Michael Boise v. Washington State Dept. Of Employment Security

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 14, 2016
Docket33202-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Michael Boise v. Washington State Dept. Of Employment Security (Michael Boise v. Washington State Dept. Of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Boise v. Washington State Dept. Of Employment Security, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 14, 2016 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

MICHAEL A. BOISE, ) ) No. 33202-1-111 Appellant, ) ) V. ) ) EMPLOYMENT SECURITY ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE OF ) WASHINGTON, ) ) Respondent. )

SIDDOWAY, J. -One circumstance in which an employee who voluntarily quits a

job may still receive unemployment benefits is where the employee's usual work is

changed to work that violates the individual's religious convictions or sincere moral

beliefs. RCW 50.20.050(2)(b )(x). Michael Boise resigned from a sales position shortly

after being hired, ostensibly because of such a work change. Benefits were denied him

by the state employment security department and, on appeal, by its commissioner.

His first petition for judicial review resulted in a superior court order remanding

the administrative decision to the commissioner's review office "to issue a decision after

employing a subjective analysis of whether a change in the conditions of employment

violated a sincerely held moral belief of the petitioner." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 131. In

isolation, the directive was ambiguous, because at least one fact essential to Mr. Boise's No. 33202-1-III Boise v. Emp 't Security

entitlement-that there had been a change in his usual work-is an objective, not

subjective, determination. On remand, the commissioner found that Mr. Boise's usual

work had not changed, an order that the superior court then affirmed. Mr. Boise

complains both decisions were contrary to an implicit finding by the superior court,

initially, and that there had been a change in his usual work.

The superior court did not engage in fact finding. Its directive did not perfectly

express its intent, but it is clear from its order as a whole that the court recognized that

the commissioner would objectively analyze whether there had been a change in Mr.

Boise's usual work and subjectively analyze only whether the change violated his sincere

moral belief. For that reason, and because the commissioner's ultimate order making the

required findings is supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Cleary Building Corporation (Cleary) is in the business of selling and constructing

manufactured buildings. It hired Michael Boise as a commissioned salesperson on

February 1, 2013, at a standard base salary of $580 per week. He signed two documents

on the date of hire: a six-page employment agreement and a six-page pay plan.

Collectively, they disclosed he was expected to meet a $516,000 annual sales target on a

regular basis and that his weekly salary could be reduced if, after 60 days, he failed to

meet the target. They also disclosed that in cases where he arranged subcontract work to

be performed in connection with a building sale, he must increase the actual cost of the

2 No. 33202-1-III Boise v. Emp 't Security

subcontract by a 12 percent minimum markup and, if he increased the actual cost by

larger markups (up to 16 percent), he could earn additional "incentive" pay. CP at 86.

Mr. Boise claims that although he signed the pay plan on the day he was hired, he did not

read it and was provided with a copy of only the signature page. It was the pay plan that

disclosed the detail about compensation and compensation reduction.

After being hired and signing the two documents, Mr. Boise was sent to

Wisconsin for two weeks of training. He claims it was there that he first learned about

the potential for salary reduction and the subcontractor markup practice. At the end of

two weeks' training, Mr. Boise notified his branch manager that he was quitting because

he could not afford a reduction in the base salary. When he returned the company car the

following Monday, the branch manager asked him ifhe wanted to stay and work through

the wage issues. Mr. Boise told his manager that it would not work, because he was not

going to be able to add money to subcontracts. In his notice of termination, Mr. Boise

marked that he was leaving for "family issues." CP at 75.

Mr. Boise then applied to the Washington State Department of Employment

Security (department) for unemployment benefits. On the voluntary quit statement he

was required to complete, he stated his main reason for quitting was, "Cleary did not

disclose I would lose salary amount if I did not have over $48,000 in sales per month."

CP at 61. He wrote that the reasons he gave his employer for quitting were "[p ]ersonal-

reasons, my concern I would lose salary." Id. Asked if he quit due to a "[r]eduction in

3 No. 33202-1-III Boise v. Emp 't Security

pay and/or fringe benefits," Mr. Boise marked "Yes." CP at 64. 1 Asked ifhe quit due to

a "[c]hange in customary job duties which was against [his] religious or moral beliefs,"

Mr. Boise marked "No," and did not answer the question "[h]ow did the change violate

your beliefs?" CP at 65. Asked about any work changes (in the event the employee's

usual work had changed since the time of hire) Mr. Boise wrote "none." Id. Asked if

other work factors made it necessary for him to quit, Mr. Boise wrote that Cleary had

given him a filthy work car and would not reimburse him for having it cleaned. Nowhere

on the form did Mr. Boise state he quit due to moral objections.

After the department denied Mr. Boise's claim for unemployment benefits, he

contested the determination, requesting a hearing. At the hearing before an

administrative law judge (ALJ), Mr. Boise testified he did not receive the first five pages

of the pay plan until sometime during his training in Wisconsin, which began on

February 4. He stated he was uncomfortable with marking up subcontractor bids without

disclosing the markup to the customer, that Cleary's markup practice was not consistent

with his previous experience in the industry, and that he found it morally objectionable.

Cleary's witness disagreed with Mr. Boise's claim that its markup practice was atypical,

testifying it "is a pretty standard business practice for a general contractor to mark up,

1 Earlier in the proceedings, Mr. Boise contended he was eligible for unemployment benefits because his "usual compensation was reduced by twenty-five percent or more," as provided by RCW 50.20.050(2)(v). He has abandoned that argument.

4 No. 33202-1-III Boise v. Emp 't Security

um, the cost or the bids if [sic] their subcontractors." CP at 39. The ALJ affirmed the

department's determination, finding that Mr. Boise quit because he was "unhappy with

the pay plan." CP at 55, 99-100.

Mr. Boise petitioned for review. Review was delegated by the commissioner to

review judge Susan Buckles. She affirmed the ALJ's decision. Addressing Mr. Boise's

contention that he had moral objections to Cleary's markup practice, she stated, "we are

persuaded that this is a normal practice in the industry, and that claimant's objections are

misplaced." CP at 111.

Mr. Boise petitioned for judicial review. In findings of fact, conclusions of law,

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