Mary Ann Dewes v. Division of Employment Security

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 7, 2023
DocketWD85578
StatusPublished

This text of Mary Ann Dewes v. Division of Employment Security (Mary Ann Dewes v. Division of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mary Ann Dewes v. Division of Employment Security, (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District

MARY ANN DEWES,  WD85578  Appellant,  OPINION FILED:  v.  February 7, 2023   DIVISION OF EMPLOYMENT  SECURITY,   Respondent.  

Appeal from the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission

Before Division Three: Thomas N. Chapman, P.J., Mark D. Pfeiffer and Cynthia L. Martin, JJ.

Mary Dewes (“Dewes”) appeals an order of the Labor and Industrial Relations

Commission (“Commission”) that purported to dismiss as untimely her application for review of

an “April 11, 2021” decision (regarding overpayment of unemployment compensation benefits)

by the Appeals Tribunal. However, no such Appeals Tribunal decision was issued on April 11,

2021.1 Because the Commission’s dismissal order fails to provide any indication that the

1 In her first application for review (which appears to have been submitted to the Commission on or about August 2, 2021), Dewes sought review of a May 28, 2021 Appeals Tribunal Corrected Decision, which denied her relief from a Division of Employment Security deputy’s determination that she had been overpaid unemployment compensation benefits. In said first application for review, Dewes alleged that the copy of the decision she received in the mail only included three of the seven pages of the May 28, 2021 Corrected Decision and did not include the last page setting out her right to apply for review. On September 3, 2021, the Commission issued an order which indicated Dewes’s application for review alleged facts that, if true, might bear on the timeliness of her application for review, and which instructed the Appeals Tribunal to develop evidence regarding matters bearing on the timeliness of said application for review and to then return the entire record to the Commission. Rather than merely developing a record regarding the timeliness of Dewes’s application for review, the Appeals Tribunal conducted a hearing and Commission addressed the appropriate application for review or that the Commission identified

the correct date of the Appeals Tribunal decision, we remand to the Commission for the

Commission to address the timeliness of Dewes’s application for review of the May 28, 2021

decision of the Appeals Tribunal, and, if timely, to address Dewes’s application for review in

accordance with section 288.200.

Background

On January 15, 2021, the Division of Employment Security (“Division”) mailed to

Dewes a notice of its determination that Dewes had received an overpayment of unemployment

benefits in the amount of $1,947.00. The determination notice indicated that Dewes had been

paid during a period of ineligibility (May 30, 2020 to August 8, 2020) due to Dewes’s

“unintentional error, omission, or lack of knowledge of material fact.” The notice indicated that

the Division would collect restitution pursuant to section 288.380.2

Dewes appealed the overpayment determination to the Appeals Tribunal. On May 26,

2021, a telephone hearing was held. The Division of Employment Security’s Exhibit 1 was

introduced into evidence. Exhibit 1 was described in the transcripts as a nineteen-page packet of

documents. At the hearing, Dewes was asked whether she had received a determination of

ineligibility mailed September 14, 2020, which was described by the Appeals Tribunal as being

issued a decision on April 11, 2022, finding that Dewes’s application for review was untimely, and determining that the deputy’s order had thus become final. On April 22, 2022, Dewes filed another application for review (this time of the April 11, 2022 Appeals Tribunal decision). On July 6, the Commission issued its order dismissing as untimely Dewes’s application to review a decision of the Appeals Tribunal issued on “April 11, 2021” (which is not the date of either of the Appeals Tribunal’s decisions). In a footnote to its July 6, 2022 Order of Dismissal, the Commission noted that the Appeals Tribunal had failed to correctly follow its orders upon remand, and found that the Appeals Tribunal Order of April 11, 2022 was a nullity. 2 Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to RSMo 2016.

2 the last page of Exhibit 1.3 Dewes testified that she had never received that document. Dewes

testified further that she and her family had moved to Florida on September 17, 2020. Dewes

was then asked whether she had filed an appeal of that September 14, 2020 determination.

Dewes testified that she did not because she would have had no reason to file an appeal without

knowing there was a reason to file such an appeal.

Following the hearing, the Appeals Tribunal issued a “Corrected Decision of Appeals

Tribunal” (“Corrected Decision”),4 which listed a date of mailing as May 28, 2021. The Appeals

Tribunal identified the issue of the hearing as whether Dewes was overpaid regular

unemployment benefits for the period from May 24, 2020 through August 8, 2020. The Appeals

Tribunal found that, on September 14, 2020, a deputy had determined that Dewes was ineligible

for benefits beginning May 24, 2020, because she had “reasonable assurance.” The Appeals

Tribunal found that Dewes had not filed an appeal of that September 14, 2020 determination,

3 The deputy’s ineligibility determination that was described as containing a mailing date of September 14, 2020 is curiously not contained in our record on appeal. Such a document was described in the transcripts as having been introduced into evidence at the hearing as page 19 of the Division’s Exhibit 1. Regarding appeals of disputed determinations, section 288.190.2 provides that “[a] full and complete record shall be kept of all proceedings in connection with a disputed determination . . . . The appeals tribunal shall include in the record and consider as evidence all records of the division that are material to the issues. . . .” Our record on appeal contains the transcripts of the May 26, 2021 hearing. Following the hearing, the transcripts contain a certification that attached were exhibits introduced into evidence at the hearing, specifically identifying the Division’s Exhibit 1 as said exhibit. However, the pages that follow the certification in the transcripts do not track the exhibit as described at the hearing and do not appear to contain the September 14, 2021 determination notice. 4 It is unclear from the record whether the Appeals Tribunal ever issued an initial decision prior to the Corrected Decision or when that initial decision was mailed as opposed to the Corrected Decision. The record on appeal appears to contain only the Corrected Decision, which exists in a peculiar format in which the text of the body of the decision is duplicated following a large blank space on the lower half of the third page of the document and the top half of the fourth page of the document. The reason for the duplication of the text following the blank space is unclear. Both the initial text and the duplicated text of the Corrected Decision indicated that it was “re-issued following the correction of certain information that was erroneously entered into the UInteract portal on May 26, 2021.” The Corrected Decision did not provide further explanation of the necessity of the issuance of the Corrected Decision. On the seventh page of the Corrected Decision, following the duplication of the text of the body of the decision, the Corrected Decision indicated that the Corrected Decision was “[d]ated and mailed at Jefferson City, Missouri, this 28th day of May, 2021.”

3 which had since become final. Thus, the Appeals Tribunal did not address the correctness of the

deputy’s determination that Dewes had erroneously been paid benefits for which a deputy had

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Related

Foster v. Division of Employment Security
360 S.W.3d 851 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2011)
Huckaby v. Division of Employment Security
363 S.W.3d 52 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2011)

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Mary Ann Dewes v. Division of Employment Security, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mary-ann-dewes-v-division-of-employment-security-moctapp-2023.