59 A.D.2d 1003 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1977
Appeal from a decision of the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board, filed July 22, 1976, which affirmed the decision of a referee disqualifying claimant from receiving benefits because she lost her employment by misconduct. By notice mailed November 25, 1975, the claimant was given the initial determination of the local office that she was disqualified because "you failed to act in your employer’s best interests by not following correct work procedures.” It is apparent that such an allegation is not the equivalent of misconduct on its face (see Matter of McHugh [Levine], 47 AD2d 676). Claimant had been employed as a customer representative with the New York Telephone Company for many years prior to her discharge from employment on November 6, 1975. Hearings were held on January 7, 1976 and January 29, 1976 and at those hearings it was established that one customer complained of her rudeness on July 14, 1975 and that another one considered claimant to have called her in a "huff”. The truth or falsity of those two complaints were not put in issue and have not been determined. It was established that in the entire period of claimant’s employment, those two derogatory letters were the only ones in her record. The employer’s representatives further testified that a Mrs. Wells, as claimant’s supervisor, had monitored several of claimant’s conversations with customers and that there had been what they call "breakdowns” between claimant and customers because of claimant. Those "breakdowns” as disclosed in the record are at most alleged errors on the part of claimant in carrying out the services requested. Mrs. Wells testified as to the conversations monitored by her and it should be observed that she did not contend that claimant had been harsh or rude in those customer contacts. The claimant testified that as a representative she would handle 35 to 40 contacts per day. The record establishes that the claimant had been employed more than six years and that even as of the time of her discharge from employment she was recognized as either the best or one of the best representatives of the employer. At the hearing of January 29, 1976, when the claimant’s attorney was attempting to elicit