Claimant seeks judicial review of an Employment Appeals Board (EAB) decision that disqualified her from receiving unemployment insurance benefits because she was fired for misconduct. According to claimant, the EAB failed adequately to defer to the rule interpretation declared by the authorized representative of the Employment Department (department). We affirm.
The EAB found the following facts, and claimant does not challenge them on review. Claimant worked for Lomas Financial Services (employer), an insurance agency. Kim Lomas, employer’s president, supervised her. During training, Lomas told claimant that employer had a policy under which only Lomas was allowed to open mail delivered to the employer’s office. Claimant understood that policy, and thereafter she routinely put unopened mail, including boxes, on Lomas’s desk. Because some boxes were heavy, and because on a few occasions Lomas had returned boxes to claimant unopened with instructions to open them and file their contents, claimant began to open some other heavy boxes herself instead of carrying them into Lomas’s office. She did not have permission from Lomas to do so, and Lomas was not aware of claimant’s conduct. Claimant did this on several occasions.
On March 13, 2003, Lomas entered the office where claimant was working and noticed a piece of cardboard on the floor. When Lomas asked claimant about the cardboard, she denied any knowledge of it. A short time later, however, Lomas called claimant into the conference room, and claimant then admitted that she had lied; the cardboard came from a box of mail that she had opened. She was discharged the following Monday, March 17.
Claimant applied for unemployment insurance benefits. Under ORS 657.176(2)(a), an employee who “has been discharged for misconduct connected with work” is “disqualified from the receipt of benefits.” The department has promulgated rules defining “misconduct” as “willful or wantonly negligent violation of the standards of behavior which an employer has the right to expect of an employee,” with an
exception for, among other things, “isolated instances of poor judgment,” OAR 471-030-0038(3)(a) and (3)(b). After reviewing her application and employer’s response, the department’s authorized representative declared that “[c]laimant was discharged because the employer lost trust” in her but that, regardless, “[claimant was discharged but not for misconduct connected with work. Therefore, BENEFITS ARE ALLOWED [.]” Although the authorized representative heard conflicting accounts from claimant and employer about whether employer had told claimant about the mail
Employer appealed, and a hearing before an administrative law judge (ALJ) ensued. Based on testimony adduced at hearing, the ALJ made additional findings of fact:
“Claimant was discharged for violation of company policy. The employer’s policy is that no employee is to open mail. * * * Claimant was aware of the policy because the President told her about it.
“Claimant understood that the employer expected her to refrain from opening the mail and that being dishonest about it could lead to her discharge.”
Based on those facts, the ALJ concluded that claimant was discharged for misconduct. Claimant then appealed to the EAB, which found that employer discharged her for dishonesty and repeated violation of company policy. Those actions, the EAB concluded, amounted to misconduct and disqualified claimant from receiving unemployment insurance benefits.
In seeking judicial review, claimant argues that the EAB erred by not giving adequate deference to the authorized representative’s administrative decision. Claimant relies on two recent cases,
Johnson v. Employment Dept.,
The department takes issue with claimant’s argument, contending that the authorized representative’s decision does not deserve deference under Don’t Waste Oregon Com. because the decision is not the interpretation of a rule but the application of an existing rule to the particular facts of this case. We do not entirely agree with either claimant or the department. 1
We held in
Sun Veneer v. Employment Div.,
In the present case, the authorized representative implicitly found that claimant had lied, thereby causing employer to lose trust
The EAB, then, interpreted the department’s rule without benefit of a departmental interpretation to which it might defer. In evaluating the EAB’s interpretation, we are in the same situation. In superficially similar circumstances, we have held that the proper disposition is a remand to the EAB with instructions to ascertain the department’s interpretation of “misconduct” (that is, to ascertain whether claimant’s actions fit within the department’s definition) using any lawful means to do so.
Johnson v. Employment Dept.,
Such a remand is not necessary here. Both
Johnson
cases involved determinations of whether one-time acts were misconduct or mere isolated incidents of poor judgment.
Tom Johnson,
Affirmed.
Notes
Employer waived appearance before this court.
The fact that EAB and this court both have authority to review legal questions such as rule interpretations for legal error, ORS 657.275(2); ORS 657.282;
OKS 183.482(8), does not conflict with the principle that, in exercising that authority, the reviewing body gives deference to agency interpretations,
Tom Johnson,
