Binger v. Whirlpool Corp.

674 N.E.2d 1232, 110 Ohio App. 3d 583
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 1996
DocketNo. 92-CV-179.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 674 N.E.2d 1232 (Binger v. Whirlpool Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Binger v. Whirlpool Corp., 674 N.E.2d 1232, 110 Ohio App. 3d 583 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Abood, Judge.

This is an administrative appeal from a judgment of the Sandusky County Court of Common Pleas which reversed the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Board of Review’s determination and found that appellee Jacqueline Binger was not discharged by appellee Whirlpool Corporation, Inc. (“Whirlpool”) for just cause.

On appeal appellant, the Administrator for the Ohio Board of Employment Services (“OBES”), sets forth the following assignment of error:

*585 “The Sandusky Court of Common Pleas erred in reversing the decision of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review and holding that said decision was unreasonable and against the manifest weight of the evidence.”

In addition, Whirlpool sets forth the following four assignments of error:

“A. The trial court committed reversible error in disregarding and setting aside the evidentiary determinations and factual findings of the administrative agency.

“B. The trial court committed reversible error in finding that the decision of the administrative agency was not supported by competant [sic ] credible evidence.

“C. The trial court committed reversible error in finding that the decision of the administrative agency was unreasonable and against the manifest weight of the evidence.

“D. The trial court committed reversible error in determining that Jacqueline Binger had been discharged without just cause.”

The facts which are relevant to the issues raised on appeal are as follows. Appellee was hired by Whirlpool in June 1985, as an assembly line worker at its plant in Clyde, Ohio. Sometime in 1990, Whirlpool officials became aware of increasing drug use among its employees and, in cooperation with the Clyde Police Department, established an undercover investigation in which agents Clifford Mesnard and Jonathan Huffman posed as employees in an attempt to identify those individuals who were selling and/or using drugs at work.

As a result of the undercover investigation, appellee and thirty-six other employees were indicted by the Clyde Police Department on drug-related charges. Appellee was initially arrested and charged with one count of conspiracy to commit aggravated trafficking in cocaine, one count of offering to sell cocaine, and one count of drug abuse. She subsequently pled guilty to one count of offering to sell cocaine, in exchange for a dismissal of the two other charges.

On March 15, 1991, Whirlpool terminated appellee, and on March 19, 1991, she applied for unemployment compensation.

On March 20,1991, OBES issued a decision in which it allowed appellee’s claim for benefits, after finding that her “layoff was not for misconduct in connection with the work.” On April 10, 1991, Whirlpool filed a written request for reconsideration, in which it asserted that appellee was discharged, along with other employees, for violating “a known company policy.” In support thereof, Whirlpool argued that it distributes an employee policy manual to all of its employees and that Appendix D of the manual, which relates to “plant rules,” states that the following acts are violations of company policy:

*586 “3. Reporting to work while under the influence of narcotic or controlled substances, use of and/or possession of same on Company property.

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“8. Immoral conduct or indecency.”

Whirlpool further argued that other employees who were terminated along with appellee as a result of the same drug investigation were not allowed unemployment compensation and stated that “if others are disqualified, this claimant should also be.”

On June 27, 1991, OBES issued an “Administrator’s Reconsideration Decision” in which it found that “the evidence is clear that claimant was discharged for just cause in connection with the work” and disallowed her claim for unemployment benefits. On July 12, 1991, appellee appealed the administrator’s decision to the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (“board”).

On October 22, 1991, an administrative review hearing was held before referee Barbara Thompson, at which testimony was presented by appellee and Gregory Frisch, Whirlpool’s Employee Relations Coordinator.

At that hearing Frisch testified that it is against Whirlpool’s policy for an employee -to use or possess drugs on company property or engage in immoral or indecent conduct, that the policy exists because Whirlpool is “concerned about the safety and well-being of [its] employees,” that appellee received a written copy of the policy in February 1990, that discipline for any violation of company rules is based on the severity of that incident, and that an internal review board handles such disciplinary matters on a case-by-case basis. He further testified that Whirlpool began its undercover investigation of employee drug use because it had numerous reports of an “excessive amount of drugs” at the Clyde plant, that appellee was targeted in the investigation by undercover agent Mesnard, that appellee and Mesnard discussed, obtaining drugs at work on at least three occasions and that those conversations were tape-recorded by Mesnard, that Mesnard and Huffman submitted written reports to the company’s disciplinary review board on a monthly basis and that Mesnard submitted three reports which were specifically based on the recorded conversations with appellee, and that the Clyde police charged appellee with three drug-related offenses as a result of Mesnard’s investigation.

At the conclusion of Frisch’s testimony, the referee admitted copies of Mesnard’s reports concerning appellee into evidence, over appellee’s objection,, stating that since they were hearsay she would “give them the weight they deserve.”

In her testimony, appellee admitted.on direct examination by the referee that she had been charged with one count of offering to sell cocaine at work but that *587 that and another charge had been dismissed when she pled guilty to offering to sell cocaine to Mesnard at the Vickery Tavern, and that she had heard the tapes of her conversations with Mesnard and agreed that they basically contain the same information as the written reports. She further testified that Mesnard approached her at work on several occasions to ask for drugs, that she gave him her home phone number so he could call her after work, and that when Mesnard called her on June 15, 1991, she put him in touch with Sue Perkins, who is not a Whirlpool employee, who then sold him one gram of cocaine at the Vickery Tavern.

Appellee further testified that Mesnard frequently came to her at work to ask about cocaine and that she always said no, that she never offered, sold or used cocaine at work, and that she received no profit from Perkins’s sale of cocaine to Mesnard.

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Bluebook (online)
674 N.E.2d 1232, 110 Ohio App. 3d 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/binger-v-whirlpool-corp-ohioctapp-1996.