Carbon County v. WFSV

2013 UT 41
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 2013
DocketNo. 20120251
StatusPublished

This text of 2013 UT 41 (Carbon County v. WFSV) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carbon County v. WFSV, 2013 UT 41 (Utah 2013).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final publication in the Pacific Reporter

2013 UT 41

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH CARBON COUNTY, Petitioner, v. WORKFORCE APPEALS BOARD, DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE SERVICES, and WADE L. MARINONI, Respondents.

No. 20120251 Filed July 9, 2013

On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

Attorneys: D. Scott Crook, Salt Lake City, for petitioner Suzan Pixton, Salt Lake City, for respondents Workforce Board of Appeals, Department of Workforce Services Blake A. Nakamura, Salt Lake City, for respondent Wade L. Marinoni

ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, JUSTICE DURHAM, JUSTICE PARRISH, and JUSTICE LEE joined.

ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE NEHRING, opinion of the Court: INTRODUCTION ¶1 This case concerns the award of unemployment benefits to an emergency medical technician (EMT) formerly employed by Carbon County. Carbon County appealed the decision of the Workforce Board of Appeals (Board) to the Utah Court of Appeals. The court of appeals affirmed. It explained that the Board failed to make certain critical factual findings, and that facts in the record, even if uncontested, could not form the basis for legal arguments on appeal absent such findings. We hold that the court of appeals erred in declining to consider certain uncontested facts in its legal analysis, CARBON COUNTY v. WFSV Opinion of the Court

but affirm the court’s ultimate determination upholding the award of unemployment benefits. BACKGROUND ¶2 Mr. Marinoni was employed by Carbon County as an EMT. He had worked as an EMT for eighteen years. He had one previous disciplinary incident in which he received a verbal warning for demanding overtime pay in a crew meeting when his supervisor told him to cover a weekend shift. ¶3 In 2010, while working as a first-response EMT, Mr. Marinoni received a call from a nurse in the Castleview emergency room requesting a STAT transport—meaning an immediate transport—of a patient to another hospital. Carbon County did not have a written policy instructing employees on how to conduct STAT transports. The employees who later testified regarding the incident could not recall with any certainty the last time STAT transport protocol was discussed during training. Mr. Marinoni acknowledged that the nurse told him “the patient was having an active MI1 with ongoing chest pain” and “they wanted to see the patient in the cath lab as soon as possible.” However, Mr. Marinoni said he did not “get the impression from [the nurse] that it was that urgent of a call.” He did not identify the request as a STAT transport because he believed that a STAT transport request was only valid if it came from a doctor. The first response team will often contact off-duty EMTs to fill regular transports so that the first response team can be available for emergencies and STAT transports. When Mr. Marinoni told the nurse that he would “go ahead and fill the transport,” the nurse “stated that was okay.” And when Mr. Marinoni called the hospital back to explain that a regular transport would arrive in about twenty minutes, another nurse told him “that would be fine.” It took approximately fifteen to twenty minutes for the off-duty EMTs to arrive and fill the transport. ¶4 When the off-duty EMTs arrived, they determined that the situation was serious and they needed another EMT to assist them. Mr. Marinoni ended up driving the ambulance. The other EMTs on the trip stated that Mr. Marinoni drove too fast, and when the EMTs

1 MI stands for myocardial infarction, a medical term for heart attack.

2 Cite as: 2013 UT 41 Opinion of the Court

and the patient receiving the transport expressed concern, Mr. Marinoni slowed down too much. ¶5 Mr. Marinoni was fired for failing to respond immediately to the transport request. He applied for and was awarded unemployment benefits. Carbon County appealed, arguing that it had established the elements of just cause required to deny a terminated employee unemployment benefits. The ALJ affirmed the award of benefits. It found that Mr. Marinoni had acted in good faith according to his understanding of his employer’s protocol. Carbon County then appealed to the Board, which accepted the ALJ’s findings of fact and affirmed. Carbon County next appealed to the Utah Court of Appeals, which affirmed the award. Finally, Carbon County petitioned for certiorari to this court. We granted certiorari to determine whether the court of appeals erred when it concluded that Carbon County’s arguments were predicated on challenges to findings of fact and that Carbon County had failed to preserve those challenges.2 We have jurisdiction under Utah Code section 78A-3-102(3)(a). STANDARD OF REVIEW ¶6 On certiorari, this court reviews the court of appeals’ decision for correctness.3 The court of appeals articulated the standard of review applicable to the Board’s conclusions, which is also relevant to our review.4 “[I]t is the province of the Board, not appellate courts, to resolve conflicting evidence, and where inconsistent inferences can be drawn from the same evidence, it is for the Board to draw the inferences.”5 Furthermore, appellate

2 We also granted certiorari on a second question of whether the court of appeals erred in failing to consider section 35A-4-508(8)(f) of the Utah Code in connection with its preservation analysis. Because we resolve the first question in the affirmative, we need not address the second. 3 Rahofy v. Steadman, 2012 UT 70, ¶ 7, 289 P.3d 534. 4 See State v. Ramirez, 2012 UT 59, ¶ 7, 289 P.3d 444 (explaining that the correctness of the court of appeals’ decision turns, in part, on whether it applied the correct standard of review). 5 Carbon Cnty. v. Dep’t of Workforce Servs., 2012 UT App 4, ¶ 9, 269 (continued...)

3 CARBON COUNTY v. WFSV Opinion of the Court

courts should “give deference to the initial decision maker on questions of fact because it stands in a superior position from which to evaluate and weigh the evidence and assess the credibility and accuracy of witnesses’ recollections.”6 ¶7 As we recently explained in Murray v. Labor Commission, in the absence of an express grant of discretion to an agency’s decision, we do not apply an abuse of discretion standard7 and instead utilize the standard framework employed in the review of trial court decisions.8 Our review in this case presents a mixed question of law and fact. “Mixed questions fall somewhere in the twilight between deferential review of findings of fact and searching reconsideration of conclusions of law.”9 As such, the standard we employ in reviewing a mixed question “can be either deferential or non- deferential.”10 We grant more deference in cases where “the mixed finding is not ‘law-like’ because it does not lend itself to consistent resolution by a uniform body of appellate precedent, and/or on the premise that the mixed finding is ‘fact-like’ because the trial court [or agency] is in a superior position to decide it.”11 This is such a case. Due to the fact-intensive inquiry involved at the agency level, this case “does not lend itself to consistent resolution by a uniform body of appellate precedent.” Because of the fact-intensive conclusions involved at the agency level, “the appellate court would be in an inferior position to review the ‘correctness’ of the . . . decision”12 and the Board’s award of unemployment benefits to Mr. Marinoni is entitled to deference.

5 (...continued) P.3d 969 (internal quotation marks omitted). 6 Drake v. Indus. Comm’n, 939 P.2d 177, 181 (Utah 1997). 7 2013 UT 38, ¶ 29, 308 P.3d 461. 8 Id. ¶ 23; see also id.

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