Nooksack Indian Tribe & State Of Wa., Dept. Of Empl. Security, Apps. v. Nadene Rapada, Res.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 20, 2016
Docket74116-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nooksack Indian Tribe & State Of Wa., Dept. Of Empl. Security, Apps. v. Nadene Rapada, Res. (Nooksack Indian Tribe & State Of Wa., Dept. Of Empl. Security, Apps. v. Nadene Rapada, Res.) 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
Nooksack Indian Tribe & State Of Wa., Dept. Of Empl. Security, Apps. v. Nadene Rapada, Res., (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

r-o

NADENE RAPADA, C.-J

No. 74116-1-1 Respondent, ro DIVISION ONE o

NOOKSACK INDIAN TRIBE, and UNPUBLISHED OPINION 3 STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPT o

OF EMPLOYMENT SECURITY

Appellants. FILED: June 20, 2016

Spearman, J. — Nadene Rapada was the accounting director for the

Nooksack Indian Tribe (NIT). NIT terminated Rapada for processing a mileage

reimbursement request without first having the request approved as required by

NIT's written accounting policy. Rapada did not dispute that she violated NIT's

official policy. She argued that after-the-fact approval was common practice at NIT and following that practice, rather than the official policy, was a good faith

error in judgment.

The Employment Security Department (ESD) initially decided that Rapada was eligible for unemployment benefits. On NIT's appeal ofthis decision, the ESD commissioner reversed concluding that Rapada was discharged for

misconduct that amounted to wanton disregard of the employer's interest and No. 74116-1-1/2

was thus ineligible for unemployment benefits. Rapada appealed to the superior

court which reversed the commissioner's decision.

We also conclude the commissioner erred and affirm the superior court.

FACTS

In 2013, Rapada was NIT's accounting director. She had been employed

by NIT for nearly thirty years, during which time the only disciplinary notice she

received was for tardiness. Rapada earned about $100,000 a year.

NIT's manual of accounting policies established a procedure for employee

reimbursement requests. For a mileage reimbursement, the claimant was

required to submit a requisition and a mileage log to the department director for

approval. After obtaining the director's signature, the documents could be

submitted to accounting staff for processing. Although this policy had been

adopted in 2005, NIT's implementation of the policy had recently changed. The change in practice was an agenda item for accounting meetings in 2013.1 Accounting staffwere required to get approval from Jeff Meyer, the chief financial officer. CP at 191-92. In December 2013, Meyer was on vacation. He

delegated authority to approve reimbursements to NIT's controller, Elizabeth

Ames.

Friday, December 20 was the last day NIT offices were open before a week-long holiday. Rapada worked with accounting staff to issue payroll and

1The agenda items indicate that, until 2013, NIT accepted approval from other employees in lieu of the director. No. 74116-1-1/3

other checks before the closure. Ames was at work but was in a meeting in

another building most of the day.

Rapada had prepared a requisition and mileage log for her own business-

related travel some weeks before but had not submitted the documents for

approval. Rapada asked an accounting employee to process the reimbursement

request with the understanding that Ames would sign the paperwork when she

returned from her meeting. Rapada did not contact Ames to request approval

before instructing the employee to process the request. The employee processed

the request, gave Rapada a check, and placed the requisition and mileage log on

Ames's desk.

Ames returned from her meeting about 5:00 p.m. and found the

documents for Rapada's request.. She noticed that the check had already been

issued. Ames examined the request to determine if she could approve it. The

mileage log reflected five instances of business travel that totaled $65.54 in

mileage reimbursement. One of the entries was travel from Rapada's home to an

NIT building on a weekend to change the clocks for daylight savings time.

Reimbursement for that trip amounted to $11.86.

Ames went to Rapada's office and told her that the trip to change the

clocks was not approved for reimbursement because it was commuter mileage.

Rapada told Ames that she had been making a special trip to work to change the

clocks for daylight savings time for years and had always gotten paid for it. Ames

and Rapada remained at work for about two more hours. They consulted each

other about various accounting items but had no further discussion about No. 74116-1-1/4

mileage reimbursement. Sometime after their conversation but before Ames and

Rapada left work, Ames reported to Meyer and to NIT's general manager that

Rapada had tried to receive reimbursement for unallowable mileage.

Rapada stated that she assumed that Ames had signed the approval

documents because there was no further discussion about the mileage. She left

work about 7:00 p.m. and cashed the reimbursement check on her way home.

On December 27, Rapada learned that she had been terminated. The

letter of termination states that expense reimbursements must be approved by

the director prior to submission to accounting. It states that NIT's "standard

procedures and controls were circumvented by processing the entire transaction

leading to a check being executed without any prior review and approval." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 122. The letter also states that Ames would not have approved

the request because of the entry for unallowable mileage.

Rapada applied for unemployment benefits. The ESD initially decided that she was eligible because NIT had not shown that Rapada willfully or intentionally violated NIT's policies. NIT appealed and a hearing was held before an

administrative law judge.

NIT presented evidence of the reimbursement procedure established in the accounting manual. Meyer testified that director approval was necessary prior to any check being issued and that he had never instructed staffto sign documents after the fact. He stated that, during annual audits, he sometimes

found documents that had been erroneously left unsigned. He denied having

those documents signed after the fact but did not explain how he rectified the No. 74116-1-1/5

missing signatures. He stated that audits from the last two years had not

revealed any key documents that were lacking signatures.

Meyer also testified that Rapada had driven to NIT to change the clock for

daylight savings time in the past. He did not know if she had been paid or

reimbursed for this duty. He stated that the disputed reimbursement was the only

request for mileage reimbursement Rapada submitted in 2013. He did not review

records from other years to determine if NIT had reimbursed Rapada's mileage

for changing the clocks in previous years. He stated that Rapada had never been

dishonest, stolen from the tribe, or tried to hide anything.

Ames testified that she would have approved Rapada's request after the

fact but for the unallowable commuter mileage. Ames stated that Rapada was

"perfectly open" about the mileage request and did not try to hide anything. CP at

69.

Rapada did not dispute NIT's written policy concerning the procedure for

approving reimbursement requests. She argued that the accounting department

frequently processed checks before all the approval forms were signed off and

later voided the check if necessary. She stated that she assumed Ames had

signed the reimbursement documents because Ames knew Rapada had the

check and said no more about it. She also stated that she had been receiving

mileage reimbursement for changing the clocks for more than 15 years. A

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