Parker v. Underwriters Laboratories, Inc.

96 P.3d 618, 140 Idaho 517, 2004 Ida. LEXIS 139
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 2004
Docket29424
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 96 P.3d 618 (Parker v. Underwriters Laboratories, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Underwriters Laboratories, Inc., 96 P.3d 618, 140 Idaho 517, 2004 Ida. LEXIS 139 (Idaho 2004).

Opinion

SCHROEDER, Justice.

This is an appeal from the Industrial Commission’s (Commission) order affirming the appeals examiner’s determination that Mary K. Parker (Parker) was ineligible for a waiver of repayment of unemployment benefits pursuant to I.C. § 72-1369.

I.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On August 6, 2001, Parker was terminated after twenty-four years of employment with Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. (Underwriters) due to corporate restructuring. She was informed that she would receive salary and vacation compensation until the date of termination and would qualify for unemployment benefits. She was also informed that she would be eligible for a “severance package” only if she agreed to sign a release agreement, which would release Underwriters from all claims relating to her employment or subsequent termination. Parker signed the release agreement on August 8, 2001.

On August 31, 2001, Parker submitted a claim for unemployment benefits with the Department of Labor (Department). Question three of the claim form asked whether the applicant “[w]ill receive vacation, holiday, bonus or severance pay this week or in the future.” Parker checked the “yes” box adjacent to this question and circled the word “severance.”

From September 2001 through August 2002 Parker received unemployment benefits in the amount of $315 per week. During this time she also received bimonthly “severance” payments in the amount of $1,922.50 pursuant to her release agreement with Underwriters. Each week Parker placed calls to the Department’s Tel-A-Claim system and answered prerecorded questions regarding her eligibility for unemployment benefits. She was required to report the amount of any severance payment that she received. She did not report any of the payments she received from Underwriters.

A Department claims investigator investigated Parker’s claim based on the results of a Department cross-match audit which matches the wages reported by employers on *519 their quarterly wage reports against claim reports filed by recipients of unemployment benefits. The Department sent a weekly earnings request form to Parker’s former employer, Underwriters, asking it to verify whether or not Parker earned wages from September 1, 2001, through August 27, 2002. The form stated that if any of the gross wages were other than regular pay, the payment was to be designated according to the following codes in the space provided: (1) H — Holiday, (2) V — Vacation, (3) S — Severance or bonus, (4) G — Gratuities or tips, or (5) O — Other. On August 27, 2002, a payroll supervisor employed by Underwriters reported that Parker earned a weekly severance payment in the amount of $887.31 during the relevant time frame.

In a letter dated September 30, 2002, the Department claims investigator informed Parker regarding the differences between the amounts Parker reported to the Department and those reported by Underwriters. The letter contained an itemized list of the discrepancies and requested a response no later than October 7, 2002.

Parker responded, explaining that when she initially applied for unemployment benefits she informed the receptionist concerning her severance benefits, and thus, she believed the relevant information was already in the Department’s records. According to Parker, she “never reported weekly any changes because nothing had changed.”

On the same day Parker’s letter was received, the Department issued an eligibility determination that Parker (1) failed to disclose her severance pay on her claim and (2) failed to respond to a request for information regarding these discrepancies. The Department concluded that Parker “willfully made a false statement or failed to report a material fact on [her] claim.” Consequently, pursuant to I.C. § 72-1366(12), 1 Parker was found ineligible for benefits prospectively effective October 6, 2002, through October 4, 2003, as well as retroactively, effective August 26, 2001, through October 6, 2001, October 14, 2001, through March 9, 2002, April 21, 2002, through June 8, 2002, and June 16, 2002, through July 27, 2002, for failing to disclose severance pay on her claim. Parker subsequently received an explanation of improper payment worksheet which listed the total amount of overpayment due as $12,285.

Parker requested an appeals hearing to protest the Department’s eligibility determination. The appeals examiner conducted a telephonic hearing and made the following findings of fact:

1. The claimant was paid severance payments beginning August 15, 2001 and ending August 15, 2002. The claimant failed to report any of the severance payments when she called in on the Tel-A-Claim system.
2. The claimant indicated in her initial written response to the Idaho Department of Labor that she did not provide information about the severance payments because she discussed the severance payments with a person at the Job Service office when she filed her unemployment insurance claim, and she believed that the Department of Labor had the information in its records.
3. The claimant also maintains that the payments that the claimant received were not severance benefits but were paid to the claimant to resolve any outstanding claims she might have against her former employer.
4. The claimant’s reported income to the Department of Labor and the severance payments made to the claimant [show an overpayment of $12,285.00].

Based on these findings, the appeals examiner concluded that Parker “did willfully make false statements or representations or willingly failed to report material facts in *520 order to obtain unemployment insurance benefits.” The appeals examiner affirmed the Department’s eligibility determination. Additionally, the appeals examiner found that Parker was not entitled to a waiver of repayment of unemployment benefits pursuant to I.C. § 72-1369(l)(d) because she was paid benefits as a result of inaccurate information provided to the Department, rather than due to error on the part of the Department.

Parker appealed the decision of the appeals examiner to the Industrial Commission (Commission) which affirmed the appeals examiner’s decision in part and reversed in part. The Commission reversed the appeals examiner’s determination that Parker willfully misrepresented a material fact for the purpose of obtaining unemployment benefits when she failed to' report her severance payments. However, the Commission affirmed the appeals examiner’s determination that Parker was ineligible for a waiver of the repayment requirement under I.C. § 72-1369(l)(d). Thus, Parker was ordered to repay the $12,285 in unemployment benefits she received.

Parker appealed to this Court.

II.

STANDARD OR REVIEW

When reviewing a decision of the Commission, this Court will not disturb the factual findings if they are supported by substantial and competent evidence. Laundry v. Franciscan Health Care Ctr., 125 Idaho 279, 281, 869 P.2d 1374, 1376 (1994).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 P.3d 618, 140 Idaho 517, 2004 Ida. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-underwriters-laboratories-inc-idaho-2004.