DocketNumber: Nos. CV 97 0575719S, CV 97 0574866S, CV 97 0574865S, CV 97 0574863S, CV 97 0574867S, CV 97 0574864S, CV 97 0574862S,
Citation Numbers: 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 5065, 24 Conn. L. Rptr. 378
Judges: McWEENY, J.
Filed Date: 4/19/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The Administrator is specifically authorized by General Statutes §
The records establish that each of the claimants were discharged from their employment due to the theft of property with a value of $25 or less. Bliven, a cashier at Staples, Inc., stole a lock worth $24.99. Jessup stole a pound of pastrami valued at $9.98 from his employer, Crown Super Market. Solek, a clerk at Waldbaum Food Mart, stole $9.82 worth of groceries. Kinlock, a dietary assistant at Fairfield Manor, stole food items from her employers kitchen worth less than $25. Leaks, a line cook at Chili's Grill Bar, stole steaks worth $18. Moffett stole less than $25 worth of beer from his employer, Hartford Distributors, Inc. Wilson, a sales clerk at Follett College Stores Corp., Inc., stole $5 worth of merchandise.
Such single incidents of petty larceny would not have constituted grounds for disqualification prior to the passage of Public Act 1995, No. 95-323, which amended the disqualification statute, §
Public Act 95-323, however, deleted the reference to "repeated" wilful misconduct, and redefined "wilful misconduct" as "deliberate misconduct in wilful disregard of the employers interest, or a single knowing violation of a reasonable and uniformly enforced rule or policy of the employer, when reasonably applied. . . ." (Emphasis added.) Public Act 1995, No. 95-323, codified as General Statutes §
The position of the Board is that petty larceny of property valued at $25 or less cannot constitute disqualification because of the plain language of our Unemployment Compensation Act compel us to maintain the validity of the larceny provision and to find that a claimant cannot be disqualified under the wilful misconduct provision for stealing $25 or less of property or services. CT Page 5067
The court rejects such construction of General Statutes §
Section
The issue here is whether a theft of $25 or less of property or services, clearly not a disqualifying larceny, can constitute a disqualifying wilful misconduct. The answer must be yes. Prior to Public Act 95-323, repeated petty thefts could amount to repeated wilful misconduct. See Cone v. Duncaster, Inc., Board Case No. 1195-86-BP (November 6, 1986). Under the current provision, similarly repeated thefts would most clearly constitute wilful misconduct.
The obvious intent of the larceny provision is to lessen the penalty for a fired employee who has stolen something of small value. This, however, does not elevate such thefts to protected activity for which an employee would never be disqualified.
A somewhat analogous statutory structure and result is addressed in Tucker v. Board of Education,
The Supreme Court agreed with the trial court that the Board of Educations denial of the leave request was a decision not a "rule" of the Board. Tucker v. Board of Education, supra,
Similar to the Teacher Tenure Act §
This construction of §
The facts certified in the Gilliard v. Hartford Club, Board Case No. 729-BR-96 (May 13. 1996) would meet the statutory wilful misconduct definition.4 In that case, the employee was observed concealing food items on her person then placing them in her locker. The items were then found in the locker and no explanation was offered by the employee. The employer's policy was to immediately dismiss any employee for stealing regardless of the value. The employee was provided a copy of the rule in writing. Other employees had been discharged for violating the employer's rule against stealing.
The wilful misconduct inquiry references different criteria than the larceny provision. A demonstrated larceny of property valued at over $25 disqualifies a claimant. Wilful misconduct requires not only proof of the larceny, but the existence of a reasonable and uniformly enforced rule or policy. If minor CT Page 5069 pilferage had been tolerated in the past, then an employee for petty theft might not be disqualified. Such a defense would not seem to lie for the larceny disqualification. See Figueroa v. C S Ball Bearing,
Contrary to the Board's claim the Administrator's position does not read out or by implication repeal the larceny disqualification of §
"In matters of statutory interpretation, we are guided by well established principles, paramount among which is the principle that our fundamental objective is to ascertain and give effect to the apparent intent of the legislature. . . . In seeking to discern that intent, we look to the words of the statute itself, to the legislative history and circumstances surrounding its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to implement, and to existing legislation and common law principles governing the same general subject notice. . . ." (Brackets omitted; citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted). Assn. of Not-for-Profit Providers for the Aging v.Dept. of Social Services,
The intent of Public Act 95-323 was to broaden the scope of disqualification, especially with respect to the nature of the termination. Petty larcenies which were not severe enough to invoke the larceny disqualification may be enough to invoke the wilful misconduct disqualification. The elimination of the "repeated" criteria from the "wilful misconduct" disqualification would logically effect the consequence of a single petty larceny. This is further evidenced by the revised definition of wilful misconduct. The requirement of reasonable and uniform application would seem to be the focus of the petty larceny cases. The larceny disqualification thus retains its vitality. An employer seeking to contest the qualification for compensation of an employee terminated for theft of $26 worth of property need only document the theft. If the property was worth $25 or less, the CT Page 5070 issue would be wilful misconduct. The burden of proof would include not only the theft but a reasonable publicized and uniformly enforced policy, reasonably applied.
In its decision, the Board ignores this construction of the statute and insists that the larceny provision must be amended to accomplish a disqualification for a larceny of $25 or less. The history of the larceny disqualification is also informative as to legislative intent. The original larceny disqualification, Public Act 1981, No. § 81-318, 1, referenced larceny in the third degree. Section
The Board seeks in this review judicial deference to its statutory construction. These cases represent the Board's initial application of the Public Act 95-323 revisions. The interpretation and construction of a statute is uniquely the function of courts not administrative agencies. Bezzini v.Department of Social Services, 49. Conn. App. 432, 436 (1998);Connecticut Light Power Co. v. DPUC,
For the reasons set forth above, the court finds the issues for the plaintiff The appeal is sustained and the case remanded to the Board to vacate its decision.
Robert F. McWeeny, J