D.L. Scrip, Jr. v. UCBR

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 2016
Docket2138 C.D. 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of D.L. Scrip, Jr. v. UCBR (D.L. Scrip, Jr. v. UCBR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.L. Scrip, Jr. v. UCBR, (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

David L. Scrip, Jr., : Petitioner : : v. : No. 2138 C.D. 2014 : Submitted: September 25, 2015 Unemployment Compensation : Board of Review, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: January 29, 2016

Petitioner David L. Scrip, Jr., (Claimant) petitions this Court for review of an order of the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board). The Board affirmed the Unemployment Compensation Referee’s (Referee) decision, thereby denying unemployment compensation benefits to Claimant under Section 402(e) of the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law).1 For the reasons discussed below, we reverse. Claimant filed for unemployment benefits after Washington County Juvenile Probation (Employer) terminated his employment on February 18, 2014. The Duquesne Service Center (Service Center) issued a determination finding

1 Act of December 5, 1936, Second Ex. Sess., P.L. (1937) 2897, as amended, 43 P.S. § 802(e). Claimant eligible for benefits. (Certified Record (C.R.), Item No. 5.) Employer appealed the Service Center’s determination, arguing that Claimant was fired for willful misconduct—namely, violating a directive not to spread rumors or undermine management. (C.R., Item No. 6.) At the evidentiary hearing before the Referee, Employer presented the testimony of Deputy Court Administrator for Probation Services Thomas S. Jess (Jess), Chief Juvenile Probation Officer Daniel Clements (Clements), and Juvenile Probation Officers Henry Billingsly (Billingsly), Monica Baronick (Baronick), Jason Kozar (Kozar), and Kelly Boyd (Boyd). Claimant testified on his own behalf. Jess testified that he fired Claimant on February 18, 2014, after receiving “information based on investigation that he was violating the president judge’s directive . . . [that] she wouldn’t tolerate further dissention and efforts to undermine the chief juvenile probation officer.” (Reproduced Record (R.R.) 14.) Jess testified that he “was told in February that . . . [Claimant] was spreading rumors and gossip to other probation officers that the assistant chief [(Karen LaBarre)] was going to see the president judge to complain about Chief Clements.” (R.R. 26.) According to Jess, several juvenile probation officers reported to Clements and a supervisory probation officer, Jack Thomas, that Claimant was spreading rumors about what he referred to as the LaBarre meeting, and then Clements and Thomas reported that information to Jess. (R.R. 27.) Clements told Jess that Claimant was saying that “Karen LaBarre, the assistant chief, was going to the president judge, [to] quote, gut chief juvenile probation officer Dan Clements.” (R.R. 37-38.) Jess further testified that Boyd “confirmed” to him that Claimant “was down at Ringgold High School, telling the probation

2 officers at the high school that Karen LaBarre was going to the president judge to complain.” (R.R. 28.) Jess stated that this undermined the leadership of the probation office because “[w]hen a probation officer’s [sic] going around, talking about the assistant chief having a meeting with the president judge about the chief, then the appearance is that the chief’s in trouble, and that’s not helping the environment to run an office.” (R.R. 40.) Jess also testified that several previous incidents of misconduct contributed to his decision to fire Claimant. (R.R. 14.) Specifically, he referenced an incident when Claimant failed to respond to an emergency call while on-call in August of 2012, (R.R. 17), and two times Claimant was “untruthful in Court,” once in March of 2012 and once in the summer of 2012, (R.R. 24-25). Billingsly testified that both he and Claimant were present at a meeting in August of 2012 where President Judge O’Dell Seneca told the entire juvenile probation office that she “will not tolerate any attacks . . . against Mr. Clements or our office.” (R.R. 53.) Baronick testified that she and Claimant parked near each other in the parking garage and frequently discussed work when they saw each other in the garage. (R.R. 58.) She further testified that Claimant once asked her if she knew about the meeting between LaBarre and the president judge or what the meeting was about. Baronick answered that she knew about the meeting and that, while she did not know what the meeting was about, she speculated that it could be about a heated conversation she overheard the previous day between LaBarre and Ray Thomas. (R.R. 59.) Baronick testified that Claimant brought up the meeting and “just asked me if I knew what it’s [sic] about.” (R.R. 59.)

3 Kozar testified that while at Ringgold High School, Claimant asked him “if I heard about a meeting between Ms. LaBarre and the president judge.” (R.R. 65.) Kozar replied that he had not heard about the meeting, and the conversation moved to another topic. (R.R. 65-66.) Kozar further testified that while this conversation was taking place, a secretary and some students were in or around the office and may have overheard some of it. (R.R. 66.) After Claimant was fired, Kozar reported the conversation to Clements because he “didn’t have good vibes” about it. (R.R. 67.) Boyd, also present for the conversation at Ringgold High School, testified that Claimant made a comment about LaBarre going to see the president judge and then left. (R.R. 70.) Boyd testified that he had not known about any meeting between LaBarre and the president judge. (R.R. 70.) He also testified that there were no adults present in the guidance office to overhear the conversation and could not recall whether there were any students around at the time. (R.R. 70.) Boyd told Jess about the conversation at Ringgold High School when Jess asked him about it, after Claimant was fired. (R.R. 71.) Clements testified that he learned about Claimant’s questions from Jack Thomas, who told Clements that “Mr. Boyd and others had told [Mr. Thomas] that [Claimant] was going around, talking to [probation officers], saying that Ms. LaBarre was going to have a conversation with the president judge (inaudible), Tom Jess, and myself.” (R.R. 79.) Clements further testified that hearing this made him feel “not good” and that he felt Claimant was undermining him because “anytime you (inaudible) indicating what conversation may or may not take place with - - regarding somebody, I think that’s undermining somebody, yes.”

4 (R.R. 79.) Clements testified that when he confronted Claimant, Claimant did not deny repeating that the meeting was taking place. (R.R. 80.) On cross-examination, Clements testified as follows: CL: . . . Now when Mr. Scrip made a comment to Mr. Kozar and the comment apparently was did you hear Karen LaBarre’s going to have a meeting with the judge, that was the comment he made? .... [CLEMENTS]: . . . I believe that was the context of the conversation, yes. CL: Okay. And so what? An employee is not allowed, in your office, to say to another employee, doesn’t so-and-so have a meeting with so-and-so next week? [CLEMENTS]: Oh, they certainly are allowed to say that, yes. .... CL: Okay. So what was wrong about Scrip making that comment? .... [CLEMENTS]: It’s inappropriate. CL: How? [CLEMENTS]: I think I can figure out what he’s doing when he asked that. CL: Okay. What was he doing? [CLEMENTS]: Putting his nose in somewhere where it doesn’t belong. It doesn’t concern him. He should be doing probation work. (R.R. 85-86.) Claimant testified that he asked Kozar, Baronick, and Boyd whether they knew anything about a meeting taking place between Karen LaBarre and the president judge. (R.R. 91, 106.) Claimant believed the meeting was about the distribution of overtime and Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) training, issues which concerned him as a member of the office. (R.R.

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D.L. Scrip, Jr. v. UCBR, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dl-scrip-jr-v-ucbr-pacommwct-2016.