This is a review of a decision of the Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division affirming a referee’s grant of benefits under the Indiana Employment Security Act 1 to appellee Eldora M. Powell (claimant) an employee of appellant Industrial Laundry (employer).
The Review Board’s entry of its decision includes the following:
“STATEMENT OF FACTS: Claimant worked for the employer herein from February 15, 1968, until she was discharged without warning on August 30, 1968. The employer representative testified that claimant was asked to work on the Saturday before Labor Day to make up a day she had missed the week before; that she did not work and also refused to work one hour overtime when requested. The representative further testified that claimant was absent more than other employees but was not discharged for said reason but rather for her refusal to work overtime and the Saturday before Labor Day.
“FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS: The Review Board finds that claimant was employed by this employer from February 15, 1968, until her discharge on August 30, 1968. “It further finds that claimant was discharged because of her refusal to work overtime and to work on Saturday prior to Labor Day.
“It further finds that claimant was not given a warning by the employer prior to her discharge.
“The Review Board concludes that the employer has failed in its burden of proof to show that claimant has shown a wanton or wilful disregard for the employer’s best interests, that she deliberately violated an employer rule, or that there was a wrongful intent on her part. (120 Ind. App. 604 [1950],94 N. E. 2d 673 ).
“It further concludes that claimant was discharged but not for misconduct in connection with her work within the meaning of the Act.
“DECISION: The decision of the referee is hereby affirmed this 30th day of October, 1969.”
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The employer does not question the facts as found by the board, except the ultimate conclusional fact that the claimant
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was not discharged for misconduct. The essence of the employer’s contention is that “considering the facts enunciated by the Review Board, reasonable men would conclude that the claimant was discharged due to her misconduct in connection with her work”, thereby rendering her ineligible for benefits.
2
Nor does the employer suggest we should disapprove of the definition of “misconduct” stated in
Merkle
v.
Review Board
(1950),
While appearing to accept the Board’s implied finding that claimant was not discharged for having been absent more than other employees 3 the employer nevertheless attempts to equate this case with the “chronic absenteeism” cases. 4 An ingenious argument is made in attempting to avoid or ignore the fact that only one absence (and one refusal to work over *43 time) was found to be a cause for the dismissal. The appellant-employer’s brief states:
“. . .[T]he claimant had been absent several times during the six months she had worked for the Appellant. . . . The employer had cooperated with the claimant and had accepted her excuses for these absences. The employer expected the claimant to return his consideration by working extra hours occasionally to help him meet a tight schedule.” (Emphasis added.)
The employer cites neither evidence nor fact recited by the Board to support the suggestion that the employer’s acceptance of the claimant’s “excuses” for her prior absences was conditional in any sense whatever nor that the claimant had ever been informed that the employer “expected” anything in return for acceptance of the excuses. Subjectively her supervisors may have anticipated that claimant would be grateful and would express her gratitude through improved cooperation. Conversely, she could have assumed, when her excuses were accepted without any suggestion that acceptance was conditional or was a favor, that her supervisors considered her absences justified and that justifiable absences were her recognized right. These possibilities, however, are purely speculative, just as appellant’s suggestion that claimant knew that her refusal to work created a great hardship on the employer. All are reasonable guesses, but neither the Board nor this court can base its decisions on guesswork.
In this respect the Board’s finding that no warning was given is significant. In both the
Anderson Motor Service
case (
The burden of proving claimant’s misconduct rests on the employer.
A. Winer, Inc.
v.
Review Board
(1950),
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The employer quotes
Chrysler Corp.
v.
Review Board
(1962),
This seems a most appropriate case in which to rely on the Board’s expertise. It is not necessary to affirmance that we be convinced that we would have reached the same conelusion had we been members of the Board. But it is necessary to a reversal that we be convinced that reasonable men would have been bound to reach a different con
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elusion on the facts found.
International Steel Co.
v.
Review Board
(1969),
The decision of the Review Board of the Indiana Employment Security Division is affirmed and costs are assessed against the appellant.
Note. — Reported in
Notes
. Ind. Acts 1947, ch. 208, Burns IND. STAT. ANN. (1964 Repl.) §§ 52-1525 — 52-1563b.
. Section 1501 of the Employment Security Act, Burns IND. STAT. ANN. § 52-1539, reads, in pertinent part: “An individual shall be ineligible for waiting period or benefit rights: For the week in which he . . . has been discharged for misconduct in connection with Ms work, and for all weeks subsequent thereto...
. This negative finding is implied by the affirmative finding which states but one cause of discharge: “her refusal to work overtime and to work on the Saturday prior to Labor Day.” In its condensed recital of the evidence under the heading “Statement of Facts”, the Board recites that the employer’s representative testified that claimant was absent more than other employees, but was not discharged for that reason.
.
Merkle v. Review Board, supra,
(
. The mere fact that in
A. Winer, Inc., supra,
(
