Petitioner Imperial Valet Services seeks review of a decision of the Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) finding Maria L. Alvarado eligible to receive unemployment compensation benefits. Upon review, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In February 2004, the District of Columbia Department of Employment Services found Maria L. Alvarado, respondent in the instant action, eligible for unemployment benefits. Her employer, Imperial Valet Services, owned and represented by George Thanos, appealed the decision to the OAH, which subsequently reversed, finding that Alvarado voluntarily left her employment without good cause. Alvarado v. Imperial Valet, No. 09-AA-1110, Mem. Op. & J. at 2,
On remand, Administrative Law Judge James C. Harmon heard the testimony of Alvarado, her daughter Leyli Flores, and Thanos. Alvarado testified that Thanos had a habit of calling her “stupid” and “a piece of crap” while she was working, in addition to screaming at her, and that as a result she felt “humiliated” and cried during and after work. Flores, who sometimes helped her mother at work, testified that she had overheard Thanos swear and yell at her mother. For his part, Thanos testified that he hardly spoke to Alvarado, or any other Spanish-speaking employee for that matter, as he delegated that responsibility to another employee.
In his final order, the ALJ credited Alvarado’s “direct, candid, specific, and plausible” testimony and found that it was corroborated by the testimony of her daughter. He did not credit Thanos’s testimony denying ever yelling at Alvarado. The ALJ found that Alvarado had voluntarily quit her position with good cause connected with the work and was therefore qualified to receive unemployment benefits. Petitioner timely appealed.
II. ANALYSIS
“This court must affirm an OAH decision when (1) OAH made findings of fact on each materially contested issue of fact, (2) substantial evidence supports each finding, and (3) OAH’s conclusions flow rationally from its findings of fact.” Rodriguez v. Filene’s Basement Inc.,
We have not had occasion in our prior cases to determine whether an employee who quits her job because of verbal abuse as opposed to, say, unsafe working conditions may claim to have quit for good cause connected to the work. We therefore take this opportunity to set forth the standard we believe ALJs should apply in considering claims of verbal abuse as justification for an employee to terminate her employment voluntarily. Petitioner argues that “yelling at an employee for a serious mistake ought not to qualify as ‘good cause’ to leave voluntarily.” We agree that “employers have every right to correct or admonish their employees in a reasonable manner when dissatisfied”; however, “employees are not required to accept undue verbal abuse from employers.” Dempsey v. Old Dominion Freight Lines,
Considering these factors, the record in this case supports a finding that Thanos’s verbal abuse created good cause for Alvarado to quit. As a threshold matter, we note that the ALJ “fully credit[ed]” Alvarado’s testimony and “d[id] not credit Mr. Thanos’s testimony [that] he never holler[ed] at” Alvarado. “Where credibility questions are involved, ‘the factfinding of hearing officers is entitled to great weight,’ since the hearing examiner is in the best position to observe the demeanor of witnesses.” Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth. v. District of Columbia Dept. of Emp’t Servs.,
Based on the record before us, it is clear that Thanos repeatedly verbally abused Alvarado. Indeed, the ALJ found that “on numerous occasions” Thanos called Alvarado “stupid” and sometimes “a piece of crap” and that her daughter heard Thanos utter profanities such as “shit, fuck, stupid, and bitch” at her mother. And, on at least one occasion, Thanos further humiliated Alvarado by calling her “a piece of crap in front of four other employees and her two daughters.”
Although the record is not clear whether some of the instances when Thanos insulted or shouted profanities at Alvarado were part of a reprimand for failing to perform her job duties properly, it is clear that several instances of verbal abuse had no connection to Alvarado’s job performance. During the relevant time period, Alvarado was a “laundry manager” and was responsible for “wash[ing] the laundry” and “overseeing the rest of the female employees ... do their jobs.” She testified that when the washing machines broke down, Thanos would call her “stupid,” a “jerk,” and a “piece of crap.” Additionally, Tha-nos asked Alvarado to “become a babysitter for [his] cat” and when the cat got lost while Alvarado was “working for his store,” he “scream[ed]” at her that she was a “piece of crap.” A laundry manager is neither a mechanic nor a pet sitter and the verbal abuse Alvarado suffered in connection with those instances cannot be characterized as instances of reprimand for unsatisfactory performance of her job duties.
Finally, Alvarado testified that, shortly before she quit, she told Thanos that
After weighing all the factors, the record demonstrates that Alvarado suffered undue verbal abuse by Thanos. Although the ALJ did not have the benefit of the multi-factor, totality-of-the-circumstances analysis we formally adopt here, his review of the record led him to the same conclusion we think the multi-factor test would have produced. Further, substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s findings of fact and his conclusion that Alvarado acted as “a reasonable and prudent person in the labor market would” by quitting her job, a conclusion that “flow[s] rationally from [his] findings of fact.” Rodriguez,
So ordered.
Notes
. See Eulo v. Florida Unemployment Appeal Comm’n,
. See Butler Carpet Co. v. Cole,
.See Kentucky Truck Sales, Inc. v. Review Bd. of Indiana Dep't of Workforce Dev.,
. See Swain v. Dir., Dep’t of Workforce Servs.,
. Thanos also argues that the AU erred in granting Alvarado’s motion for adverse inference based on his failure to produce the workplace manager as a witness. Because the ALJ found, and we agree, that even "without the adverse inference against [Thanos], ... the evidence presented by [Alvarado] in this case is sufficient ... to find that there was good cause connected with the work for leaving the job," we need not reach this issue.
