In Re Grievance of Hurlburt

2003 VT 2, 820 A.2d 186, 175 Vt. 40, 2003 Vt. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 10, 2003
Docket01-138
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2003 VT 2 (In Re Grievance of Hurlburt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Grievance of Hurlburt, 2003 VT 2, 820 A.2d 186, 175 Vt. 40, 2003 Vt. LEXIS 2 (Vt. 2003).

Opinion

Skoglund, J.

¶ 1. Grievant Randy Hurlburt appeals from an order of the Vermont Labor Relations Board (VLRB or Board) dismissing his grievance. Grievant claims that his employer did not have just cause to dismiss him. He further claims that the Board upheld his dismissal for reasons different from those given by his employer when dismissing him, thereby violating his due process right to notice. We find no support for these claims and affirm.

*42 ¶ 2. Grievant was employed by the State (employer) for approximately twenty years. From 1995 until his dismissal in February 2000, he was employed as a supervisor in the Department of Buildings and General Services Microphotography Section in Middlesex. During that period, his overall performance was consistently rated average or above average. He was disciplined three times during his twenty year tenure with the state, resulting in suspension twice and one written reprimand.

¶ 3. From the facts as found by the VLRB, we learn the following: grievant’s supervisory responsibilities included overseeing the unit in which his girlfriend, Catherine MacDonald, worked. As of November 1999, grievant and MacDonald had lived together in Waterbury for approximately three years. On November 24, 1999, the day before Thanksgiving, grievant took the day off from work to go hunting. After hunting, grievant drove to pick up MacDonald from work at the parking lot on employer’s premises. Upon arrival, grievant appeared intoxicated, and MacDonald suggested that she drive home. A disagreement between the two ensued and resulted in shoving. Grievant and MacDonald then got into the vehicle, and along with MacDonald’s two children, left the premises. Before arriving at their apartment, grievant got out of the vehicle. MacDonald drove to the apartment with her children.

¶ 4. Grievant arrived at the apartment soon thereafter. He kicked MacDonald in the back and then shoved MacDonald into a chair, causing her to fall to the floor. After several further confrontations with grievant, MacDonald and her children left the apartment and walked approximately four miles to the Vermont State Police barracks in Middlesex. Arrangements were then made for MacDonald and her children to stay at a battered women’s shelter.

¶ 5. MacDonald and her children spent the Thanksgiving holiday at the battered women’s shelter. The next day, MacDonald filed a complaint against grievant requesting emergency relief from abuse, in which she detailed the events described above in an affidavit and stated that she was afraid of grievant. A Temporary Relief from Abuse Order (TRO) was granted. The TRO mandated that grievant “shall not telephone, write to, contact or otherwise communicate with the plaintiff in any way... this includes any work related contact.” It further provided that grievant “shall not place himself within 500 feet of plaintiff individually or... plaintiff’s children and residence. While at'work Defendant shall not place himself within 50 feet of plaintiff.”

¶ 6. On Monday, November 29, grievant informed unit supervisor John Yacavoni that he had been served with a TRO. Yacavoni ordered grievant *43 to abide by the TRO. Yacavoni also warned grievant to stay away from MacDonald or find himself in additional trouble.

¶ 7. Over the next two days, grievant, while at work, sent eight e-mail messages to MacDonald. After sending these messages, grievant enlisted the help of the office computer system administrator to delete them. Although the e-mail messages were deleted, they were not erased from the “wastebasket” in MacDonald’s e-mail account. These e-mail messages were later discovered by MacDonald and shown to the police.

¶ 8. On December 3, grievant was arraigned in Barre District Court on the charge of domestic assault. Among his conditions of release were that he “shall not purchase, possess or consume any alcoholic beverages... shall not associate with Catherine MacDonald, nor personally contact, harass, or cause to be harassed same,” and that he “shall not be within fifty feet of victim.”

¶ 9. On December 6, Yacavoni observed both grievant and MacDonald smoking cigarettes on a loading dock, which is one of the office’s two smoking areas. They were less than fifty feet apart. On the same or following day, a co-worker approached the interior smoking room and heard grievant and MacDonald arguing therein. The co-worker overheard MacDonald mentioning something about “victim’s assistance,” and grievant talking about the “new friends” MacDonald was making. Two days later, Yacavoni relieved grievant of any supervisory responsibilities over the unit in which MacDonald worked.

¶ 10. On December 13, Vermont State Trooper Barney went to grievant’s apartment to issue grievant a citation for violating the TRO as a result of the e-mail messages grievant sent to MacDonald. When Trooper Barney arrived, she found MacDonald and grievant together in the apartment; this was a direct violation of grievant’s court-ordered conditions of release. The following day, grievant was arraigned in Barre District Court on charges that he violated both the TRO and his conditions of release. The court imposed additional conditions of release, including the condition that grievant abide by the previous conditions of release imposed on December 3.

¶ 11. On the evening of December 16, grievant violated several conditions of his release: grievant drank alcohol, had contact with MacDonald, and did not abide by his curfew. As a result, he was arrested. Grievant was incarcerated until Monday, December 20. During this period, grievant missed two days of work and did not inform Yacavoni of his incarceration until the day following his release. Grievant submitted a time sheet claiming eight hours of sick leave for the work days he missed while incarcerated. Employer denied grievant’s request for sick leave and *44 classified his absence while incarcerated as unauthorized. On December 21, grievant entered a residential alcohol treatment program. Yacavoni authorized grievant to take sick leave for this absence.

¶ 12. On December 30, Bradley Ferland, business manager for employer, sent a letter warning grievant that violating his conditions of release would be viewed as workplace misconduct that could lead to dismissal. The letter ordered grievant:

not to have contact or communication with Catherine [MacDonald] or be within 50 feet of her while at work. You are hereby ordered as a condition of your employment to adhere to any and all such conditions. I am notifying you that any violation of these conditions will be treated as misconduct and work place discipline up to and including dismissal will follow.

¶ 13. Grievant returned to work on Monday, January 3, 2000. To enable grievant to abide by the court-imposed restrictions and Ferland’s directive, Yacavoni created an arrangement requiring grievant to contact someone in the unit where MacDonald worked, who would then ask MacDonald to leave the area, when grievant had to enter that unit. However, grievant and MacDonald were observed conversing in her work area contrary to the arrangement and in violation of his supervisors’ orders. Additionally, on January 4, a co-worker observed MacDonald and grievant together in grievant’s office.

¶ 14.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 VT 2, 820 A.2d 186, 175 Vt. 40, 2003 Vt. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grievance-of-hurlburt-vt-2003.