Cindy Pritchett v. Mississippi Department of Employment Security

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 15, 2023
Docket2022-CC-00808-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Cindy Pritchett v. Mississippi Department of Employment Security (Cindy Pritchett v. Mississippi Department of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cindy Pritchett v. Mississippi Department of Employment Security, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2022-CC-00808-COA

CINDY PRITCHETT APPELLANT

v.

MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF APPELLEE EMPLOYMENT SECURITY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/08/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. KATHY KING JACKSON COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: GEORGE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: CINDY PRITCHETT (PRO SE) ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: ALBERT B. WHITE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/15/2023 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE BARNES, C.J., McCARTY AND SMITH, JJ.

McCARTY, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. The Mississippi Department of Employment Security determined an employee had

voluntarily abandoned her job when she left the hotel where she worked without finishing

the duties assigned to her by her supervisor, and as a result, she was not entitled to

unemployment benefits. Finding that this decision was supported by substantial evidence,

we affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶2. Cindy Pritchett worked as a guest room attendant at the Harrah’s casino in Biloxi. As

a GRA, her job was to clean rooms in the hotel. She had occupied that position for seven

years. ¶3. Ms. Pritchett took about 15 to 25 minutes to clean each room. GRAs are assigned a

“board” of rooms, depending on how many need cleaning and how many people are on duty,

and they are supposed to clean their board by the end of the day. In previous years, GRAs

were paid by each room on their board, but under a revised union contract, they were paid

hourly.

¶4. According to Ms. Pritchett’s supervisor, as it neared the end of her shift, Ms. Pritchett

was told “that she had two rooms left and she didn’t want to do them or couldn’t do them[.]”

In the employer’s version of events, when she and another supervisor asked Ms. Pritchett

“why she couldn’t do it[,] she just said she didn’t want to do the rooms and she was leaving.”

¶5. Two supervisors then told Ms. Pritchett “that if she left without completing her board

that would be job abandonment.” In response, the GRA told them “that because they no

longer got paid . . . by room, and they went to hourly based off of their union agreements

. . . she didn’t have to work after five[.]” She was again told she would be abandoning her

job if she left, and Ms. Pritchett called her union representative. After this phone call, she

“clocked out, turned in her keys, and left her board and left property.”

¶6. Ms. Pritchett then went on a previously scheduled two-week vacation. When she

came back from her vacation, she was escorted off the premises and told not to return. She

sought unemployment benefits and initially began receiving them, but they were denied a few

months later on the basis that she had voluntarily quit her job. She appealed this decision,

and a telephonic hearing was conducted before an administrative law judge.

¶7. Ms. Pritchett had a different version of what happened than her employer. She

2 pointed out that this occurred during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic. She recalled

when she went into work, she “ wasn’t feeling good.” The GRA said, “My back was hurting,

my body was aching, my head was hurting, everything was hurting.” Nonetheless, she

handled most of her board but was planning to leave at 5:00 p.m. In her memory, she told

her employer she asked to “please get somebody to do the other two rooms because I’m not

feeling well.” Her reason for leaving was not that she was quitting; in her words, “I couldn’t

finish the rooms because I was sick.”

¶8. During the hearing with the ALJ, the employer disputed this version of events. The

supervisor pointed out they were asking Ms. Pritchett to finish her board, which would have

taken between 30 and 60 minutes for the two rooms. The supervisor was asked, “[H]ad she

cleaned those two rooms . . . would she still have a job?” She responded, “Definitely,”

because “[s]he would have finished her board.” The supervisor did not recall Ms. Pritchett

saying she was sick; she only remembered the “reason she gave was because they were paid

hourly, no longer per room.”

¶9. The ALJ ruled in favor of the employer, finding that Ms. Pritchett “voluntarily left her

employment when she asked to leave work early without completing her assigned rooms,”

even though she was warned this would constitute abandoning her job. Further, the ALJ

found that “[w]hen the claimant left her employment, continuing work was available and the

claimant was at no threat of discharge.” The ALJ also found Ms. Pritchett was “obligated

to repay the assessed overpayment” of benefits she received before her denial “plus any

interest that may accrue.”

3 ¶10. After the ALJ rendered this decision, Ms. Pritchett appealed to the MDES Board of

Review, which adopted the ALJ’s findings of fact and law and affirmed. Ms. Pritchett then

appealed that denial to the George County Circuit Court, which likewise affirmed. She

appealed from that decision, and the Supreme Court assigned the case to us for review.

DISCUSSION

¶11. We employ a limited standard of review in cases from the MDES Board of Review,

and its “finding that an employee has quit work voluntarily without good cause is a question

of fact that will be upheld if it is supported by substantial evidence.” Mitchell v. Miss. Dep’t

of Emp. Sec., 348 So. 3d 1030, 1033 (¶7) (Miss. Ct. App. 2022).

¶12. State law declares that “[a]n individual shall be disqualified for benefits . . . for the

week, or fraction thereof, which immediately follows the day on which he left work

voluntarily without good cause, if so found by the department[.]” Miss. Code Ann.

§ 71-5-513(A)(1)(a) (Supp. 2019). “The burden of proof of good cause for leaving work

shall be on the claimant, and the burden of proof of misconduct shall be on the employer.”

Miss. Code Ann. § 71-5-513(A)(1)(c).

¶13. As we summarized it in Mitchell, “[u]nemployment benefits are available for

employees who leave work involuntarily, through no fault of their own.” 348 So. 3d at 1033

(¶8). “An employee is disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits if he or she left

work voluntarily and without good cause.” Id.

¶14. In that decision, the worker told his employer “he would not be in because he was

sick” and then alleged he sought medical care at a clinic. Id. However, we determined “[t]he

4 records from Urgent Care that [he] submitted are illegible,” and “at no point did [his]

testimony or other documentary evidence indicate that a physician had told [him] that he

could not work.” Id. at 1033-34 (¶9).

¶15. Despite his resistance to working, and “citing fears of COVID-19 if he rode with his

co-workers in the truck to the job site,” the employee refused compromises and alternatives

suggested by his supervisor. Id. at 1034 (¶9). In lieu of his leaving, “his supervisor asked

him to stay and work something out,” but “[i]nstead of talking to his supervisor or suggesting

another solution, [the worker] left.” Id. He did not come back to work, and the company

fired him. Id. MDES concluded he left work voluntarily. Id.

¶16. On appeal, we affirmed. Id. Citing a prior case, we held that “[t]he claimant did not

exhaust all avenues with this employer in an effort to resolve this problem before he quit.”

Id.

¶17. On appeal, Ms. Pritchett filed a brief pro se.

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Related

Owens v. Mississippi Department of Employment Security
135 So. 3d 943 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2014)

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