McGowan v. Executive Express Transportation Enterprises, Inc.

420 N.W.2d 592, 1988 Minn. LEXIS 47, 1988 WL 22033
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 18, 1988
DocketC0-87-572
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 420 N.W.2d 592 (McGowan v. Executive Express Transportation Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGowan v. Executive Express Transportation Enterprises, Inc., 420 N.W.2d 592, 1988 Minn. LEXIS 47, 1988 WL 22033 (Mich. 1988).

Opinion

YETKA, Justice.

This is an appeal from a split decision of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, 411 N.W. 2d 593, affirming a determination of respondent Commissioner of Jobs and Training that relator Linda McGowan was disqualified from receiving unemployment compensation benefits due to misconduct. Relator, a delivery driver, was terminated for refusing to pick up a personal prescription for her supervisor, the president of respondent Executive Express Transportation Enterprises, Inc.

The commissioner’s representative concluded that relator’s refusal constituted misconduct under Minn.Stat. § 268.09, *593 subd. 1(2) (1984). The Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed in a split decision. The majority concluded: (1) the findings of the commissioner reasonably support the conclusion that relator’s actions constituted misconduct connected with work and (2) the employer’s request to pick up the prescription was reasonable under these circumstances. The dissent concluded that relator’s conduct did not establish the culpability necessary for disqualification under either the statute or Tilseth v. Midwest Lumber Co., 295 Minn. 372, 204 N.W.2d 644 (1973). McGowan appeals. We affirm.

The material facts are not in dispute. Relator Linda McGowan (hereinafter McGowan) was employed by respondent Executive Express Transportation Enterprises, Inc. (hereinafter Executive Express) as a freight coordinator and van driver for over 1 year. Executive Express is a small, family-owned freight delivery service in the business of shipping freight between St. Cloud and the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport. The company is owned by Paul and Jill Rooney, who also both work at the offices. Paul Rooney is president of the company and was McGowan’s immediate supervisor.

McGowan’s duties consisted primarily of picking up freight from the company’s customers in the St. Cloud area and transporting the freight in the company’s van to its offices in St. Cloud. The freight was then shipped to the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport.

When McGowan began her employment in June 1985, she signed an employment agreement. The agreement contained, inter alia, the following language:

2. The Employee agrees to abide by all the policies, rules, regulations, and standards established by the Company and further agrees to abide by all reasonable Company policies and decisions now or hereinafter existing.
3. The Employee agrees to perform the duties of this position faithfully, professionally, and in the best interests of the Company and public at all times. Employee shall also perform such further duties as are incidental or implied from the foregoing, consistent with the background, training and qualifications of Employee or may be reasonably delegated as being in the best interests of the Company.

The record would also tend to support that McGowan had some difficulties with her employer prior to the incident in question concerning her dress and the manner in which she spoke with various customers. Moreover, McGowan had used the company truck in the past for personal errands and for pick-ups and delivery of items not strictly related to Executive Express, but in the nature of the business of the employer.

At approximately 4:15 p.m. on July 30, 1986, Paul Rooney left a note for McGowan telling her to go to a St. Cloud pharmacy to pick up a prescription. It is undisputed that the prescription was for Rooney’s personal medication and was not freight to be shipped by the company. However, because the office was extremely busy and the nature of Rooney’s managerial duties required his presence by the telephone, he asked McGowan to pick it up during her regular delivery duties. McGowan would have been paid her regular salary. McGowan testified that she did not pick up the prescription on July 30 because she did not have time and because she did not believe it to be within the scope of her job duties. McGowan also admitted in her testimony that it would have adversely affected the company’s operations for the owners of the company to leave the office at that time to pick up the prescription.

The next morning, July 31, Paul Rooney left McGowan a note asking where the prescription was. McGowan left Rooney a note informing him that she had not picked up the prescription because she had not had time and that she did not believe the errand was part of her job. When McGowan returned from some delivery duties later that morning, Rooney confronted her about the prescription. McGowan again stated that she felt it was not part of her job duties and refused to pick up Rooney’s prescription. A discussion followed in the office, during which Rooney told McGowan she was to pick up the prescription or be *594 discharged. When another employee interrupted, McGowan left the office and sat in the company truck for 15-20 minutes. Rooney then came out to the truck and the argument continued. McGowan again refused to pick up the prescription and called Rooney some names; Rooney discharged her.

McGowan applied for unemployment compensation and, on August 15,1986, was found eligible by a claims adjudicator for the Department of Jobs and Training. Executive Express appealed and a hearing was held" before a referee. In a decision dated December 12, 1986, the referee ruled that McGowan was disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits, concluding that her refusal to pick up Rooney’s prescription constituted misconduct under Minn.Stat. § 268.09, subd. 1(2) (1984).

The referee made no finding that McGowan’s job duties included running personal errands for Rooney. Nonetheless, the referee found Rooney’s directive to be “reasonable” and further found that McGowan’s refusal manifested “a willful disregard for her employer’s interests” and “a willful disregard of the standards of behavior which an employer has a right to expect of its employees.”

On appeal, the referee’s decision was affirmed by a representative of the commissioner in a decision dated March 10, 1987. The commissioner’s representative specifically adopted the referee’s findings of fact. However, the decision states: “The Referee found that the request was reasonable and within the framework of her job duties as a delivery person.” (Emphasis added.) As noted above, the referee made no such finding.

The Minnesota Court of Appeals affirmed in a split decision. McGowan v. Executive Express Transp., Inc., 411 N.W. 2d 593 (Minn.App.1987). The majority found the errand to be within McGowan’s job duties and incidental or implied from her position as a delivery person. The majority also agreed with the commissioner’s finding that Rooney’s request was reasonable under these circumstances.

One judge dissented, finding the errand to be unconnected with McGowan’s work. He found that her refusal was not misconduct “connected with” her work as required by the statute and the refusal to perform a personal errand was insufficient to establish the culpability necessary to disqualify an employee from receiving unemployment compensation benefits. McGowan now seeks further review by this court.

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Bluebook (online)
420 N.W.2d 592, 1988 Minn. LEXIS 47, 1988 WL 22033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-executive-express-transportation-enterprises-inc-minn-1988.