JBM Legal, LLC v. UCBR ( 2021 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    JBM Legal, LLC,                :
    :
    Petitioner :
    :
    v.                 : No. 571 C.D. 2020
    : Submitted: February 8, 2021
    Unemployment Compensation      :
    Board of Review,               :
    :
    Respondent :
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    HONORABLE J. ANDREW CROMPTON, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE WOJCIK                                                   FILED: July 14, 2021
    JBM Legal (Employer) petitions for review of the May 22, 2020 order
    of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board), which affirmed a
    referee’s determination that Grace Yearwood (Claimant) is not ineligible for
    unemployment compensation (UC) benefits under Section 402(b) of the
    Unemployment Compensation Law (Law).1 We affirm.
    Claimant was last employed as a part-time administrative employee for
    Employer from January 2, 2018, until June 27, 2019, at a final pay rate of $18.05
    1
    Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S.
    §802(b). Section 402(b) provides that an employee shall be ineligible for compensation for any
    week in which her unemployment is due to voluntarily leaving work without cause of a necessitous
    and compelling nature.
    per hour. Claimant was on unpaid maternity leave from June 27, 2019, and intended
    to return to work on August 20, 2019. Claimant was unable to return to work and
    applied for UC benefits. The local service center determined that Claimant was
    ineligible for UC benefits because she voluntarily quit her job without a necessitous
    and compelling reason. Certified Record (C.R.) at 31-32. Claimant appealed the
    notice of determination, and a referee held a hearing. Id. at 41.
    Employer’s principal did not appear at the hearing. Employer’s office
    manager testified that Claimant was hired as a full-time paralegal in 2018. Claimant
    was attending school throughout her employment with Employer.             Employer
    reduced Claimant’s hours at her request in February 2019. Reproduced Record
    (R.R.) at 93a-94a. Employer’s office manager testified that Claimant’s part-time
    position was created as an accommodation for her during her pregnancy. Id. at 98a.
    When Claimant returned from maternity leave, Employer had a full-time paralegal
    position at the same pay rate available for her, but the administrative part-time
    position in which Claimant had worked immediately prior to her maternity leave was
    not available. Id. Employer’s office manager testified that when Claimant declined
    the full-time paralegal position, Employer offered her a part-time paralegal position
    at $15.00 an hour with a $100.00 monthly parking allowance. Id.
    Claimant disputed Employer’s office manager’s testimony. Claimant
    testified that Employer had previously promised to accommodate her school
    schedule and that Employer knew that she required part-time hours. C.R. at 99.
    Claimant stated that prior to her maternity leave in June 2019, she worked reduced
    hours due to Employer’s toxic work environment and the stress that it caused her.
    Claimant testified that she contacted Employer seeking to return from maternity
    leave on August 20, 2019, to the part-time position that she held immediately prior
    2
    to maternity leave. The testimony revealed that Employer had offered her a full-
    time position, or a part-time position at a reduced hourly rate of $15.00 and $100.00
    parking reimbursement because Employer’s “revenues had changed.” Id. at 94-96.
    After considering the testimony and documentary evidence, the referee
    determined that Claimant was not ineligible for UC benefits under Section 402(b) of
    the Law. C.R. at 120-22. The referee found that Claimant decided not to return to
    work after her maternity leave due to the reduction in her pay and her dissatisfaction
    with the work environment. Id. at 119. The referee noted that the $3.00 decrease in
    her hourly pay rate was fairly substantial. Id. at 121. The referee determined that
    Claimant had met her burden of proving that she left her job for a necessitous and
    compelling reason. Id. Employer appealed to the Board.
    The Board remanded the matter to the referee for a second hearing to
    receive testimony and evidence on Employer’s principal’s reason for failing to
    appear at the previous hearing. Employer’s principal testified that a scheduling
    conflict prevented her appearance at the previous hearing. Employer’s principal
    testified that Claimant was offered a full-time paralegal position at the same rate of
    pay upon her return from maternity leave. C.R. at 171. Employer’s principal stated
    that Claimant’s part-time position immediately prior to maternity leave was only a
    temporary accommodation for Claimant’s pregnancy. Id. Employer’s principal
    testified that the part-time position Claimant held as a pregnancy accommodation
    was not available, but Employer was able to split the full-time paralegal position into
    two part-time paralegal positions. Employer’s principal offered Claimant the part-
    time paralegal position at $15.00 an hour after Claimant declined to return to her
    full-time paralegal position. Id.
    3
    The Board determined that Claimant was eligible for benefits because
    she voluntarily terminated her employment for a necessitous and compelling cause.
    Specifically, the Board found as fact:
    2. [Claimant] was working in a full-time paralegal position
    of 40 hours weekly with a salary of $37,500 until the fall
    of 2018, when she began attending school and was only
    able to work 35 hours weekly.
    3. [Employer] accommodated [Claimant’s] part-time
    work schedule.
    4. In November of 2018, [Claimant] informed [Employer]
    that she was pregnant.
    5. In January of 2019, [Employer] switched [Claimant]
    from salary to an hourly rate of $18.05 with paid parking
    of $250 per month.
    6. In February of 2019, [Claimant] informed [Employer]
    that she was stressed from being spoken to by [Employer’s
    principal] in a condescending manner and blamed for
    things she did not do. [Claimant] requested part-time
    working hours of 20 hours weekly.
    7. [Employer] accommodated [Claimant’s] part-time
    work schedule request and transferred [Claimant] from
    paralegal duties to administrative duties at the same pay
    rate of $18.05 per hour with paid parking of $250 per
    month.
    8. On June 28, 2019, [Claimant] began an unpaid
    maternity leave of absence.
    9. [Claimant] expected to return to work on August 20,
    2019; however, [Employer] informed [Claimant] that
    work was slow and she could not return to work until
    September.
    4
    10. [Employer] wanted [Claimant] to return to a full-time
    paralegal position but [Claimant] indicated she could not
    do so because of attending school.
    11. [Claimant] met with [Employer’s principal] and
    informed [Employer] she could work 30 hours per week
    as a paralegal. [Claimant] also provided a copy of her
    school schedule.
    12. Thereafter, [Employer] offered [Claimant] a part-time
    paralegal position for 20 hours weekly at a pay rate of $15
    per hour with a $100 parking reimbursement.
    13. [Claimant] informed [Employer] that the decrease in
    pay and parking allowance was not going to work for her.
    14. [Claimant] quit her employment due to a substantial
    change in the working conditions.
    C.R. at 212-14. The Board determined that Employer’s offer of a part-time paralegal
    position at a reduced rate of pay and parking reimbursement, coupled with the
    change in job duties, constituted a substantial and unilateral change in working
    conditions. Id. at 215. Employer appealed to this Court.2
    Initially, we note that a claimant is ineligible for UC benefits under
    Section 402(b) of the Law if she voluntarily terminates her employment without a
    necessitous and compelling reason. The claimant bears the burden of proving that a
    necessitous and compelling reason existed. An employer’s implementation of an
    unreasonable, unilateral change in the employment agreement constitutes a reason
    of necessitous and compelling nature for an employee to voluntarily quit her
    employment. A-Positive Electric v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review,
    
    654 A.2d 299
    , 302 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1995). A substantial reduction in pay can constitute
    2
    Our scope of review is limited to determining whether constitutional rights were violated,
    whether an error of law was committed, or whether necessary findings of fact are supported by
    substantial evidence. 2 Pa. C.S. §704.
    5
    a necessitous and compelling reason. Id. “[T]here is no talismanic percentage figure
    which separates a substantial reduction from one that is not. Each case must be
    measured by its own circumstances.” Ship Inn, Inc. v. Unemployment Compensation
    Board of Review, 
    412 A.2d 913
    , 915 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1980).
    “Further, the Board is the ultimate fact []finder in unemployment
    compensation matters and is empowered to resolve all conflicts in the evidence,
    witness credibility, and weight accorded the evidence.” Ductmate Industries, Inc.
    Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    949 A.2d 338
    , 342 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2008). It is irrelevant whether the record evidence can support findings other than
    those made by the Board; the crucial inquiry is whether there is evidence to support
    the findings actually made. 
    Id.
     If the Board’s findings are supported by substantial
    evidence, they are binding on appeal. 
    Id.
    On appeal, Employer argues that the Board erred in determining that
    Claimant had a necessitous and compelling reason to voluntarily quit her job.
    Employer argues that Claimant was offered the option to return to the position that
    she held prior to February 2019. Employer argues that it was under no obligation to
    offer Claimant the position that she held immediately prior to maternity leave
    because it was an accommodation for her pregnancy.
    The Board resolved the conflict in testimony in favor of Claimant and
    found that Claimant’s requested reduction to part-time hours in February 2019 was
    due to a toxic work environment, not because of her pregnancy. The Board did not
    credit Employer’s principal’s or the office manager’s testimony that the reduction of
    Claimant’s hours in February 2019 was a temporary pregnancy accommodation.
    Because the Board is the ultimate fact finder, these credibility determinations will
    not be disturbed on appeal.      
    Id.
       Therefore, the February 2019 reduction of
    6
    Claimant’s hours was a new employment agreement. Naylon v. Unemployment
    Compensation Board of Review, 
    477 A.2d 912
    , 913 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1984) (“In general,
    once an employee has accepted new terms of employment, he has conceded their
    suitability and may not later claim that dissatisfaction with those terms constitutes
    cause of a necessitous and compelling nature.”).
    Claimant had worked under the new terms of her employment for four
    months before taking an unpaid maternity leave in June 2019. Claimant was willing
    to return from maternity leave to the position in which she was working prior to the
    leave, but Employer did not make that position available to her. Upon Claimant’s
    return, Employer offered Claimant a full-time position, or a part-time position with
    different job duties at a substantially reduced rate of pay and reduced parking
    allowance. The Board properly concluded that the reduction in Claimant’s pay rate
    and parking allowance, coupled with the change in her job duties, was a necessitous
    and compelling reason for Claimant to voluntarily quit her employment under
    Section 402(b) of the Law.
    Accordingly, we affirm the Board’s order.
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    7
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    JBM Legal, LLC,                :
    :
    Petitioner :
    :
    v.                 : No. 571 C.D. 2020
    :
    Unemployment Compensation      :
    Board of Review,               :
    :
    Respondent :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 14th day of July, 2021, the Order of the Unemployment
    Compensation Board of Review, dated May 22, 2020 is AFFIRMED.
    __________________________________
    MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 571 C.D. 2020

Judges: Wojcik

Filed Date: 7/14/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/21/2024