Veronica Harrison appeals the superior court’s order affirming the Department of Labor’s
The undisputed facts are that, effective October 13, 1999, Harrison quit her employment with Intellisource, Inc. to take a better job with Fletcher Martin Associates. Three weeks later she was involuntarily terminated from her new position. The Department held that her separation from Intellisource was the pertinent one for purposes of determining eligibility for benefits, and neither party objected to that holding. But Harrison did appeal the Department’s further determination that she was not entitled to benefits with respect to that separation because her reason for quitting was “personal.”
In support of that determination, the court below relied — and the Department now relies — upon the Department’s Rule 300-2-9-.05. That rule states in pertinent part: “An employee who voluntarily
In Caldwell, as here, the claimant quit her employment to take a better job, from which she was terminated after a brief period. In that instance, however, the Department determined that the claimant was eligible for benefits with respect to the original separation. The superior court reversed, holding that the finding of eligibility denied the original employer substantive due process because there was no fault on its part. Our Supreme Court, in turn, reversed the superior court, noting that “[c]ompulsory contributions for employment security . . . are payable without regard to fault.”
the purpose of the Employment Security Law is to spread and lighten the burden of unemployment by allowing involuntarily unemployed workers to collect benefits based on their work history, even though that work history may encompass a period of employment which the employee voluntarily terminated. . . . [D]isqualification . . . would have the significant disadvantage of discouraging employees from seeking better opportunities, as the employee apparently did here.
(Emphasis supplied.) Id.
Thus, Rule 300-2-9-.05 as applied in this case conflicts with the holding in Caldwell. And this Court has previously held that a state department or agency is without authority to promulgate a rule that conflicts with a prior judicial interpretation of state law. In Pizza Hut Delivery v. Blackwell,
[T]he wording of Rule 260 (a) is essentially irrelevant. “Average weekly wages” under OCGA § 34-9-260 has been judicially interpreted to include an employee’s tips and no rule promulgated by the Board can change that interpretation or qualify it by imposing a limitation that tips must be listed on an employee’s W-2 form in order to be includable as a component of “average weekly wages.”
(Citation omitted; emphasis supplied.) Id. See also Groover v. Johnson Controls World Svc.,
In Caldwell, under facts substantially identical to those here, our Supreme Court interpreted the Employment Security Law of this state as allowing an employee who left one job to seek a better job opportunity to collect unemployment benefits when the second job terminated through no fault of the employee.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Hereinafter “Department.” Michael L. Thurmond, as Commissioner of Labor of Georgia, is one of the appellees here, the other being the original employer. “Department” will refer to both appellees collectively.
