Robert E. Eby (Claimant) appeals from an order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (UCBR) that affirmed the referee’s denial of benefits to Claimant. We reverse.
DuPont Electronics (Employer) employed Claimant as a design draftsman. On October 1, 1991, Employer sent the following letter to certain employees including Claimant:
The attached contains an estimate of the pension or separation incentive you will receive if you elect to voluntarily leave DuPont. It is based on an off-roll date of 12/31/91. You are receiving this information because you are in a group that has identified work to be eliminated, thereby making you eligible for the program.
The purpose of these special incentives is to reduce the rolls through voluntary means thereby minimizing the need for an involuntary reduction of force.
You have until Monday, December 2, 1991, to elect to leave with an incentive. Although that’s two months away, please begin the decision-making process now. Understand the *12 incentives and benefits for which you are eligible. Attend the seminars available through your site or business, involve your family and be realistic about your options.
Although it saddens me that we must take these actions, I believe they are critical in order to ensure the viability of our business in this increasingly competitive environment.
(Emphasis added).
The incentive plan offered the employees early retirement with 100% of what their retirement would be at age 62. Claimant believed that if he did not accept the incentive, his job would have been eliminated, leaving him unemployed without benefits. (Notes of Testimony of April 3, 1992 hearing at 4). Employer neither contested the petition for benefits nor appeared at the hearing to present evidence. The referee denied benefits and the UCBR affirmed, holding that Claimant was ineligible for compensation because his unemployment was due to voluntarily leaving work without cause of a necessitous and compelling nature. The UCBR concluded that Claimant failed to meet his burden to show cause of a necessitous and compelling nature for voluntarily terminating because continuing work was available at the time he left employment.
On appeal to this Court, Claimant argues that there is insufficient evidence in the record to support the UCBR’s conclusion that there was available work for Claimant when he voluntarily terminated. We agree.
At the hearing before the referee, only Claimant presented evidence and testimony. Where the party with the burden of proof, as Claimant here, is the only party to present evidence and did not prevail before the UCBR, our scope of review on appeal is whether the UCBR committed an error of law or capriciously disregarded the evidence.
Kirkwood v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review,
Whether a voluntary termination of employment was for cause of a necessitous and compelling nature is a legal conclusion always subject to appellate review.
Fetterman v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 78
Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 233,
Good cause for voluntarily leaving one’s employment (i.e. that cause which is necessitous and compelling) results from circumstances which produce pressure to terminate that is both real and substantial, and which would compel a reasonable person under the circumstances to act in the same manner.
Taylor v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review,
In
Flannery v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review,
*14 The UCBR’s opinion under the capricious disregard standard erred as a matter of law, since there was no competent evidence to support the UCBR’s finding that continuing work was available. Claimant presented evidence in the form of Employer’s letter and his testimony that supports the legal conclusion that his voluntary termination was for a necessitous and compelling reason.
Accordingly the order of the UCBR is reversed and Claimant is granted benefits.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 2nd day of June, 1993, the order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review in the above-captioned matter is reversed and Claimant is granted benefits.
