Roadhouse v. Employment Department

391 P.3d 887, 283 Or. App. 859, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 23, 2017
Docket2014EAB0947; A157520
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 391 P.3d 887 (Roadhouse v. Employment Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roadhouse v. Employment Department, 391 P.3d 887, 283 Or. App. 859, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 255 (Or. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FLYNN, J.

Claimant seeks review of a final order of the Employment Appeals Board denying him unemployment insurance benefits because it found that claimant “voluntarily left work without good cause.” ORS 657.176 (2) (c). The board based its determination that claimant voluntarily left work on its finding that claimant could have continued working for employer after he refused to attend a meeting that employer had scheduled for claimant’s day off and at which claimant believed he would be fired. We review that order for “substantial evidence, substantial reason, and errors of law.” Franklin v. Employment Dept. 254 Or App 656, 657, 294 P3d 554 (2013). We conclude that the board’s determination that claimant could have continued working for employer is not supported by substantial reason. We reverse and remand on that basis, without addressing the board’s decision that claimant lacked “good cause” to quit.

BACKGROUND

We summarize the facts from the board’s findings and from the undisputed evidence in the record that is not inconsistent with those findings. Claimant had been employed as head chef at employer’s restaurant for almost four years when, just before the weekend of Valentine’s Day, a coworker told claimant that employer’s owner1 had arranged a secret meeting with another coworker to discuss firing claimant. Claimant did not ask further questions about the meeting because it was just a “rumor” and because he needed to get the restaurant through the busy weekend. However, claimant expected to be “let go” after he finished his work on Sunday. Claimant testified that his belief was reinforced when he noticed that employer changed the locks to the restaurant’s doors on Sunday and saw employer give out a new key to one of the employees. Employer left the restaurant Sunday evening before claimant finished his work and without giving claimant a key.

Claimant left the restaurant at about 11:15 p.m. on Sunday and, at approximately 11:45 p.m., received a text [861]*861message from employer asking to meet with claimant the next morning, February 17, at 9:30 a.m. Although claimant was not scheduled to work again until February 19, claimant sometimes came into the restaurant on his days off to do inventory. He responded to the message and asked to meet at 10:00 a.m. instead of 9:30 a.m. Employer responded, “[Ojkay see you then.”

After scheduling the meeting, claimant questioned the coworker who reportedly had attended the secret meeting with employer and was told that employer had asked if the coworker “could take over [claimant’s] ordering duties”, and had said that claimant was being “fired” because employer “can’t afford [claimant’s] salary anymore.” Claimant then sent a text message to employer that stated:

“So I hear [you are] firing me. That is fine. Just mail me my check. Do you need my address?”

Employer never responded to that message.

Claimant did not attend the meeting on February 17. Instead, he sent employer an email at 10:05 a.m. that morning explaining his response to what he understood to be employer’s plan:

“I have learned of my dismissal from my subordinates and received a similar confirmation from your wife. It is unfortunate to receive this information in such an unprofessional and humiliating Manner. My subordinate cited [the restaurant’s] financial inability to continue to pay my salary as the reason for my termination, which was also confirmed by your wife. Naturally, I will not be attending a dismissal meeting (falling on my day off at a business I am no longer employed with) clearly designed to further humiliate. Please do forward my final check expeditiously to: [claimant’s address]”

Employer never responded to claimant’s email, and claimant did not show up for his next scheduled work shift on February 19.

Shortly after February 19, claimant received his final check, which was dated February 16—the Sunday that he last worked. Employer testified that there was no significance to this date other than that it was “in the realm of the [862]*862area when [claimant] asked for his check.” The check was handwritten, as opposed to being issued through employer’s payroll company, because that was what employer did “in circumstances of quitting or firing.” During the hearing, claimant confirmed that he would have been willing to continue working for employer had he not believed that he was being terminated.

Employer testified at the hearing that he did not disagree with claimant’s description of events but that the coworker had misunderstood employer’s intentions. Employer testified that he told the coworker he was going to propose some changes to claimant and wanted to get the coworker’s opinion on whether the restaurant could continue operations without claimant if claimant “acted negatively” in response to the changes that employer wanted to make. When claimant did not show up for the meeting or his next scheduled shift, employer “figured [claimant] quit or he didn’t want to be there anymore.”

Employer acknowledged that when he received claimant’s text and email message expressing the belief that he was being discharged, employer “didn’t dispute it.” When asked why he didn’t respond to claimant’s text or email if it was not his intention to discharge claimant, employer responded that, “Well it could have been the end result of the meeting. I’m not saying it wasn’t a possibility. However—I mean I should have responded.”2 The AL J found that claimant’s belief that the purpose of the meeting was to tell him that he was going to be discharged was “entirely understandable,” but ultimately concluded that claimant “voluntarily quit work” and did not have good cause to do so.

On review, the board found that “[claimant believed the owner planned to discharge him” at the meeting, based in part “on the owner’s actions.” However, the board found, [863]*863“based on the owner’s firsthand, sworn testimony” that employer “had not yet decided before” the scheduled meeting that employer would discharge claimant at the meeting. Based on that testimony from employer, the board determined that claimant could have continued working for employer and, thus, concluded that claimant voluntarily left work. The board also determined that claimant left without good cause.

DISCUSSION

On judicial review, claimant argues that the board’s conclusions are not supported by substantial evidence and are not “rationally related” to the board’s findings of fact. With respect to the board’s determination that claimant voluntarily quit, claimant contends that the board erred in relying entirely on the employer’s subjective plan—prior to the time of the scheduled meeting—without considering employer’s actions at the time of the scheduled meeting. Alternatively, claimant argues, his reasonable belief that he was being discharged provided good cause to leave work. We conclude that the board’s determination that claimant could have continued working for employer is not supported by substantial reason and we reverse and remand on that basis.

We begin with some general context for the dispute in this case.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kerr v. Board of Psychologist Examiners
467 P.3d 754 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)
Taylor v. SAIF Corp. (In re Taylor)
433 P.3d 419 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2018)
Lockett v. Teacher Standards & Practices Comm'n
412 P.3d 229 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
391 P.3d 887, 283 Or. App. 859, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roadhouse-v-employment-department-orctapp-2017.