Provo City v. Department of Workforce Services, Workforce Appeals Board , 715 Utah Adv. Rep. 30 ( 2012 )


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  •                         IN THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    ‐‐‐‐ooOoo‐‐‐‐
    Provo City, a Utah municipal              )         MEMORANDUM DECISION
    corporation,                              )
    )           Case No. 20110900‐CA
    Petitioner,                         )
    )
    v.                                        )                 FILED
    )              (August 16, 2012)
    Department of Workforce Services,         )
    Workforce Appeals Board; and Jason R.     )              
    2012 UT App 228
    Smith,                                    )
    )
    Respondents.                        )
    ‐‐‐‐‐
    Original Proceeding in this Court
    Attorneys:     Robert D. West and Gary D. Millward, Provo, for Petitioner
    Suzan Pixton, Salt Lake City, for Respondent Department of Workforce
    Services, Workforce Appeals Board
    ‐‐‐‐‐
    Before Judges Voros, Orme, and Thorne.
    ORME, Judge:
    ¶1     Provo City seeks our review of a decision by the Workforce Appeals Board
    affirming the decision of the Utah Department of Workforce Services granting
    unemployment compensation to a terminated city employee. Provo City contends that
    the employee was terminated for just cause and, as a result, that he should be denied
    unemployment benefits. We decline to disturb the decision of the Board.
    ¶2      The employee worked as a power line repairman for Provo City for
    approximately eighteen years prior to his termination. In 2011, a thirteen‐year‐old girl
    who had stayed overnight in the employee’s home while visiting his daughter reported
    that he had inappropriately touched her. The employee was arrested shortly thereafter
    and admitted that some inappropriate touching had occurred, albeit of a much less
    egregious sort than described by the victim. As a result of the charges against him,
    Provo City terminated the employee, explaining that because the employee was
    required to work in residential areas, Provo City would need to have him supervised if
    it continued to employ him. Provo City also worried about damage to its goodwill that
    might result if it retained the employee. Provo City did not provide any evidence of
    prior misconduct by the employee during his eighteen‐year tenure and based its
    termination decision solely on this one incident.
    ¶3      The employee sought unemployment benefits following his termination, which
    Workforce Services granted after concluding that the employee was not terminated for
    “just cause” as that term is used in the unemployment compensation context.1 Provo
    City appealed to the Workforce Appeals Board, which then held a hearing to determine
    whether the employee was terminated for just cause. At the hearing, the employee,
    who had still not been arraigned on any criminal charges, admitted to some
    inappropriate touching. The employee contended, however, that he did not realize that
    this off‐duty, after‐hours behavior in his own home could affect his employment as a
    power line repairman. Based on the information of record at the time of the hearing, the
    Board determined that the employee was not fired for just cause for purposes of
    receiving unemployment benefits and affirmed the grant of unemployment
    compensation.
    ¶4    The general rule that an employee who loses his or her job is entitled to
    unemployment benefits exists in order “to provide a cushion for the shocks and rigors
    of unemployment.” Gibson v. Department of Employment Sec., 
    840 P.2d 780
    , 783 (Utah Ct.
    1
    “Just cause” is an unemployment compensation term of art. An otherwise
    legitimate termination may be without just cause for the limited purpose of determining
    unemployment compensation. See Gibson v. Department of Employment Sec., 
    840 P.2d 780
    , 783 (Utah Ct. App. 1992) (“An employee’s conduct may provide a legitimate basis
    for an employer to terminate the employee, without requiring denial of unemployment
    benefits.”).
    20110900‐CA 
    2 App. 1992
    ) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). For this reason “[t]he Utah
    Supreme Court has called for a liberal construction” of the rules dictating when an
    employee qualifies for benefits. 
    Id.
     (citing Logan Regional Hosp. v. Board of Review, 
    723 P.2d 427
    , 429 (Utah 1986)). This liberal construction favors awarding benefits except
    when the employer can show that the employee’s conduct is especially adverse to the
    employer’s interests, i.e., when an employee has been fired for “just cause” as defined
    in the Utah Administrative Code. See Utah Admin. Code R994‐405‐201.
    ¶5     “Whether an employee is terminated for ‘just cause’ is a mixed question of law
    and fact.” Johnson v. Department of Employment Sec., 
    782 P.2d 965
    , 968 (Utah Ct. App.
    1989) (citation omitted). “[W]e give a degree of deference to the agency” charged with
    “application of the law to a particular set of facts.” Autoliv ASP, Inc. v. Department of
    Workforce Servs., 
    2001 UT App 198
    , ¶ 16, 
    29 P.3d 7
     (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). This deference makes good sense because the Board, being regularly faced
    with these situations and decisions and having a better feel for the norms of the modern
    workplace, is generally in a better position than we are to make such determinations.
    Accordingly, “[w]e will not disturb the Board’s application of law to its factual findings
    unless its determination exceeds the bounds of reasonableness and rationality.” Pender
    v. Department of Workforce Servs., 
    2011 UT App 79
    , ¶ 3, 
    250 P.3d 1014
    .
    ¶6     To determine if a termination meets the “just cause” exception, we turn to the
    Utah Administrative Code, which outlines the circumstances under which a terminated
    employee may be precluded from receiving unemployment benefits to which he or she
    would otherwise be entitled. “Benefits will be denied if the claimant was discharged for
    just cause . . . . However, not every legitimate cause for discharge justifies a denial of
    benefits.” Utah Admin. Code R994‐405‐201. See supra note 1. “To establish just cause
    for a discharge, . . . three elements must be satisfied,” namely, culpability, knowledge,
    and control. Utah Admin. Code R994‐405‐202. Importantly, “[the employer] has the
    burden to prove there was just cause for discharging the claimant.” Id. R994‐405‐203.
    ¶7     The Code explains that to establish culpability, “[t]he conduct causing the
    discharge must be so serious that continuing the employment relationship would
    jeopardize the employer’s rightful interest.” Id. R994‐405‐202(1). However, “[i]f the
    conduct was an isolated incident of poor judgment and there was no expectation it
    would be continued or repeated, potential harm may not be shown.” Id. Additionally,
    “[t]he claimant’s prior work record is an important factor in determining whether the
    20110900‐CA                                 3
    conduct was an isolated incident.” Id. Thus, “[t]o determine if culpability has been
    established, adjudicators must balance ‘the employee’s past work record, the
    employee’s length of employment, and the likelihood the conduct will be repeated
    against the seriousness of the offense and the harm to the employer.’” Fieeiki v.
    Department of Workforce Servs., 
    2005 UT App 398
    , ¶ 2, 
    122 P.3d 706
     (quoting Gibson, 
    840 P.2d at 784
    ). Further, “when the employee has a clean work record and there is little
    chance the conduct will be repeated, a more serious offense and more harm to the
    employer will be necessary to show culpability.”2 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    ¶8     In Southeastern Utah Association of Local Governments v. Workforce Appeals Board,
    
    2007 UT App 20
    , 
    155 P.3d 932
    , we considered the culpability of an employee who had
    been fired for sexually harassing another employee outside of work. We upheld as
    reasonable the Board’s conclusion that the employee’s twenty‐year history of good
    behavior indicated that the sexual harassment was an isolated event and “demonstrated
    [the employee’s] ability to perform her job, as well as an ability to comply with [the
    employer’s] legitimate expectations that she discontinue any conduct constituting
    sexual harassment.” Id. ¶ 9.
    ¶9     Further, we distinguished Southeastern from Autoliv ASP, Inc. v. Department of
    Workforce Services, 
    2001 UT App 198
    , 
    29 P.3d 7
    , in which we had agreed with the Board
    that sending sexually explicit emails at work was a “violation of a universal standard of
    behavior,” id. ¶ 27, and thus, serious enough to establish culpability. See Southeastern,
    
    2007 UT App 20
    , ¶ 10. We thought it significant that in Southeastern, unlike Autoliv, the
    employee’s sexual harassment “took place outside of work hours, did not directly
    involve misuse of company resources, and was not expressly forbidden by a written
    employer policy.” Id. ¶ 11 (footnote omitted). Consideration of the nexus between the
    behavior and the employment is consistent with the directive in Utah Administrative
    Code R994‐405‐207, which states that while “[d]isqualifying conduct is not limited to
    offenses that take place on the employer’s premises or during business hours[,] . . . it is
    2
    Provo City argues that the evidence was sufficient for the Board to conclude that
    the employee’s actions were inappropriate or illegal, thus establishing culpability.
    Whether his actions were inappropriate or illegal may help establish one or more of the
    elements applicable to our determination, but in determining whether an employee was
    terminated for just cause, inappropriateness or illegality of the employee’s actions, by
    itself, is not necessarily determinative.
    20110900‐CA                                  4
    necessary that the offense be connected to the employment in such a manner that it is a
    subject of legitimate and significant concern to the employer.” Utah Admin. Code
    R994‐405‐207.
    ¶10 Here, Provo City bore the burden of showing that it had just cause under the
    Code to terminate the employee.3 While the allegations against the employee at the
    time of termination were serious, the Board was not unreasonable in determining,
    based on the evidence then of record, that the allegations against the employee—even
    accompanied with the employee’s admissions—did not establish conduct so serious as
    to jeopardize “the employer’s rightful interest.” See id. R994‐405‐201. The employee
    was a long‐time employee of Provo City with, apparently, no prior instances of
    misconduct. Further, the allegations against the employee, like those in Southeastern,
    constituted an isolated incident wholly unrelated to his employment and which took
    place outside of work hours and in his home. Given these factors, we are not prepared
    to say that the Board exceeded the bounds of reasonableness in ruling that Provo City
    3
    Provo City argues that the Board imposed the wrong standard of proof on the
    city, essentially requiring it to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the accusations
    against the employee were true. Provo City assumes this because the Board noted that
    when the city terminated the employee, he had not been convicted yet of the crime for
    which he was charged and terminated. However, it is clear that the Board merely
    required substantial evidence from Provo City that it had just cause for terminating the
    employee. Provo City’s obligation before the Board was not merely to prove that the
    employee acted inappropriately, but to prove that the city had just cause to terminate
    him. It was this “just cause” determination that needed to be established. To meet this
    burden, the city had to show not merely that wrongdoing had been alleged, but that the
    employee actually did something wrong. The Board saw a conviction as evidence that
    would have been helpful to Provo City in proving that the employee did something
    wrong because the conviction would have provided something more than a mere
    accusation and a limited admission of wrongful behavior. A conviction, then, would
    have been helpful, although not necessary, nor sufficient alone, to provide persuasive
    evidence that there was just cause to terminate the employee. And it seems that, with
    this in mind, the Board was merely commenting on the absence of such evidence.
    20110900‐CA                                5
    had not established that it was required to terminate the employee in order to protect its
    interests.
    ¶11 Provo City argues that its image and goodwill would be significantly harmed if it
    continued to employ an accused sex offender. It further argues that the employee’s
    conduct was job‐related because his job required him to work in residential
    neighborhoods. As the employee apparently had a “clean work record” and there was
    no evidence that “the conduct [would] be repeated,” Provo City had the additional
    burden to show that this was “a more serious offense and” that “more harm” would
    befall Provo City by retaining the employee. Fieeiki, 
    2005 UT App 398
    , ¶ 2 (emphasis
    added). The Board apparently saw little risk of harm to the city in continuing to employ
    a long‐time employee accused of one‐time inappropriate touching of a minor and
    whose responsibilities do not take him into direct contact with children. We cannot say
    that this determination was unreasonable in light of the record before the Board.4
    ¶12 As mentioned above, we are careful to distinguish between the propriety of
    terminating the employee and the employee’s entitlement to unemployment benefits.
    We do not suggest that Provo City was wrong to terminate the employee for his actions.
    But the question before us is whether the employee comes within an exception to the
    general rule that allows employees who suddenly find themselves without work to
    claim unemployment benefits. Reviewing the facts in light of the rules and case law
    that govern this question, we simply cannot conclude that the Board’s decision was so
    unreasonable that we should interfere with it.5
    4
    We acknowledge that on the question of whether there was “just cause” under
    the rule to terminate the employee, this was a close call. Because of the deference that
    we give the Board in making these determinations, only disturbing its decisions when
    they are unreasonable, see Pender v. Department of Workforce Servs., 
    2011 UT App 79
    , ¶ 3,
    
    250 P.3d 1014
    , we also would have upheld the Board’s decision here had it decided that
    there was just cause to terminate the employee so as to preclude his receipt of
    unemployment compensation.
    5
    We note that the Board gave Provo City the opportunity to supplement the
    factual record with additional evidence regarding the employee’s criminal case that
    came to light after the initial hearing. Provo City declined to do so.
    20110900‐CA                                 6
    ¶13 Because Provo City failed to meet its burden of establishing culpability as
    required by the Code, we decline to disturb the decision of the Workforce Appeals
    Board.6
    ____________________________________
    Gregory K. Orme, Judge
    ‐‐‐‐‐
    ¶14   WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    J. Frederic Voros Jr.,
    Associate Presiding Judge
    ____________________________________
    William A. Thorne Jr., Judge
    6
    Because the employer must satisfy all three requirements to avoid paying
    unemployment compensation on the ground the employee was fired for just cause, see
    Utah Admin. Code R994‐405‐202, Provo City’s failure to establish culpability means we
    need not consider the “knowledge” and “control” elements.
    20110900‐CA                               7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 20110900-CA

Citation Numbers: 2012 UT App 228, 286 P.3d 936, 715 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 2012 Utah App. LEXIS 231, 2012 WL 3511250

Judges: Orme, Thorne, Voros

Filed Date: 8/16/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024