Craig v. Bureau of Unemployment Compensation

83 N.E.2d 628, 83 Ohio App. 247, 51 Ohio Law. Abs. 449, 38 Ohio Op. 356, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 725
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1948
Docket6958
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 83 N.E.2d 628 (Craig v. Bureau of Unemployment Compensation) 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
Craig v. Bureau of Unemployment Compensation, 83 N.E.2d 628, 83 Ohio App. 247, 51 Ohio Law. Abs. 449, 38 Ohio Op. 356, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 725 (Ohio Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

*450 OPINION

By MATTHEWS, PJ.:

The Bureau of Unemployment Compensation denied benefits to the plaintiff. On appeal, the Court of Common Pleas reversed the Bureau’s decision. This is an appeal from that judgment.

In accordance with §1346-4 GC, the appeal was heard by the Common Pleas Court on the record certified to it by the Bureau of Unemployment Compensation.

The plaintiff was employed by Capitol Barg Dry Cleaning Company from May 6th, 1945 to March 16th, 1946. On the last named date, he quit, for the reason as stated in his claim for benefits, that “This was an unhealthy job. I had to go out and get rugs from homes and offices. I had to take them from the floor and deliver them to the plant. This was dusty work also real dirty. It kept my lungs full of dirt all the time. I was afraid I would get down sick so I quit.”

In his claim for benefits filed nine days after he quit, the plaintiff certified that on the day after he quit he was able to work and available for work. He reported regularly to the Bureau, as required, until September 23rd, 1946, during which his efforts to obtain employment were unsuccessful.

The Referee summarized the plaintiff’s testimony as follows:

“Claimant stated that he had attacks of bronchitis off and on for a number of years. He stated that sevéral years ago prior to his employment with Capitol Barg Dry Cleaning Company that he had driven a taxi cab and that one of his attacks of bronchitis had occurred about this time and he found it necessary to quit the taxi driving job until he recovered his health and at that time he returned to work as a taxi driver.
“Claimant states that his separation was due to the fact that he found the work to-be dusty and unsanitary. He stated that after his first three months of employment he had a desire to quit but was persuaded to remain on and this occurred after another three months of employment but he did not quit at that time. Claimant stated that in the week prior to his actual separation, he noticed that his weight was declining, that he . was feeling weak, that he had lost his appetite and did not rest well, and at that time decided that these, circumstances were due to the job and that he would quit it. He informed the employer and it was agreed that he would remain until the employer got another driver. It appears that the employer obtained a driver within *451 a week and that the new driver began work on the following Monday. A physician’s statement dated, April 15, 1946, is contained in the.file and claimant stated that this was the only occasion on which he had seen the physician and that he had .not seen a physician on occasion of the same illness prior to that time. It appeared that claimant’s chronic bronchitis existed although perhaps in a dormant state at the time that he undertook to drive a truck for the Capitol Barg Dry Cleaning Company.” •

Analyzing the evidence, the Referee said:

“The evidence in this case respecting claimant’s physical condition appeared to indicate that he suffered every once in a while from attacks of bronchitis which caused him to cough considerable and to be stopped up. The evidence indicates that at some previous time when claimant was operating a taxi cab that he had an attack of bronchitis and was very choked up. It appeared then that he was forced to quit the taxi cab company and that when he was again able to work, he returned to employment at the taxi cab company. The evidence also indicated that claimant sought medical attention only one time on April 15, 1946, and he stated that he did not consult this physician at any prior time during 1946.
“The evidence does not seem to sustain the company’s contention that claimant quit because he was dissatisfied with the rate of pay because there was evidence to indicate that claimant received more- pay after a new agreement was effected than he had prior to the effective date of the agreement.
“The evidence seems to indicate that claimant separated himself from the employment because he feared that continued participation in the job might affect his health. His physician’s certificate was dated a month after the date of his separation and it seems reasonable to believe that if claimant was actually ill at the time of his separation that he would have consulted physician before a month passed. Although claimant contended that at the time of his separation he was. weak and losing weight, that his appetite was poor and he did not sleep well, there does not appear to be any medical evidence which substantiates this condition.
“Although claimant contended that he frequently considered quitting the job because he felt that it was affecting his health on several previous occasions, the fact remains that he did not actually do so. There is no evidence to indicate that the conditions of work were any more difficult at the time of his separation than they were' at the time he *452 first undertook to perform the duties of the job. The facts indicate that when claimant decided to separate himself from the employment that he volunteered to remain at work until the employer had found a replacement. This appears to nullify his contention that he was unable to perform the work, if his separation was due to this reason, because had that been so, he would not have volunterred to remain until the employer found someone to replace him.
“The evidence indicates that claimant filed claiming benefits as of March 17, 1946, which is the date following the day he was separated. All of these facts seem to nullify claimant’s contention that the separation was due to inability to do the work. If claimant quit because of inability to perform the work, he would not be .able to work the next day on which he began to claim benefits. While a separation because of actual illness, would be a just cause, when a claimant was again able to work he would be bound to return to the work he had left if it was available or he would be ineligible for benefits, because in a similar circumstance the courts have held that a claimant in such a position is unable to work and unavailable for work in his usual trade or occupation.
“Accordingly, in this case it is believed that claimant voluntarily quit his job because of his fear that ill health would result from continuing to do the work. It does not appear that at the time of separation that claimant was in ill health. Consequently, it is believed that claimant voluntarily quit his work without just cause. Under the provisions of §1345-6-d-,(9) GC, the claim should be disallowed and benefits denied.”

The Referee’s decision was that the plaintiff had voluntarily quit his work without just cause and, therefore, disallowed the claim and denied benefits. The Board of Review denied his application for a further appeal.

The jurisdiction of the courts on appeal from the Board of Review is -limited by §1345-4 GC, to a determination of whether the decision was “unlawful, unreasonable, or against the manifest weight of the evidence.” If the decision is found to offend in any one of the respects named, the court-may reverse and vacate, or modify.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 N.E.2d 628, 83 Ohio App. 247, 51 Ohio Law. Abs. 449, 38 Ohio Op. 356, 1948 Ohio App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-bureau-of-unemployment-compensation-ohioctapp-1948.