A. Myers v. UCBR

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 25, 2021
Docket474 C.D. 2020
StatusUnpublished

This text of A. Myers v. UCBR (A. Myers v. UCBR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Myers v. UCBR, (Pa. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Antoinette Myers, : Petitioner : : v. : No. 474 C.D. 2020 : Submitted: November 20, 2020 Unemployment Compensation : Board of Review, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge1 HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: February 25, 2021

Petitioner Antoinette Myers (Claimant) petitions, pro se, for review of an order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board). The Board affirmed a decision of the Unemployment Compensation Referee (Referee), thereby denying Claimant unemployment compensation benefits pursuant to Section 402(b) of the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law),2 relating to voluntary separation from employment without cause of a necessitous and compelling nature. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

1 This case was assigned to the opinion writer before January 4, 2021, when Judge Brobson became President Judge. 2 Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. § 802(b). Claimant filed a claim for unemployment compensation benefits following her separation from employment with her employer, Aveanna Healthcare LLC (Employer). (Certified Record (C.R.), Item No. 2.) The Altoona UC Service Center (Service Center) determined Claimant to be ineligible for benefits, because, although she had a necessitous and compelling reason for quitting, she did not exhaust all alternatives available to resolve the situation with Employer before doing so. (C.R., Item No. 5.) Claimant appealed, and a Referee conducted a hearing at which Claimant testified on her own behalf and Courtney Liptock (Liptock), Employer’s Executive Director, testified on behalf of Employer. (C.R., Item Nos. 6, 9 at 1.) At the hearing, Claimant testified that she began work for Employer as a quality assurance nurse on May 12, 2012, and that the last day she worked was May 6, 2019. (C.R., Item No. 9 at 3.) When asked to explain why she was no longer working for Employer, Claimant stated that she was terminated for no reason and that she received a termination notice effective May 14, 2019. (Id. at 4.) Of particular importance herein, we note that Claimant suffered an injury to her right knee in 2014, which had been the source of an ongoing workers’ compensation dispute with Employer. (Id. at 4, 6-8, 11, 15-18.) Claimant testified that she suffered a medical emergency, unrelated to her right knee injury, and was out of work from April 24, 2019, through May 5, 2019. (Id. at 4, 6.) When she returned to work on May 6, 2019, Claimant was told by Employer that her doctor’s note was inadequate, so Employer gave her an additional form to be filled out by the emergency room doctor who treated her. (Id. at 4-5.) Claimant testified that she did not return to work with Employer until after an appointment with her workers’ compensation doctor on May 13, 2019. (C.R., Item Nos. 6 at 9-11, 9 at 6.) At that appointment, Claimant explained to her

2 doctor that her duties were becoming too much, she had been working in pain, and she refused to continue to do so. (C.R., Item No. 9 at 6.) Claimant told her doctor that Employer refused to pay for her knee brace, medications, a stool, or a standing desk, all things that would assist her in staying at work and doing her job. (Id. at 6-7.) Claimant testified that her doctor agreed to take her out of work for two weeks, at which point she should be reevaluated. (Id. at 8.) Following her doctor’s appointment on May 13, 2019, Claimant went into work and presented Employer with her doctor’s note from her previous emergency room visit, dated May 8, 2019. (C.R., Item No. 9 at 8.) She then walked into Liptock’s office and handed Liptock her laptop and tablet. (Id.) Claimant explained their interaction as follows: I did not trust [Liptock] with the information [regarding her May 13th doctor’s appointment]. I just – that’s just the truth. [Liptock] has not proven to be an honest person, in my sight. So, I did not trust her with the information. So, what I did tell her, when I walked into her office, I had in my hand, my laptop and my tablet, which I use for work. I handed that to her. She said to me, aren’t you going to need these? My response was my attorney’s [sic] will be in touch. That was the end of the conversation about why I handed her the laptop and the tablet. Anything beyond that is a fabrication. Before I totally departed her office, I think I got, maybe, a step through the doorway, I did turn back and say to her, I didn’t get paid last week, when I was in the hospital. So I’m going to need to be paid for that. That was the end of our interaction. I went to my desk, gathered my things, and I left. My doctor assured me that he would send the note – the doctor’s note to [Employer].

(Id.) When questioned further by the Referee, Claimant admitted that she also left her keys in her desk and that her plan, which she failed to tell anyone at work that day, was not to return until she could negotiate different job modifications through

3 her attorney. (C.R., Item No. 9 at 15.) On cross-examination, Claimant admitted she “was not forthcoming” with Employer because she “was not comfortable with giving [Liptock] the information.” (Id. at 20.) Claimant explained that the only people she saw when she went to work on May 13, 2019, were Liptock and Eric,3 that everyone else was in a meeting, and that she did not want to interrupt the meeting to explain what was going on. (Id.) She testified that she did not talk to Eric about it because Eric was on his way to the meeting. (Id.) Claimant testified that she did not have a note from her doctor with her when she went to Employer on May 13, 2019, because “[i]t had to be typed up and all of that.” (Id. at 8.) Claimant’s understanding when she left her doctor’s office was that the doctor was going to send a note to Employer. (Id.) Claimant testified that her doctor later told her he faxed the note to Employer and that Claimant called Employer’s office to confirm that it was received. (Id. at 9-10, 18.) Claimant admitted she did not tell Employer that her doctor took her out of work or that she would return to Employer in two weeks, and that she just wanted to deal with her attorney due to the “trust issue.” (Id. at 8-10, 12.) Claimant further admitted that she left work that day without telling anyone when she would be back or what was going on with her medical condition, just that her “attorney would be in touch.” (Id. at 13.) Claimant testified that she received a “termination notice” through Employer’s “Workday” system on May 14 or 15, 2019. (C.R. Item No. 9 at 4, 8-9, 19.) She forwarded the termination notice to her attorney, but she admittedly did not reach out to Employer to find out why she received the notice. (Id. at 13.)

3 The individual named “Eric” is not fully identified in the transcript or elsewhere in the certified record, other than Liptock stating that he was her “leadership” at Employer. (C.R., Item No. 9 at 26.) 4 Claimant further stated that she received a “retraction” from Employer in December 2019, explaining that her employment was not terminated. (Id. at 10.) While Claimant testified that she repeatedly asked to return to work through her attorney and that Employer refused these requests, Claimant did not have any paperwork supporting this assertion and was not represented at the hearing. (Id. at 14, 17.) Liptock then testified on behalf of Employer, essentially confirming Claimant’s version of events leading up to the separation. (See C.R., Item No. 9 at 20-21.) Liptock testified that on May 13, 2019, Claimant came into her office with her laptop and other device, told Liptock it was her last day and that her attorney would be contacting Employer, and that was the end of the conversation. (Id.

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A. Myers v. UCBR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-myers-v-ucbr-pacommwct-2021.