Department of Labor, Licensing & Regulation v. Hider

706 A.2d 1073, 349 Md. 71, 1998 Md. LEXIS 150
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 11, 1998
Docket63, Sept. Term, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 706 A.2d 1073 (Department of Labor, Licensing & Regulation v. Hider) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Labor, Licensing & Regulation v. Hider, 706 A.2d 1073, 349 Md. 71, 1998 Md. LEXIS 150 (Md. 1998).

Opinion

RODOWSKY, Judge.

This is an unemployment compensation case. The Board of Appeals (the Board), applying Maryland Code (1991, 1997 Cum.Supp.), § 8-1003 of the Labor and Employment Article, temporarily disqualified two claimants from receiving unemployment compensation insurance benefits based on a finding of misconduct. 1 In the judicial review process the Court of Special Appeals concluded that the Board had erred as a matter of law in two respects. Hider v. Department of Labor, *74 Licensing & Regulation, 115 Md.App. 258, 693 A.2d 17 (1997). First, the intermediate appellate court considered that the Board had found misconduct on a basis other than the basis on which the employer relied for terminating the claimants’ employment. Id. at 276, 693 A.2d at 25. Second, the court concluded that § 8-1003 required intentional conduct. Id. at 281, 693 A.2d at 28. As explained below, we shall reinstate the decision of the Board.

The claimants, Barbara M. Hider (Hider) and Virginia L. White (White), were employed by North Arundel Nursing and Convalescent Center, Inc. (the Nursing Home). The Nursing Home terminated the employment of Hider and White on the day after an emergency situation arose involving a chronically ill, sixty-nine-year-old patient at the Nursing Home (the Patient). A claims examiner in the Office of Unemployment Insurance determined that Hider and White were not disqualified. The Nursing Home administratively appealed, and an evidentiary hearing was held before a hearing examiner of the Board.

The hearing examiner concluded that Hider and White were temporarily disqualified because they were “discharged for misconduct connected with the work within the meaning of [§ 8-1003].” The Board affirmed, adopting the findings of fact and conclusions of law of the hearing examiner. On the claimants’ petition for judicial review, the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County affirmed. That judgment was reversed by the Court of Special Appeals. Hider, swpra.

This Court then granted the petition for certiorari of the Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (the Department) that raises two questions:

“1. Did the lower court err by failing to apply the substantial evidence test to the Board’s factual finding that claimants were discharged from their employment for failing to respond to an emergency situation?
“2. Did the lower court err by interpreting the simple ‘misconduct’ provision in the unemployment insurance law to apply only to purposeful misbehavior?”

*75 Before the hearing examiner five witnesses testified for the employer and five for the claimants, compiling an agency record of testimony and exhibits comprising 917 pages. The overview of this record is that the Patient lived in a part of the Nursing Home designated as Station Two Back. On October 6, 1994, the day of the events giving rise to this case, Robin Anderson (Anderson), a licensed practical nurse (LPN), was assigned to Station Two Back and was immediately in charge of the Patient. White, an LPN and a nursing supervisor, was that day responsible for Station Two Back and for two other nursing stations. Hider, a registered nurse, was the Assistant Director of Nursing. Hider had been employed by the Nursing Home from November 1989, and White had been employed there from August 1992.

Employer’s witnesses, Activities Director Sandra Osborne (Osborne), Assessment Nurse Melinda Miller (Miller), and Food Services Supervisor Lorraine Hill, testified that at approximately 12:30 p.m. on October 6, 1994, a page was broadcast into the multi-purpose room where they, along with Hider, were working on resident care plans. White, who was also in the room on a break, answered the page on the telephone in the multi-purpose room and, after hanging up, turned to those gathered in the room and asked if they had ever heard the Patient complain of his heart hurting. Miller responded that she had not and that such a complaint warranted further investigation. Hider then asked White to help her retrieve supplies from Hider’s car for a bridal shower that was to be held in the Nursing Home later that same day. According to Osborne, White replied, “ ‘[Wje’ll get the food out of the car, and then we’ll dial 911 when we get back.’ ” Hider and White left the multi-purpose room, laughing, and exited the building.

Concerned for the well-being of the Patient, Miller left the multi-purpose room to check on him. When she arrived at the Patient’s room, she found him to have an elevated pulse, to be diaphoretic (ie., sweating profusely), and to be stating repeatedly, “My heart hurts.” After consulting with Director of *76 Nursing Marcy Eley (Eley), Miller called 911, and the Patient was transferred by ambulance to North Arundel Hospital.

Before the hearing examiner, Hider and White denied that a page ever came into the multi-purpose room regarding the Patient’s condition. They stated that the first time the Patient’s status was brought to their attention was in the hallway as they were about to exit the building. There Anderson, the charge nurse, approached Hider and White to give them an update of the Patient’s condition. Hider and White both testified that Anderson did not ask them for assistance or convey to them in any way that the Patient was in distress. They said that Anderson simply wanted to make them aware that she had medicated the Patient for agitation in accordance with a physician’s instructions. Hider testified that she asked Anderson what the Patient’s vital signs were and, when Anderson replied that she had not taken them, both Hider and White instructed her to return to the Patient’s room and take his vital signs. Hider and White then left the building and returned in approximately five minutes to discover that 911 had been called for the Patient.

Anderson, called as a witness by the claimants, testified that when she approached Hider and White in the hallway she told them that she thought the Patient should be sent to an acute care hospital via 911 because he was complaining of chest pains. Although she did not use the word, “emergency,” when referring to the Patient’s condition, Anderson testified that she conveyed to Hider and White her opinion that it was indeed an emergency and that the Patient should be evaluated at an acute care hospital. Anderson testified that Hider and White instructed her to return to the Patient’s room and take his vital signs. Anderson said that White appeared to be confused when Anderson spoke to the latter in the hall and that it later occurred to Anderson that White may not have been the person who responded to the page.

On October 7, 1994, following a brief fact-finding investigation, the Nursing Home’s Administrator, Sandra Mennerick (Mennerick), and Director of Nursing Eley, met with Hider *77 and White to discuss what had transpired the preceding day. The meeting ended with the termination of Hider and White.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 A.2d 1073, 349 Md. 71, 1998 Md. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-labor-licensing-regulation-v-hider-md-1998.