*1316 ON PETITION TO TRANSFER
We granted transfer to consider under what circumstances an employer’s termination of an employee for a knowing violation of a reasonable employer workplace policy under Indiana Code § 22-4-15-l(d)(2) meets the requirements that the rule be “uniformly enforced” when it is enforced for the first time. We also attempt to clarify the standard of review of the Unemployment Insurance Review Board’s findings and conclusions. We affirm the Board’s determination that the rule was uniformly enforced and therefore the termination was for just cause.
Factual and Procedural History
Charles H. McClain, Sr. was fired from his job as a custodian at the Indiana University Medical Center in Indianapolis (“IUPUI”) for violating IUPUI’s policy that employees personally “clock out” their own timecards at the end of a work shift. When McClain began his employment with IUPUI he signed an employee information receipt which provided in part: “I must always use my time card to clock in when beginning work and clock out when ending/leaving work (including lunch break) for each shift I work.” On the evening of the violation, McClain’s supervisor saw a friend of McClain’s, James Jones, sitting in the time clock room at 11:00 p.m. holding four time cards. The supervisor remained in the room until clock out time at 11:30 p.m. when he observed Jones clock out two of the four time cards — Jones’s and McClain’s — before he stopped Jones. McClain later claimed that he gave his time-card to Jones only a minute or two before 11:30 so he could help another of the four, who he said had car trouble. All four employees involved in the incident were suspended and then fired.
McClain applied to the Indiana Department of Workforce Development for unemployment benefits under Indiana Code §§ 22-4 et. seq. The Department determined McClain was terminated for “just cause” and suspended McClain’s benefits. Ind.Code § 22^-15-l(a) (Supp.1997). McClain appealed to an Administrative Law Judge who, after a hearing, agreed that McClain was discharged for just cause. Specifically, the ALJ found that McClain was engaged in a “knowing violation of a reasonable and uniformly enforced rule of an employer.” Under Indiana Code § 22-4-15-1(d)(2) this is a basis for denial of compensation. At the hearing, McClain testified that he knew of the timecard policy and was aware that a violation could result in a loss of his job. He said, however, that he thought he would be warned before he would be terminated. The supervisor testified that it was “standard practice” to fire employees who violate the policy but admitted that he knew of no other incidents of one employee clocking out another. IUPUI’s representative at the hearing, the manager of records and unemployment compensation, testified that McClain was discharged for falsification of his timecard and that “the university treats that as a suspension subject to discharge in all departments.” IUPUI introduced a copy of the written policy, partially quoted above, as an Exhibit. The ALJ concluded that McClain knew about the policy, and that it was reasonable and uniformly enforced.
The Unemployment Insurance Review Board affirmed the ALJ and McClain appealed to the Court of Appeals, which reversed on the issue of uniform enforcement.
McClain v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Dep’t of Workforce Dev.,
Standard of Review
The Indiana Unemployment Compensation Act provides that “[a]ny decision of the review board shall be conclusive and binding as to all questions of fact.” Ind.Code § 22 — 4— 17-12(a) (Supp.1997). However, the statute
*1317
also includes explicit provision for judicial review in language virtually identical to that found in provisions for review of other administrative agency actions.
1
Indiana Code § 22-4-17-12© provides that when the Board’s decision is challenged as contrary to law, the reviewing court is limited to a two part inquiry into: (1) “the sufficiency of the facts found to sustain the decision”; and (2) “the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings of facts.” Under this standard courts are called upon to review (1) determinations of specific or “basic” underlying facts, (2) conclusions or inferences from those facts, sometimes called “ultimate facts,” and (3) conclusions of law. Courts uniformly recognize that propositions of law, such as the construction of the statute, are for the court to determine.
Parkison v. James River Corp.,
Review of. the Board’s findings of basic fact are subject to a “substantial evi-
denee” standard of review.
KBI, Inc. v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Dep’t of Workforce Dev.,
The Board’s conclusions as to ultimate facts involve an inference or deduction based on the findings of basic fact. These .questions of ultimate fact are sometimes described as “questions of law.”
Hehr v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Employment Sec. Div.,
Providing a more exact standard is neither necessary nor desirable. Like the courts in Indiana, courts in other jurisdictions have found it difficult to formulate a consistent, precise, and meaningful standard of review of agency action. Tests for “clear error,” “substantial evidence,” “clear error of judgment,” or “arbitrary and capricious” action are often bandied about without any obvious benefit. See generally Kenneth Culp Davis, 5 AdministRátive Law Treatise § 29:5 (2d ed. 1984). We agree with Davis that:
the dominant scope of review is in the middle: Courts usually substitute judgment on the kind of questions of law that are within their special competence, but on other questions they limit themselves to deciding reasonableness; they do not clari fy the meaning of reasonableness but retain full discretion in each case to stretch it in either direction.
Id. § 29:1, at 332 (emphasis omitted). In sum, basic facts are reviewed for substantial evidence, legal propositions are reviewed for their correctness. The best that can be said for ultimate facts or “mixed questions” as a general proposition is that the reviewing court must determine whether the Board’s finding of ultimate fact is a reasonable one. The amount of deference given to the Board turns on whether the issue is one within the expertise of the Board.
Application to this Case
In order to establish a prima facie case for violation of an employer rule under § 22-4-15-l(d)(2), the employer must demonstrate that the employee knowingly violated a reasonable and uniformly enforced rule.
Hehr,
The standard of review of the Board’s decision depends in the first instance on whether uniform enforcement is a question of basic fact, ultimate fact, or a question of law. In order to evaluate uniformity one must first define the class of persons against whom uniformity is measured. This is usually a rule of law but it may be informed by appropriate findings as to employer practices, etc. In this case the definition of the class presents no issue; it is those employees who participate in vicarious clocking. Definition of the class can, however, be a significant issue. For example, in
General Motors Corp. v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Dep’t of Workforce Dev.,
Once the class is defined, the question whether the employer treats the persons within a class consistently is a basic factual inquiry and is reviewed subject to the substantial evidence test and for conformity to law. See,
e.g., Citizens Gas & Coke Util. v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Employment Sec. Div.,
The Court of Appeals majority held that as a matter of law, when a rule is enforced for the first time, there cannot be uniform enforcement. The court required that the policy must include its own sanction to meet the standard for a “discharge for just cause” under § 22—4—15—1(d)(2). We disagree. A policy that has not been the basis for termination of an employee in the past may nonetheless be “uniformly enforced” even if only one person is the subject of an enforcement action, so long as the purposes underlying uniform enforcement ■ are met. Uniform enforcement gives notice to employees about .what punishment they can reasonably anticipate if they violate the rule and it protects employees against arbitrary enforcement.
See McClain,
Conclusion
We affirm the decision of the Unemployment Insurance Review Board.
Notes
. Cf. Ind.Code §§ 8-1-3-1 (Utility Regulatory Commission), 22-3-4-8(d) & 22-3-7-27(0 (Workers’ Compensation Board), 23-2-3.1-11 (Securities Commissioner) (1993 & Supp.1997).
. The substantial evidence test in this state has been explained as a set of subsidiary rules. One frequent formulation is that as a general rule the findings of the Board arc conclusive and binding, Ind.Code § 22-4-17-12(a) (Supp.1997), unless they fall within one of the exceptions for which the court may reverse. These exceptions include but are not limited to:
(1) The evidence on which the Review Board based its findings was devoid of probative value;
(2) The quantum of legitimate evidence was so proportionately meager as to lead to the conviction that the finding docs not rest upon a rational basis;
(3) The result of the hearing before the Review Board was substantially influenced by improper considerations;
(4) There was not substantial evidence supporting the findings of the Review Board;
(5) The order of the Review Board, its judgment or finding, is fraudulent, unreasonable or arbitrary.
General Motors Corp. v. Review Bd. of the Ind. Dep't of Workforce Dev.,
. It has been said that findings of fact — whether basic or ultimate — will be reversed only "if reasonable persons would be bound to reach a different result upon a consideration of the evidence from the perspective favoring the Board's decision.”
Hehr,
. This "reasonable inference” standard is not to be confused with a separate inquiry specific to this case, whether an employer’s policy is a "reasonable” one as the statute requires. Ind Code § 22 — 4— 15 — 1 (d)(2) (Supp.1997).
