Mario Vasquez, Relator v. Safe-Way Bus Co., Department of Employment and Economic Development

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 20, 2014
DocketA14-226
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mario Vasquez, Relator v. Safe-Way Bus Co., Department of Employment and Economic Development (Mario Vasquez, Relator v. Safe-Way Bus Co., Department of Employment and Economic Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mario Vasquez, Relator v. Safe-Way Bus Co., Department of Employment and Economic Development, (Mich. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-0226

Mario Vasquez, Relator,

vs.

Safe-Way Bus Co., Respondent,

Department of Employment and Economic Development, Respondent.

Filed October 20, 2014 Affirmed Larkin, Judge Dissenting, Smith, Judge

Department of Employment and Economic Development File No. 31696368-4

Mario M. Vasquez, Minneapolis, Minnesota (pro se relator)

Safe-Way Bus Co., Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota (respondent)

Lee B. Nelson, Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development, St. Paul, Minnesota (for respondent department)

Considered and decided by Smith, Presiding Judge; Larkin, Judge; and Bjorkman,

Judge. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

LARKIN, Judge

Relator challenges an unemployment-law judge’s decision that he is ineligible for

unemployment benefits because he was discharged for employment misconduct. We

affirm.

FACTS

On May 9, 2013, relator Mario Vasquez began working for respondent Safe-Way

Bus Co. as a school bus driver. He was discharged on September 25 after another Safe-

Way employee reported that he had used his cellular phone while driving. Vasquez

applied for unemployment benefits, and respondent Minnesota Department of

Employment and Economic Development (DEED) sent information requests to Vasquez

and Safe-Way.

In response to the request, Safe-Way’s president stated that Vasquez was

terminated because his use of a cellular phone while driving violated Minnesota law1 and

company policy. She submitted a copy of Safe-Way’s employee handbook, which

included the policy. The policy reads, “You are not to use a cellular telephone while

driving the bus. You are not to use a ‘hands-free’ headset for a cellular phone while

driving the bus. You are not to text while driving the bus. Using a cell phone while

1 “A school bus driver may not operate a school bus while communicating over, or otherwise operating, a cellular phone for personal reasons, whether handheld or hands free, when the vehicle is in motion or a part of traffic.” Minn. Stat. § 169.443, subd. 9(b) (Supp. 2013).

2 driving will result in termination.” The president stated that Vasquez was made aware of

this policy during training and monthly driver in-service meetings and that signs posted

throughout Safe-Way’s property reminded drivers not to use cellular phones while

operating buses. She also stated that Vasquez was warned about the policy two days

before he was discharged.

In Vasquez’s response to DEED’s information request, he stated that he was aware

of Safe-Way’s policy and acknowledged being warned about it shortly before his

discharge. He admitted that he “neglected” to silence his cellular phone before work on

September 25, that the phone rang while he was driving, that he removed the phone from

his pocket, and that he “glanced at it to shut off the ringer because it annoyed [him] while

driving.” But he denied violating Safe-Way’s policy.

Based on this information, DEED determined that Vasquez was ineligible for

unemployment benefits. The department found that Vasquez had violated Safe-Way’s

policy and committed employment misconduct because he “had his cell phone on while

driving the bus.”

Vasquez appealed the determination, and an unemployment-law judge (ULJ)

convened an evidentiary hearing on November 22. Safe-Way’s president and Vasquez

testified at the hearing. The president testified that she had warned Vasquez about the

company’s cellular-phone policy on September 23, after a bus aide reported that Vasquez

had used his phone while driving. She stated that she had “a very, very specific

conversation with [Vasquez] in regards to the cell phone, that it is against the law, that

it’s against company policy, and that it isn’t to be tolerated.” She advised Vasquez “that

3 this was his only warning for this behavior and if it happened again he would be

terminated.” She also told him, “[I]f you need to have your cell phone on you then make

sure the ringer is off. If, if you don’t think you can remember to do that, leave your cell

phone on my desk during the route. . . . Therefore, you won’t be tempted or distracted by

the ring or using it.”

The president also testified that on September 25, the same bus aide reported that

Vasquez once again used his cell phone while driving. She stated that she met with

Vasquez in her office and asked him whether he remembered their conversation from two

days earlier and whether he had used his cellular phone. She stated that Vasquez did not

immediately respond, but he eventually answered that he had used his cellular phone after

she told him that not responding to her question “was not favorable on his behalf.”

Vasquez testified that he was aware of the company’s cellular-phone policy before

September 23, but he denied that he had talked on his cellular phone while driving or that

he admitted otherwise to Safe-Way’s president. He stated that while he was driving on

September 25, his cellular phone rang, he took it out of his pocket, and he turned it off.

The ULJ asked Vasquez if he was told to have his cellular phone silenced while driving,

and Vasquez responded, “I believe [the company president], she did tell me that . . . she

did tell me that it should be kept on in silence.”

The ULJ determined that Vasquez had committed employment misconduct and

was therefore ineligible to receive unemployment benefits. The ULJ found that Vasquez

had “talked” on his cellular phone while driving on September 23, was subsequently

advised “to turn his phone to silent or leave the phone in [the president’s] office to avoid

4 being distracted by the phone,” and “answered” his cellular phone after it rang while he

was driving on September 25. The ULJ also found that the president’s testimony was

more credible than Vasquez’s because “Vasquez’s testimony was hesitant and evasive”

while the president’s was “more detailed and consistent.”

Vasquez requested reconsideration, arguing that he had been prejudiced by his

inability to question the bus aide who had reported the cellular phone use and that his act

of silencing the ringer on his cellular phone did not constitute “use” of the cellular phone.

The ULJ affirmed the determination that Vasquez was ineligible for unemployment

benefits because he had committed employment misconduct, reasoning that a “[ULJ] is

permitted to consider hearsay testimony” and that Safe-Way’s president had testified that

Vasquez admitted to using the cellular phone on September 25. The ULJ further found

that Vasquez’s specific acts, described as “removing his cell phone from his pocket while

it was ringing, looking at it, and turning it off,” constituted “use” of the cellular phone

and employment misconduct.

Vasquez appeals by writ of certiorari.

DECISION

This court may reverse or modify a ULJ’s decision “if the substantial rights of the

petitioner may have been prejudiced because the findings, inferences, conclusion, or

decision” are “unsupported by substantial evidence in view of the entire record as

submitted” or “affected by other error of law.” 2014 Minn. Laws ch. 271, art. 1, § 1, at

1028-29 (to be codified at Minn. Stat. § 268.105, subd. 7(d) (2014)). Substantial

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