Cathy a Martin v. E C Brooks Correctional Facility

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 2014
Docket316393
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cathy a Martin v. E C Brooks Correctional Facility (Cathy a Martin v. E C Brooks Correctional Facility) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cathy a Martin v. E C Brooks Correctional Facility, (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

CATHY A. MARTIN, UNPUBLISHED December 23, 2014 Claimant-Appellant ,

v No. 316393 Kent Circuit Court E. C. BROOKS CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, LC No. 2012-009837-AE and DEPARTMENT OF LICENSING & REGULATORY AFFAIRS/UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE AGENCY,

Appellees.

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and BECKERING and SHAPIRO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Claimant, Cathy A. Martin, appeals by delayed leave granted the circuit court’s order affirming a decision by the Michigan Compensation Appellate Commission (MCAC), which denied her unemployment benefits. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Claimant worked full-time at the E. C. Brooks Correctional Facility (“E. C. Brooks”) as a corrections officer from approximately 2008 until March 2011. Because of uncertainty— discussed in detail below—regarding her job status, claimant began searching for new employment in February 2011, and eventually found a position as a corrections officer in Georgia. In March 2011, claimant resigned from her position at E. C. Brooks. For reasons that are unclear from the record, claimant’s employment opportunity in Georgia did not come to fruition. Thereafter, she applied for unemployment benefits in Michigan.

In May 2011, the Unemployment Insurance Agency determined that claimant was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits pursuant to MCL 421.29(1)(a) because she voluntarily left her employment without good cause attributable to her employer. Claimant appealed that determination. The matter proceeded to a hearing before a hearing referee in June 2011. At the hearing, claimant testified that in February 2010, she heard rumors from her supervisors that another correctional facility in Muskegon might close, and that this closure could have an effect on her facility, but explained she was told not to worry about it. In February 2011, claimant’s supervisors informed her that there was going to be a layoff and that another -1- correctional facility in Muskegon would close by June 1, 2011. Claimant believed that the situation in February 2011 was different than the situation in February 2010 because her supervisors told her that she should worry about the February 2011 situation, explaining, “we kept hearing from our lieutenants and stuff that we were going to get laid off . . . .” Claimant understood that because another facility in the area was closing, senior employees from that facility would replace less senior employees, including herself, at E. C. Brooks. She explained that her superiors told her that, because of her lack of seniority, if and/or when the other facility closed, “you will get bumped[.]” According to claimant, her union was going to “see who was going to get bumped out, who’s going to get transferred, what they can do, and who’s going to take the layoff.” Claimant was stressed because she “didn’t know if [she was] going to be bumped off, transferred, or laid off,” so she began looking for other work. She did not consider transfers, because she was told by her superiors that there was a “freeze” on transfers, pending the closure of the other facility. She also did not consider voicing her concerns with the human resources department, explaining that speaking with the human resources department would be disrespectful and “going over the[] head[s]” of her superiors. Claimant testified that it was “normal” to receive such information from her superiors, rather than from human resources. She testified that she trusted her superiors, but admitted, “I didn’t know really what was going on. It confused me.”

During her testimony, claimant spoke of a layoff, transfers, and being “bumped” from employment by more senior employees from another facility. When asked if being “bumped” was the same as being laid off, claimant responded, “I have no idea, ma’am. I really don’t.”

Rebecca Wright, the human resources officer for E.C. Brooks and other Muskegon area facilities, testified that a Muskegon correctional facility—not the one at which claimant worked—closed in June 2011. Wright testified that supervisors do not have authority to give official notice of facility closings. Official notice only came from human resources, which would notify employees in a letter regarding whether they were being laid off or “bumped.” According to Wright, a “bump” is where a more senior employee at one facility “bumps” a less senior employee at a different facility out of his job and the more senior employee takes the less senior employee’s place at that location. Then, a bumped employee has two weeks to decide whether to accept an offer to transfer to a different facility. Wright said that there was room throughout the state for everyone from E.C. Brooks, including claimant, to transfer to a different location after being bumped out of E.C. Brooks.

Wright testified that if claimant had approached her before she resigned, Wright could have told her that there were enough transfer vacancies available so that no one at E. C. Brooks would be laid off. According to Wright, ever since 2009, E.C. Brooks’ internal newsletter warned employees of a possible closure, “but whether or not it would truly happen, we were never really sure until the day they came down with notices.” On May 25, 2011, after claimant resigned, the human resources department provided each E.C. Brooks employee with written notice of how upcoming transfers would work, and that notice was the first official notice that employees would be transferred.

On June 30, 2011, the hearing referee found that, because of the layoff rumors, claimant established good cause for leaving work that was attributable to her employer. The hearing referee so found because it determined that leaving in order to avoid a layoff amounted to

-2- leaving for good cause attributable to the employer. The hearing referee concluded that claimant acted as a reasonable person would have under the circumstances in response to the rumors and statements by her supervisors.

E. C. Brooks appealed the hearing referee’s decision to the MCAC, and on May 29, 2012, the MCAC reversed the hearing referee’s decision. The MCAC concluded that it was undisputed that claimant left E. C. Brooks voluntarily; thus, it found that the dispositive issue was whether claimant left for good cause attributable to her employer. Noting Wright’s testimony that a bump was not the same as a layoff, the MCAC found that claimant did not leave her employer in anticipation of a layoff; rather, she left in anticipation of a bump, which was essentially a transfer. The MCAC concluded that claimant’s decision to leave was premature and not for good cause attributable to her employer. It found that claimant acted on “rumors” from her superiors regarding facility closures, and that such action did not amount to good cause attributable to her employer.

Thereafter, claimant appealed the MCAC’s decision to the circuit court. After hearing oral argument, the circuit court affirmed the MCAC’s decision. The circuit court found significant claimant’s lack of understanding as to whether being bumped was the same as being laid off. It also found that the information claimant received from her supervisors regarding the closure and bumps or layoffs was uncertain. Thus, it found that the record supported the MCAC’s finding that claimant resigned in response to “rumors.” Further, the circuit court found that the MCAC’s decision was not contrary to law, as it found that the MCAC correctly applied the reasonable person and “good cause” standards to claimant’s case.

II. DISCUSSION

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Cathy a Martin v. E C Brooks Correctional Facility, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cathy-a-martin-v-e-c-brooks-correctional-facility-michctapp-2014.