Read v. Employment Security Department

813 P.2d 1262, 62 Wash. App. 227, 1991 Wash. App. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 5, 1991
Docket25963-6-I
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 813 P.2d 1262 (Read v. Employment Security Department) 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
Read v. Employment Security Department, 813 P.2d 1262, 62 Wash. App. 227, 1991 Wash. App. LEXIS 284 (Wash. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

Coleman, J.

Jack Read, Earl Frederick, and James Christensen assert in this consolidated appeal that the trial court erred by affirming the findings of the Commissioner of the Employment Security Department (the Department) that each claimant voluntarily left his employment with Tacoma News, Inc., without good cause pursuant to RCW 50.20.050 and, thus, did not qualify for unemployment benefits. We affirm.

On July 12, 1988, Tacoma News circulated a memorandum in its various departments announcing the implementation of an early retirement plan for qualified *229 employees, largely because of the company's need to reduce operating costs. That retirement plan was identified in the memorandum as "voluntary" and offered employees the option of receiving $1,000 per month for 36 consecutive months or a lump sum of $33,000 if their applications for retirement were accepted.

In addition, on July 17, 1988, the Tacoma News Tribune published an article about employment layoffs and cutbacks in which the managing editor of the newspaper announced:

When all the dust clears, we will have reduced our total work force by about 25 positions through a combination of attrition, early retirement and job eliminations. We have more than 750 full- and part-time employees.
As we've discussed in this space previously, The News Tribune is working on a merit system. In thinning the ranks, we first identified jobs that could be eliminated without injuring the product. We then reviewed the performance of the various people doing those targeted jobs. Those with the lowest performance were the most vulnerable. Where performance was equal, we turned to seniority, keeping the veteran.
For those displaced, there's a severance [] of a month's pay plus medical benefits and help in finding a new job.

Approximately 12 employees applied for and were granted the early retirement package and another 12 to 15 employees were laid off. No one working in the mail room or in any of the other production departments was laid off. Those employees who were laid off had worked in the newsroom as reporters and editors.

Jack Read, Earl Frederick, and James Christensen were among the employees of Tacoma News who elected to apply for early retirement. Read had begun working in the company's mail room in 1976. Upon learning of the early retirement opportunity, Read completed the required application form, even though he was 6 months younger than the specified minimum age (48 years old) to *230 qualify for the plan. Read's application was approved and his employment was terminated as of August 2, 1988.

When Read later applied for unemployment benefits from the Department, he was awarded benefits as of August 20, 1988, because the Department concluded Read had been "discharged" from employment under RCW 50.20.060 for a nondisquahfying reason. 1 On appeal, however, the Seattle Office of Administrative Hearings (OAH) reversed, disqualifying Read from benefits after finding that he had voluntarily left work without "good cause" as required under RCW 50.20.050. 2 OAH found that "[tjhere were no plans by the employer to lay off [Read] or discharge him for any reason." Read subsequently appealed to the Commissioner, who affirmed the OAH decision.

Earl Frederick worked in the mail room of Tacoma News from September 23, 1968, until July 17, 1988. He, like Read, applied for the early retirement package offered by the company. Frederick testified that he accepted the early retirement plan because he felt that the job was "getting harder all the time" and because he had to stand on a cement floor for 7-hour shifts. *231 Frederick's application for unemployment benefits was denied by the Department, and that decision was later affirmed by OAH. The administrative law judge at OAH found that "[b]ut for [the voluntary retirement] package [Frederick] would not have resigned at the time he did despite other reasons he advanced for doing so." The ALJ also made the finding that Frederick's job was "relatively safe and that thus if he had not accepted this resignation retirement package, he would not have been discharged or laid off." On appeal, the Commissioner affirmed.

James Christensen, the third claimant, worked for Tacoma News until July 1988 when he applied for and was granted early retirement. Although the Department initially granted Christensen unemployment benefits, OAH modified that original determination and denied further benefits to him, finding that he voluntarily left work without "good cause" pursuant to RCW 50.20.050. OAH found that Christensen "would not have voluntarily quit except for the [volunteer retirement] program." In addition, OAH concluded from the testimony presented that the "evidence fail[ed] to establish that the claimant was in imminent danger of involuntary termination had he not volunteered to quit under the [volunteer retirement] program." The Commissioner affirmed that determination. The Commissioner also determined that Tacoma News had not made any announcement or decision to lay off employees as the employer had in Morillo v. Director of Div. of Empl. Sec., 394 Mass. 765, 477 N.E.2d 412 (1985), a case relied upon by the claimants. Each claimant challenged the Commissioner's decisions in a consolidated appeal to the Superior Court, and the court affirmed the Commissioner's rulings. All three claimants appeal.

We first determine whether RCW 50.20.050 (the "voluntary quit" provision) or RCW 50.20.060 (the "discharge" provision) governs this cáse. The claimants argue that RCW 50.20.060 controls because they were not "at fault" for bringing about their unemployment and because each man had a "reasonable basis to believe" that his position *232 would be eliminated because of the employer's plan to reduce costs. They further assert that Morillo is persuasive authority for their position that they did not leave their employment "voluntarily". In contrast, the Attorney General, representing the Department, argues that the Commissioner correctly concluded that each of the claimants had voluntarily left his job without good cause so that RCW 50.20.050 is determinative.

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Bluebook (online)
813 P.2d 1262, 62 Wash. App. 227, 1991 Wash. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/read-v-employment-security-department-washctapp-1991.