May v. Employment Division
This text of 662 P.2d 801 (May v. Employment Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Claimants were discharged from their employment with Cascade Steel Rolling Mills, Inc., for allegedly smoking marijuana while at work. They seek judicial review of an Employment Appeals Board (EAB) decision denying unemployment insurance benefits for misconduct connected with their work under ORS 657.176 and OAR 471-30-038.1
After they were discharged, claimants applied for unemployment benefits, and the claims were allowed. Following a hearing requested by employer, the referee affirmed that decision in each case. In his decisions, the referee concluded that the rule on which employer relied to justify the discharge of claimants was not in effect at the time they were fired. He found:
“(8) On Sept. 2, 1981, the personnel representative, from an office window, saw claimant take a puff on a cigarette. (9) Employer then thought he saw claimant hand the cigarette to [211]*211another claimant. (10) The personnel manager and the head of the fence department then walked out to the picnic table where claimant and three fellow employees were seated. (11) When the personnel representative and the head of the fence department were within 25 feet of the table where the four employees were seated, the personnel representative thought he could smell marijuana smoke. (12) Both the personnel representative and the head of the fence department thought from the gestures and mannerisms of the claimant and fellow employees that they had smoked marijuana. (13) Employer discharged claimant, because he thought claimant had smoked marijuana on the job.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Employer then appealed to EAB. EAB reversed the referee’s decision, concluding that claimants had been discharged for misconduct in connection with their work and for that reason they were disqualified from receiving benefits. Rather than make its own findings, EAB found those facts found by the referee to be “proper and complete” and accepted them as its own. See OAR 471-41-020(1)(d). Thus, EAB’s decision was based on a crucial finding of fact neither it nor the referee made: that claimants had in fact smoked marijuana as alleged. Accordingly, we agree with claimants’ contention that without a finding on that question, EAB’s decision is not supported by its findings.2 See Davidson v. Employment Division, 48 Or App 119, 616 P2d 540 (1980).
Reversed and remanded for reconsideration.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
662 P.2d 801, 63 Or. App. 208, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-employment-division-orctapp-1983.