    current application for benefits, and the bank account previously used for direct
    deposit is still active, direct deposit will carry over to your current UC claim.” Id.
    at 10 (italic emphasis added). Finally, under the UC Handbook heading, “YOU’VE
    BEEN APPROVED FOR UC BENEFITS. NOW WHAT?” the            chart reflects that a claimant
    must immediately “[r]eport any separation from subsequent employment” “[b]y
    8
    reopening [this] claim over the [I]nternet at www.uc.pa.gov or by calling the [UC]
    service center at 888-313-7284.” Id. at 19 (italic emphasis added).
    In Beck v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Pa. Cmwlth.
    No. 459 C.D. 2013, filed September 11, 2013), this Court summarized:
    The [Department] promulgated [R]egulations that govern
    the mechanics of filing an application and claims for
    compensation and the backdating of applications and
    claim[] weeks. Generally, ‘[a]n application for [UC]
    benefits is effective on the first day of the calendar week
    in which the application is filed or deemed filed in
    accordance with [Section] 65.43a [of the Regulations]
    (relating to extended filing), whichever is earlier.’ 
    34 Pa. Code § 65.42
    .
    Beck, slip op. at 7. The Beck Court explained:
    With regard to the filing of claims, ‘[f]or a week in which
    a claimant was employed less than his full[-]time work,
    the claimant shall file a claim for compensation not later
    than the last day of the second week after the employer
    paid wages for that week.’ 
    34 Pa. Code § 65
    .43a(a). . . .
    [C]laim weeks [] may be backdated by the number of
    weeks indicated in Section 65.43a(e) [of the Regulations]
    if the claimant’s untimely filing of the claims is due to one
    or more of the enumerated reasons in Section 65.43a(e)
    [and (f) of the Regulations]. 
    34 Pa. Code § 65
    .43a(d).
    Beck, slip op. at 7-8 (footnote omitted).
    Section 65.43a(e) of the Regulations provides for a 6-week extension if
    “[t]he Department suspends accepting filings or is unable to handle all filings, due
    to an excessive volume of telephone calls or other reasons[;]” a 2-week extension if
    “[t]he claimant attempts to file by telephone, Internet or fax transmission . . . , the
    method used to attempt to file is unavailable or malfunctions, and the attempt to file
    occurs on the last day that the claimant could timely file by the method used[;]” a
    52-week extension if “[a] UC Office fails to accept a filing as a result of error or
    9
    mistake by the Department[;]” a 2-week extension for “[s]ickness or death of a
    member of the claimant’s immediate family or an act of God[;]” a 2-week extension
    “if the claimant makes all reasonable and good faith efforts to file timely but is
    unable to do so through no fault of the claimant[;]” and a 52-week extension
    [d]uring the period following the issuance of the March 6,
    2020 Proclamation of Emergency Disaster, issued under
    [Section 7301 of the Emergency Management Services
    Code,] 35 Pa.C.S. § 7301 (relating to general authority of
    [the] Governor) due to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19)
    global pandemic, until the end of the current ‘high
    unemployment’ period, as that term is defined in [S]ection
    405-A(a.1)(2) [of the Law,10] []43 P.S § 815(a.1)(2)[].
    
    34 Pa. Code § 65
    .43a(e). In addition, Section 65.43a(f) of the Regulations extends
    the claim filing deadline due to a claimant’s illness or injury “until the last day of
    the second week after the incapacity ends.” 
    34 Pa. Code § 65
    .43a(f). Finally,
    “Claimant has the burden of proof to establish that his application satisfies the
    requirements for backdating a claim for benefits.” Egreczky v. Unemployment
    Comp. Bd. of Rev., 
    183 A.3d 1102
    , 1106 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017).
    Further,
    [i]n UC cases, the [UCBR’s] findings of fact must be
    supported by ‘[s]ubstantial evidence [which] is defined as
    ‘such relevant evidence which a reasonable mind would
    accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’’ W[.] & S[.]
    Life Ins[.] Co. v. Unemployment Comp[.] [Bd.] of Rev[.],
    
    913 A.2d 331
    , 335 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006) (quoting Guthrie
    v. Unemployment Comp[.] [Bd.] of Rev[.], 
    738 A.2d 518
    ,
    521 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1999)). ‘The [UCBR’s] findings are
    conclusive on appeal so long as the record, when viewed
    in its entirety, contains substantial evidence to support the
    findings.’ W[.] & S[.] Life Ins[.] Co., 
    913 A.2d at 335
    .
    This Court is bound ‘to examine the testimony in the light
    most favorable to the party in whose favor the [UCBR] has
    found, giving that party the benefit of all inferences that
    10
    Added by Section 2 of the Act of February 9, 1971, P.L. 1.
    10
    can logically and reasonably be drawn from the testimony’
    to determine if substantial evidence exists for the
    [UCBR’s] findings.         U[.]S[.] Banknote Co. v.
    Unemployment Comp[.] [Bd.] of Rev[.], . . . 
    575 A.2d 673
    ,
    674 ([Pa. Cmwlth.] 1990). Moreover, ‘even if there is
    contrary evidence of record, the [UCBR’s] findings of fact
    are binding upon the Court where supported by substantial
    evidence.’ Borough of Coaldale v. Unemployment
    Comp[.] [Bd.] of Rev[.], 
    745 A.2d 728
    , 731 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2000).
    Cambria Cnty. Transit Auth. (Cam Tran) v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev., 
    201 A.3d 941
    , 947 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2019).
    Here, Claimant’s reason for failing to properly file his claims for weeks
    ending December 14, December 21 and December 28, 2019, and January 4 and
    January 11, 2020, is not among those listed in Section 65.43a(e) or (f) of the
    Regulations. Rather, Claimant
    attributes the lack of a timely filing to h[is] unfamiliarity
    with the [UC] system. Though we are not unsympathetic
    to the recently unemployed who must, often times without
    the assistance of counsel, navigate what can seem at times
    to be a cumbersome benefits system, we cannot allow a
    lack of familiarity to be an excuse to permit backdating of
    [UC] benefits.[11]
    Beck, slip op. at 9. Claimant’s ignorance of the UC claim process and/or negligence
    is not a basis upon which this Court may reverse the UCBR’s decision. See Ciccolini
    v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1796 C.D. 2016, filed August
    3, 2017); Readinger v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1288
    C.D. 2016, filed May 22, 2017); Caruso v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev. (Pa.
    Cmwlth. No. 1917 C.D. 2015, filed May 23, 2016); Shuty v. Unemployment Comp.
    Bd. of Rev. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 609 C.D. 2012, filed October 3, 2012); Valle v.
    11
    Nevertheless, this Court is dismayed that the Department’s UC claims’ system would
    allow a claimant to create a new UC claim within the same benefit year, and that the UC Handbook
    does not more clearly explain how subsequent claims are to be made in a single benefit year.
    11
    Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev. (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 701 C.D. 2012, filed December
    20, 2012).
    Moreover, Claimant’s testimony provides substantial evidence to
    support the UCBR’s adopted findings that Claimant did not review the UC
    Handbook, and did not file claims for the weeks ending December 14, December 21
    and December 28, 2019, and January 4 and January 11, 2020, until January 29, 2020.
    As such, the findings are binding on appeal. Cam Tran. Further, although the UC
    Handbook does not specify that subsequent UC benefit claims made within the same
    benefit year should be made under the original claim, the UC Handbook clearly
    states in several places that a claimant must reopen his original claim upon
    subsequent unemployment, that he should make biweekly claims while he awaits an
    eligibility determination, and that he should contact the UC Service Center with any
    questions.
    Claimant filed his new application on December 11, 2019, and did not
    follow up on the Notice of Financial Determination or Claim Confirmation
    Letter/PIN after 12 days passed as the Department’s December 11, 2019 email
    directed, nor did he file biweekly claims with the UC Service Center until January
    29, 2020. Given the particular circumstances of this case, this Court is constrained
    to affirm the UCBR’s determination that Claimant’s ignorance and/or negligence
    does not justify an extension under Section 65.43a(e) of the Department’s
    Regulations. Accordingly, the UCBR properly upheld the Referee’s decision.
    Based on the foregoing, the UCBR’s order is affirmed.
    ___________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    12
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Robert A. Naborn,                        :
    Petitioner      :
    :
    v.                   :
    :
    Unemployment Compensation                :
    Board of Review,                         :   No. 542 C.D. 2020
    Respondent           :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 19th day of February, 2021, the Unemployment
    Compensation Board of Review’s May 1, 2020 order is affirmed.
    ___________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge