Alcan Rolled Products Ravenswood v. Terry W. McCarthy

765 S.E.2d 201, 234 W. Va. 312, 2014 W. Va. LEXIS 1139
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 2014
Docket13-1080
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 765 S.E.2d 201 (Alcan Rolled Products Ravenswood v. Terry W. McCarthy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alcan Rolled Products Ravenswood v. Terry W. McCarthy, 765 S.E.2d 201, 234 W. Va. 312, 2014 W. Va. LEXIS 1139 (W. Va. 2014).

Opinion

*315 LOUGHRY, Justice:

The petitioner, Alcan Rolled Products Ravenswood, LLC (“Alcan”), 1 appeals the Circuit Court of Kanawha County’s order entered September 10, 2013, reversing the decision of Workforce West Virginia’s Board of Review (“Board”). The Board affirmed the decision of a Workforce West Virginia administrative law judge (“ALJ”), who denied unemployment benefits to Alcan’s former employee, the respondent, Terry McCarthy (“Mr. McCarthy”), upon finding he had been discharged for gross misconduct. Concluding that the findings of fact of the ALJ, as adopted by the Board, were clearly wrong, the circuit court entered an order reversing the decision of Workforce West Virginia and ruling that Mr. McCarthy was entitled to unemployment compensation benefits. Alcan challenges the circuit court’s order, asserting that the court failed to give proper deference to the findings of fact of the ALJ; substituted its findings of fact for those of the ALJ and the Board; and erred by ruling that Mr. McCarthy’s actions did not constitute “gross misconduct.” Upon our careful consideration of the record in this matter, the briefs and arguments of the parties, the applicable legal authority, the appropriate standard of review, and for the reasons discussed below, we reverse the circuit court’s final order and remand this action to the circuit court with directions to reinstate the Workforce West Virginia decision finding Mr. McCarthy ineligible for unemployment compensation benefits.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On or about October 5, 2012, Mr. McCarthy 2 was discharged fi’om employment with Alcan for picket line violence. The miscon-duet occurred on August 7, 2012, during a labor strike by Alcan’s hourly workforce. Supervisory employees traveling in a four-vehicle convoy observed Mr. McCarthy throwing a “jack rock” 3 from a picket line into their lane of travel at the south “Y” intersection leading to Alcan’s facility in Rav-enswood, West Virginia.

Following his termination, Mr. McCarthy filed a claim for unemployment compensation benefits with the Division of Unemployment Compensation of Workforce West Virginia. He was denied benefits at all three levels of the administrative process based on the recurrent finding that Mr. McCarthy’s actions, which led to his discharge from employment with Alcan, constituted gross misconduct.

On October 25, 2012, the Workforce West Virginia deputy entered his decision finding that Mr. McCarthy was disqualified from receiving benefits. 4 The deputy based his decision upon Alcan’s evidence that Mr. McCarthy threw a jack rock at an employee’s vehicle, which the' deputy found was gross misconduct. Mr. McCarthy requested an appeal of the deputy’s decision, and an eviden-tiary hearing was held before the ALJ on December 21,2012. 5

During this evidentiary hearing, Mr. McCarthy testified that he did not throw the jack rock and that while he heard and saw jack rocks hit the road that morning, he did not see who threw them. Mr. McCarthy presented the testimony of a co-worker, Ed Nunn, who testified that he was with Mr. McCarthy on the picket line “most of the time;” that he did not see Mr. McCarthy throw a jack rock; and that he saw “a jack rock or two” in the roadway that day, but did not know who threw them. Mr. McCarthy *316 also called Luke Staskal as a witness. Mr. Staskal, Alcan’s Human Resource Business Partner, testified and confirmed that videos were taken of jack rocks in the roadway that day by the security company employed by Alcan, but that he did not know where those videos were located. The transcript of this evidentiary hearing reflects that Mr. Staskal was never asked whether there were videos showing the specific incident involving Mr. McCarthy.

During this same evidentiary hearing, Al-can presented the testimony of several witnesses, including Tom Slone, Alcan’s Manager of Environmental Health Services and Security, who investigated the incident. Mr. Slone explained that the Alcan management personnel immediately reported the incident involving Mr. McCarthy upon arriving at the Alcan plant the morning of August 7, 2012. While there were several incidents of picket line violence reported that day, Mr. Slone testified that he was personally charged with documenting this particular incident the morning it occurred. Mr. Slone authenticated his incident report, which contained his summary of the incident as described by William (Rocky) Elkins, the management employee who was driving the first vehicle in the convoy: “Turned off Rt. 2 onto the north branch of the South Y (access) to Century Road [and] observed [Mr.] McCarthy throw an object toward his vehicle, believed to be a jack rock.” Mr. Slone explained that his incident report also contained signed statements from David Johnson and Jeff Wams-ley, management employees who occupied the second vehicle in the convoy that morning. Mr. Wamsley’s signed statement reflects that he “observed [Mr.] McCarthy toss a jack rock at Rocky’s [Elkins’s] back tire. I saw the jack rock bounce toward the back tire. There is no question that this was a jack rock.” 6 Similarly, Mr. Johnson’s signed statement indicates that he “witnessed [Mr.] McCarthy toss a jack rock at Rocky’s [El-kins’s] vehicle. I confirm that this was a jack rock.” Mr. Slone’s incident report, as well as Alcan’s Rules of Conduct 7 for the facility, were admitted into evidence by the ALJ.

In addition to their written statements, Mr. Elkins and Mr. Johnson were called as witnesses by Alcan during the administrative hearing. Mr. Elkins testified that he was driving the lead vehicle in the four-vehicle convoy carrying management employees to the Alcan plant for the first time since the labor strike began. He explained that as he was driving past the picket line, he saw Mr. McCarthy, whom he recognized from work, “stoop[ ] down and ma[k]e a ... bowling motion with his arm[,]” although he did not see anything come out of Mr. McCarthy’s hand. Mr. Elkins also testified that once Mr. Johnson and Mr. Wamsley arrived at the plant, he told them that Mr. McCarthy was “messing” with him by making the tossing motion at which time Mr. Johnson and Mr. Wamsley told him that Mr. McCarthy was not “acting” but had actually tossed a jack rock into the roadway.

During Mi’. Johnson’s testimony, he confirmed his written statement contained in the incident report, which he explained was given to Mr. Slone within thirty minutes of arriving at the plant that day. According to Mr. Johnson, he was a passenger in the vehicle being driven by Mr. Wamsley and, as the vehicle slowed to make the sharp curve at the Y intersection, he saw Mr. McCarthy toss a jack rock into the roadway from the picket line. Mr. Johnson testified that the jack rock bounced on the road between the Elkins and Wamsley vehicles and that Mr. Wamsley “swerved over” to navigate around the jack rock. 8 When asked how many other strikers *317 were standing with Mr.

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765 S.E.2d 201, 234 W. Va. 312, 2014 W. Va. LEXIS 1139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alcan-rolled-products-ravenswood-v-terry-w-mccarthy-wva-2014.