McClaflin v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office
This text of 126 P.3d 288 (McClaflin v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Petitioner, Susan B. McClaflin (claimant), seeks review of a final order of the Industrial Claim Appeals Office (Panel) affirming a hearing officer’s decision determining that claimant was ineligible to receive unemployment benefits. We affirm.
A deputy determined that claimant was ineligible to receive benefits during the applicable period because she was not actively seeking work as required under the statutory scheme. See § 8 — 73—107(l)(g)(I), C.R.S. 2005. Claimant appealed, and the matter proceeded to a hearing.
The hearing officer found that claimant, a long-time employee of King Soopers (employer), was diagnosed with carpal tunnel syndrome and was placed on leave, during which she had surgery to correct her condition. [289]*289He found that when claimant was eventually released to work, employer did not provide claimant with any work hours.
The hearing officer further found that claimant then filed a claim for unemployment benefits but did not attempt to seek other work, in part because her union agreement prohibited her from seeking or accepting other employment. He found that seeking other work could have jeopardized claimant’s “disability” (that is, workers’ compensation) claim. Nevertheless, the hearing officer found that, after filing her claim for unemployment benefits, claimant, by her own admission, did not contact any other employers and did not make an active search for work. After concluding that the work search eligibility requirement was clear and unambiguous, the hearing officer determined that claimant was ineligible to receive benefits.
Claimant appealed the hearing officer’s decision, and the Panel affirmed. The Panel concluded that the evidence clearly established claimant did not seek work as required under the statutory scheme. The Panel also concluded that claimant had failed to demonstrate she should be exempt from the work search eligibility requirement because of her circumstances.
On appeal, claimant contends that the Panel erred in affirming the hearing officer’s decision that she was ineligible to receive benefits. We disagree.
I.
Claimant first argues that she actually satisfied the work-seeking requirement because she sought work from employer. However, claimant failed to raise this argument to the Panel. Instead, claimant argued that she should be excused from the work-seeking requirement because of the potential consequences to her employment status and her workers’ compensation claim. Indeed, in her brief to the Panel, claimant essentially admitted that she did not comply with the work-seeking requirement and that she “effectively elected the lesser of two evils” when she did not actively seek work with another employer.
Under these circumstances, we decline to consider this argument. See Hart v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 914 P.2d 406 (Colo.App.1995) (appellate court declined to consider issue because claimant failed to raise it before the Panel and, therefore, failed to preserve it for review).
II.
Claimant also contends that the hearing officer and the Panel should have excused her failure to satisfy the work-seeking requirement because application of that requirement is inequitable under the circumstances. We perceive no error.
An unemployed individual is eligible to receive benefits with respect to any week only if the Division finds that the individual “is actively seeking work.” See § 8-73-107(l)(g)(I). Department of Labor & Employment Regulation 2.8.4 provides that a claimant must make reasonable and diligent efforts actively to seek suitable work unless otherwise relieved of this requirement by virtue of (1) participation in approved job training, (2) job attachment, or (3) limited job opportunities pursuant to statute or regulation. Fulfillment of this obligation is a prerequisite to receiving unemployment compensation benefits. See Arteaga v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, 781 P.2d 98 (Colo.App.1989).
Here, claimant has failed to demonstrate that any of the three possible bases for relief from the work-seeking requirement was satisfied. Claimant clearly is not participating in a job training program. Nor has she demonstrated, or even claimed, that she is “job attached” as defined by Department of Labor & Employment Regulation 2.8.2. Indeed, in an earlier decision in this case, a hearing officer specifically determined that claimant was not job attached. Finally, claimant is not faced with “limited job opportunities,” which the regulations specifically limit to circumstances in which a search for work would be fruitless “due to economic conditions within the labor-market area.” See Dep’t of Labor & Employment Reg. 2.8.4.5.
Claimant’s reliance on § 8-3-103, C.R.S. 2005, is unavailing. The portion of that stat[290]*290ute cited by claimant merely provides that nothing in the Colorado Labor Peace Act shall be construed to deprive an employee of unemployment benefits he or she “might otherwise be entitled to receive under any other laws of the state of Colorado.” Claimant fails to explain how that language would render her eligible to receive unemployment benefits when she is otherwise ineligible under the state statutory scheme.
Claimant further cites to § 8-73-108(l)(a), C.R.S.2005, which sets forth the overarching principle that unemployment insurance is for the benefit of persons who become unemployed through no fault of their own. However, this statute addresses entitlement rather than eligibility. See Arteaga v. Indus. Claim Appeals Office, supra. Indeed, it specifies that “each eligible individual who is unemployed through no fault of his own shall be entitled to receive a full award of benefits” (emphasis added). Once again, here claimant failed to establish that she was eligible to receive benefits.
Claimant’s reliance on § 8-40-102(1), C.R.S.2005, is equally unpersuasive. That subsection merely expresses the General Assembly’s intent regarding the interpretation of Colorado’s workers’ compensation statutes. It does not discuss unemployment benefits much less authorize the modification or relaxation of eligibility requirements for receiving such benefits.
In sum, claimant has failed to demonstrate that the hearing officer or the Panel erred in declining to excuse her from the statutory eligibility requirement of actively seeking work. While claimant was certainly free, based upon her circumstances, to refuse to seek work from other potential employers, we are not persuaded that the unemployment fund should bear the expense of that refusal. See Bayly Mfg. Co. v. Dep’t of Employment, 155 Colo. 433, 395 P.2d 216 (1964) (citing Hallaban v. Riley, 94 N.H. 48, 45 A.2d 886 (1946); unemployment statute was not designed to finance apparently hopeless quest for claimant’s old job or job paying equal wages, and although claimant may continue to refuse lower paying jobs, she must do so at her own expense rather than that of the unemployment fund).
The order is affirmed.
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126 P.3d 288, 2005 Colo. App. LEXIS 1612, 2005 WL 2456885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclaflin-v-industrial-claim-appeals-office-coloctapp-2005.