DocketNumber: Appeal, No. 239
Judges: Ervin, Gunther, Hirt, Rhodes, Ross, Woodside, Wright
Filed Date: 11/15/1954
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
Opinion by
The claimant in this unemployment compensation case had been in the employ of Bethlehem Cornwall Corporation, continuously since July 1950. The com
On October 23,1953 claimant applied for unemployment compensation benefits. He subsequently lodged a grievance with his union, a local of United Steel Workers of America. The union filed a complaint in accordance with the procedure set up in its labor contract with the company, but in the midst of the proceedings withdrew the complaint and accepted the decision of the company. All of the facts to which we have referred are reflected in the findings of the Referee based upon competent testimony. Because of claimant’s failure to return to his work on or before October 26, 1953, in accordance with the company’s notice to him, the Referee ruled “that he left his employment voluntarily without good cause and must be disqualified under the provisions of Section 402(b) . . .” of the Unemployment Compensation Law as last amended by the Act of May 23, 1949, P. L. 1738, 43 PS §802. The Board on appeal, after hearing additional testimony, adopted the findings and conclusions of the Referee and affirmed the order denying benefits.
Section 402(b) provides: “An employe shall be ineligible for compensation for any week ... In which his unemployment is due to voluntarily leaving work without good cause.” As to the test to be applied in determining whether there is good cause for voluntarily leaving work by an employe we have said: “The vitalizing element of good cause is good faith. Sturdevant
Claimant attempted to justify his refusal to wear safety glasses at all times during working hours on two grounds. When he was hired in 1950 the then operative safety rule required employes to wear glasses only when performing certain types of work and he contended that he was not bound by any subsequent modification of it. The contention is without merit. Within the terms of the company-union agreement, rules affecting employes at their work were subject to change by the employer at any time. The present rule must be regarded as having union approval as is indicated by the union’s withdrawal of its complaint filed with the company on claimant’s grievance, based on the enforcement of the present rule as to him. Claimant’s second ground is equally without merit. He testified that he could not wear glasses at all times, stating : “They gave me headaches.” According to his testimony he suffered these headaches “at least fifty times” during the three years he worked for the company and that they made him “generally sick.” The difficulty with this contention is that the testimony does not establish that the glasses were the cause of the headaches. Both the company doctor and a doctor of claimant’s choice found that his vision is normal. And the Board adopted the finding and conclusion of the Referee “that claimant has not offered any medical statement to the effect that wearing safety glasses actually caused his headaches.”
The testimony in this case amply supports the conclusion that claimant in legal effect quit his employment voluntarily and without good cause on October
Decision affirmed.