Perlman/Rocque v. Review Board of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development

649 N.E.2d 701, 1995 Ind. App. LEXIS 515, 1995 WL 256191
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1995
DocketNo. 93A02-9407-EX-429
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 649 N.E.2d 701 (Perlman/Rocque v. Review Board of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perlman/Rocque v. Review Board of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development, 649 N.E.2d 701, 1995 Ind. App. LEXIS 515, 1995 WL 256191 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

DARDEN, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Perlman-Rocque appeals a decision of the Review Board of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development awarding unemployment benefits to claimant Julie Seely on the grounds that she was discharged without just cause. We affirm.

ISSUES

I. Did the Review Board properly find that Seely was discharged without just cause?
II. Did the Review Board violate Perl-man's due process rights?

FACTS

Perlman-Roceque, located in Greenfield, Indiana, is a distributor of MeDonald's products. Julie Seely was employed by Perlman as an Order Loader Selector from August 14, 1987 through July 16, 1998. In that capacity, Seely selected items ordered by McDonald's, and loaded the items onto delivery trucks. One of the items that Seely was responsible for loading was frozen beef patties packaged in cases and stored in a freezer until selected for delivery. The freezer's steel doors are ten feet high and eight inches thick. There is a four inch steel strip which holds weather stripping to the edge of the doors along the edge of each door. The steel strip is securely fastened to the doors with three inch screws which are placed approximately six inches apart.

On June 16, 1998, Seely was working the evening shift at Perlman. At 8:30 p.m., Pat Holloway, evening supervisor, discovered a twisted piece of the steel strip which holds the weather stripping to the freezer doors on his desk. Holloway knew that only two people, one of whom was Seely, were assigned to a position that evening which would have taken them in and out of the freezer, and he went to the loading dock to inquire about the piece of steel. Holloway first encountered the other person assigned to a freezer position that evening. That person told Holloway to ask Seely about the twisted piece of steel.

[703]*703Holloway confronted Seely, and asked her whether she had hit the freezer door with her material handling equipment. Seely denied hitting the door with her equipment. When Holloway questioned her again, Seely claimed that the piece of steel had fallen off the door, and that she had placed it on Holloway's desk. Holloway asked Seely three times whether she had hit the door, and each time Seely denied hitting the door. Holloway then questioned a worker assigned to the cooler, a room connected to the freezer by way of the doors in question. That worker stated that he heard someone hit the door, looked around and saw Seely at the door. Two additional workers in the building reported hearing a loud collision, but they did not see anything. After questioning additional warehouse workers, Holloway telephoned Ralph Haggerty, Director of Operations, at home. Haggerty told Holloway to document the facts, and that he would conduct a further investigation.

The next morning, Haggerty received the written report from Holloway. After receiving the report, Haggerty telephoned Holloway at home to review the incident. On June 22, 1998, Haggerty and Brian Beckham, another supervisor, met with Seely. At that meeting, Haggerty explained to Seely that Holloway had reported that she had hit the freezer doors. Haggerty asked Seely if she had hit the freezer doors, and Seely responded that she had not. Haggerty then asked Seely if her material handling equipment had hit the freezer doors, and Seely responded that it had not. Haggerty asked Seely if the pallet she was transporting had hit the freezer doors, and Seely responded that it had not. Seely eventually stated that a case of red meat that she was transporting "might" have hit the freezer door. R. at 76. At the conclusion of the meeting, Haggerty told Seely that he would further investigate the incident, and that, at minimum, a warning letter would be placed in Seely's personnel file.

On July 8, 1998, Haggerty and Jill Malan, Perlman's Human Resources Administrator, met with Seely. According to Haggerty and Malan, Seely admitted that 1) she had hit the freezer door with a case of frozen beef patties, and 2) she had lied to Holloway by telling him that she did not hit the freezer door. According to Seely, she did not admit that she had lied to Holloway on June 16. The following day, Seely received a letter from Haggerty which stated, among other things, that any further false or misleading statements could lead to further disciplinary action, up to and including termination.1

On July 13, 1993, four days after receiving the letter, Seely contacted Peter Barickman, General Manager, and told him that she [704]*704wanted to speak to him about the letter. During the meeting, Seely told Barickman that, on the evening of the accident, she had told Holloway that she had hit the freezer door with a case of red meat. Barickman told Seely that he needed to investigate the matter himself because he was not privy to any of the previous meetings. Barickman first discussed the matter with Holloway, who reported that he had asked Seely three times whether she had hit the door because he wanted to be very sure what had happened. Holloway told Barieckman that Seely had denied hitting the freezer each of the three times that he had asked her. Barick-man then talked to the worker who had heard the collision and seen Seely at the freezer doors. Barickman also spoke to two other workers who had heard the collision. They told Barickman that the collision had been much too loud to have come from a case of frozen meat. Barickman was aware that during the July 8, meeting with Haggerty and Malan, Seely had admitted lying to Holloway on June 16. Therefore, according to Barickman, Seely's statements to him that she had told Holloway she hit the freezer door with a case of red meat were false, misleading, and calculated to portray Holloway as untruthful.

Two days after the meeting with Barick-man, Seely prepared a Guaranteed Fair Treatment Statement pursuant to Guaranteed Fair Treatment Procedure. Guaranteed Fair Treatment Procedure is a program which "guarantee[s] ... a fair and equitable process for the resolution of problems/complaints regarding promotions, discipline, compensation, or any other concerns of the employees." Guaranteed Fair Treatment Brochure, R. at 121. According to the brochure, employees follow three steps in resolving problems and complaints:

Step One-Discuss the concern with your supervisor in an open and frank manner. If you do not receive an answer you feel to be fair and equitable within seven (7) calendar days, you may proceed to Step Two within seven (7) calendar days of the decision.
Step Two-Develop a written outline of your concern and present it to your Supervisor. A meeting will then be arranged with your General Manager to discuss the concern, after which the General Manager will submit a written decision to you within seven (7) calendar days.... If, in good faith, you believe the decision is unfair, you may proceed to Step Three within seven (7) calendar days of the decision.
Step 8-If you believe that your concern still has not been resolved in a fair and equitable manner, you must request, in writing, a hearing of the complaint by the Appeals Board. Within thirty (80) days of your request, an Appeals Board ... will review the facts and cireumstances surrounding the complaint. The Appeals Board may elect to 1) uphold the decision of management, or 2) overturn the decision of management. The decision of the Appeals Board is final and binding on the company and the employee....

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649 N.E.2d 701, 1995 Ind. App. LEXIS 515, 1995 WL 256191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perlmanrocque-v-review-board-of-the-indiana-department-of-workforce-indctapp-1995.