45 A.2d 423 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued December 13, 1945. The appellant was denied unemployment compensation by the bureau, the referee and the board.
The board found: "1. The claimant was last employed as a fire watch and safety inspector by Publicker Commercial Alcohol Company, 1325 W. Girard Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, from July 1944 to May 31, *420 1945. 2. At the time of his separation, the claimant was employed as a safety inspector, in which capacity he had nothing whatever to do with fire equipment. However, he made repeated complaints to his superiors about his inability to get life preservers for the employes, while large sums of money were being expended for the purchase of fire equipment which he considered unnecessary. The claimant was warned to refrain from interfering in matters not within his jurisdiction under penalty of dismissal, but he nevertheless continued to make complaints about said equipment to numerous Government officials and other agencies. He finally went in person to see Mr. Richard Diamond, Supervisory Engineer of the Defense Plant Corporation, and accused the plant officials of making unnecessary expenditures of Government money. Mr. Diamond called a meeting of the plant officials and the City Fire Marshal, at which the charges preferred by the claimant were proved to be unwarranted and unfounded and it was established that Government money was not used for the purchase of the equipment in question. The matter was then referred to the Third Service Command for disciplinary action. Subsequent thereto, the claimant was discharged from his employment."
The board's conclusion of law was: "We believe that the conduct of the claimant was such that he could reasonably anticipate dismissal would result therefrom. Therefore, it must be concluded that the claimant brought about his own discharge and his resulting unemployment must be deemed to be due to voluntarily leaving work without good cause, within the meaning of Section 402 (b) [
The board's findings of fact, when supported by evidence, are conclusive upon appeal, which is confined to questions of law. Unemployment Compensation Law, December 5, 1936, P.L. (1937) 2897, § 510,
The findings of fact are supported by the evidence. Without intending to supplant or criticize the board's *421 findings, our study of the evidence indicates that the board might have found, in addition to the cause stated in its findings, that claimant was discharged because, to quote a portion of the separation notice signed by the employer's assistant personnel director: "In the opinion of this company's safety department head and the company's physician, the claimant is no longer suitable for industrial work, because of his age [69 years] and definite neurotic tendencies." The testimony reveals an employe, entrusted with the inspection and maintenance of safety measures, performing his duty with an excess of zeal which conceivably may have amounted to officious interference in matters not within the scope of his duties, and for this conduct he was discharged as insubordinate.
It will be observed that the board found as a fact that appellant was discharged, but concluded as a matter of law that he voluntarily quit. Its theory is that when an employe can reasonably anticipate that his conduct will produce a discharge, the ensuing actual discharge is a voluntary quitting. Before us the board's able counsel argued that conduct which might result in a discharge, and actually produces a discharge, constitutes a "constructive voluntary leaving," analogous to the unsettled idea of constructive desertion in the law of divorce.
Unemployment compensation cannot be administered upon vague theories imported from other and unrelated realms of the law. The Unemployment Compensation Law represents "the exercise of the police powers of the Commonwealth" to abolish: "Economic insecurity due to unemployment [which] is a serious menace to the health, morals, and welfare of the people of the Commonwealth." Id. § 3,
The board's decision that a discharge under certain circumstances is equivalent to a voluntary relinquishment of employment is directly counter to our construction of the act. We have heretofore plainly held that the two are not the same thing, that one is the opposite of the other. "When we say, `he left work voluntarily,' we commonly mean, he left of his own motion;he was not discharged. It is the opposite of a discharge,
dismissal or lay-off by the employer or other action by the employer severing relations with his employes, to provide against which the act was mainly designed": Labor and Industry Dept. v.Unemployment Compensation Board of Review,
The board relies mainly upon Dept. of Labor and Industry v.Unemployment Compensation Board of Review,
A similar controversy will probably not again arise. The Act of May 29, 1945, No. 408, § 9,
Decision reversed, and the record is remitted to the board with instructions to enter an appropriate order consistent with this opinion.