387 Mass. 776 | Mass. | 1982
The employee was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits after a hearing and decision by a review examiner of the Division of Employment Security that his discharge from employment “was attributable solely to deliberate misconduct in wilful disregard of the employing unit’s interest within the meaning of [G. L. c. 151 A, § 25 (e) (2)].”
On the morning of October 30, 1980, Laura Ensler, assistant manager of Federal Management Co., Inc., signalled the employee, a maintenance worker since July, 1979, by
The review examiner found that the employee’s discharge, the day after these incidents occurred, was due to his “insubordination when he failed to obey a direct order from the assistant manager to report to unload a truck.” The examiner concluded that since the employee did not unload the truck and acknowledged his conduct described above, his discharge was “attributable solely to deliberate misconduct in wilful disregard of the employing unit’s inter
The record before us is bare of such finding. The review examiner attributed the employee’s discharge to insubordination through failure “to obey a direct order ... to report to unload a truck.” Since he also made a subsidiary finding that the employee did report to the unloading site, we cannot determine whether he disbelieved the employee’s testimony that he descended as promptly as he could to the site after receiving the order, or concluded that the employee’s remarks to the assistant manager on the telephone constituted “insubordination.” Cf. Smith v. Director of the Div. of Employment Sec., 376 Mass, at 565-566. It is also not clear whether the employee’s later use of a vulgar epithet
The employee also complains that the review examiner failed to consider evidence that he had been discharged for his activities as a union steward. Such evidence would be directly relevant to the statutory requirement that benefits be denied when a discharge is “shown to the satisfaction of the director [of the Division of Employment Security] to be attributable solely to deliberate misconduct in wilful disregard of the employing unit’s interest.” The review examiner permitted most of the evidence offered by the employee on this issue, excluding only one question. We agree with the employee that, on remand, the issue should be fully developed and a determination should be made whether the discharge was in part attributable to another cause. Cf. Trustees of Deerfield Academy v. Director of the Div. of Employment Sec., 382 Mass. 26, 31-33 (1980).
We find no merit in the employee’s final contention that the employer should have been barred from participating in the hearing because no good cause was shown for its failure to return the notice of the claim within the period prescribed by G. L. c. 151 A, § 38 (b). The record clearly shows that the notice was misaddressed by the agency when originally mailed to the employer. Not only does the statute expressly provide for such good cause failure to respond, but there is nothing before us to indicate that the employee
The decision of the District Court is reversed. Judgment is to be entered remanding the case to the Division of Employment Security for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
General Laws c. 151A, § 25 (e) (2), as appearing in St. 1975, c. 684, § 78, provides in material part: “No waiting period shall be allowed and no benefits shall be paid to an individual under this chapter ...(e) For the period of unemployment next ensuing and until the individual has had at least four weeks of work and in each of said weeks has earned an amount equivalent to or in excess of his weekly benefit amount after he has left work ... (2) by discharge shown to the satisfaction of the director to be attributable solely to deliberate misconduct in wilful disregard of the employing unit’s interest . . . .”
We do not accept the employer’s suggestion that the term “insubordination” implies the “wilful disregard of the employing unit’s interest” required for denial of benefits under G. L. c. 151A, § 25 (e) (2). Compare Oehme v. Whittemore-Wright Co., 279 Mass. 558, 563 (1932); McIntosh v. Abbot, 231 Mass. 180, 183 (1918). The record before us contains an incomplete reference to “insubordination” as described in the division’s claim adjuster’s handbook: “Claimant is discharged because of deliberate refusal to perform his work as director [sic] or to perform particular assigned task . . . .” From this abbreviated language we cannot determine if the division contemplates a stated finding on the state of mind of an employee who refuses to perform a task. Nevertheless, our most recent cases construing the statute have made clear that “the employee’s ‘state of mind’ is ‘an important factual issue,’ ... so that, for example, if an employee believed that violations of a certain rule were habitually ignored or disregarded as unimportant by the employer, this might be a factor to take into account. Not every transgression of a rule automatically justifies a disqualification from unemployment benefits, the general principle being that ‘[wjhile the violation of a work rule may well justify the discharge of an employee, such a violation does not necessarily amount to misconduct for unemployment compensation purposes’” (citations omitted). Smith v. Director of the Div. of Employment Sec., 376 Mass. 563, 566-567 (1978).