Sheridan v. Division of Employment Security

425 S.W.3d 193, 2014 WL 1202438, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 334
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 2014
DocketNos. WD 76046, WD 76387, WD 76388
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 425 S.W.3d 193 (Sheridan v. Division of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheridan v. Division of Employment Security, 425 S.W.3d 193, 2014 WL 1202438, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 334 (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

GARY D. WITT, Judge.

This consolidated appeal concerns Appellant Mackenzie Sheridan-Kautzi’s (“Sheridan-Kautzi”)1 eligibility for unemployment benefits. The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission (“Commission”) determined that benefits for the six weeks after Sheridan-Kautzi gave birth were awarded in error on the ground that Sheridan-Kautzi was “unable to work.” We reverse and remand.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Sheridan-Kautzi worked for Jordan Hotel Investments d/b/a Crowne Plaza Hotel (“Employer”) in Kansas City as a sales manager from May 21, 2012 until she was discharged on July 6, 2012. Sheridan-Kautzi gave birth to a child on July 25, 2012.

On July 6, 2012, the day she was discharged, Sheridan-Kautzi filed an application for unemployment benefits. Employer protested that claim, alleging that Sheridan-Kautzi was discharged for misconduct. A deputy with the Division of Employment Security (“Division”) determined that Sheridan-Kautzi was not disqualified from receiving benefits. [196]*196Employer appealed this decision to the Appeals Tribunal.

The Appeals Tribunal set the appeal for hearing. The notice establishing the parameters for the hearing stated: “Evidence will be taken regarding the separation from work. The Decision will determine if the claimant left work voluntarily without good cause attributable to work or was discharged for misconduct connected with the work.”

An in-person hearing was held and included testimony about the circumstances surrounding Sheridan-Kautzi’s separation from work. The referee also asked Sheridan-Kautzi regarding whether she told the Division that she was able and available for work the week she gave birth to her child. The referee sua sponte entered into the record an exhibit where Sheridan-Kautzi had indicated she was able and available for work the week ending July 28, 2012, despite having given birth on July 25, 2012. The referee elicited from Sheridan-Kautzi that she was in the hospital for two days following the birth and asked why she indicated she was able to work the week ending July 28, 2012. Sheridan-Kautzi replied in part that “[w]e just kept reporting it weekly as instructed. I guess I didn’t think that because I was giving birth that I should not have done that.”

The Appeals Tribunal issued its decision affirming the deputy’s finding that Sheridan-Kautzi was NOT disqualified from the receipt of benefits as a result of misconduct connected with work. However, the decision also noted that Sheridan-Kautzi had reported as available for work the week following childbirth. The Appeals Tribunal remanded the case with directions that the deputy investigate Sheridan-Kautzi’s ability and availability to work following the birth because she had been hospitalized July 25, 2012 for two days and received unemployment benefits for the week ending July 28, 2012. The referee’s decision stated in part that the “claimant misrepresented information to the Division in order to receive unemployment insurance benefits for that week.” The remand instruction was “for investigation and determination concerning the claimant’s ability to work and availability to work on and after July 22, 2012, her ability to work during the ten weeks after the birth of her child, whether the claimant was overpaid benefits during that period, and whether any such overpayment was a result of fraud.”

On October 81, 2012, Sheridan-Kautzi filed an application for review with the Commission, challenging the Appeal Tribunal’s sua sponte inquiry into her ability and availability to work as the mother of a baby as well as the Tribunal’s order remanding the case for a deputy’s investigation. She sought review on statutory, due process, and equal protection grounds. The Commission determined that the “Appeals Tribunal did not decide this separate issue, but only ordered that it be investigated and determined” and therefore that Sheridan-Kautzi had not yet been aggrieved by an adverse decision on the matter.

However, the Commission’s decision also noted an additional agency action: on October 23, 2012, a deputy issued a determination in accordance with the Appeals Tribunal’s remand order. That determination stated that Sheridan-Kautzi was “ineligible for benefits from July 22, 2012, through September 8, 2012, on a finding that claimant was not able to work that period.” If there was a hearing conducted prior to the entry of this determination, neither party cited its location in the record and it is somewhat unclear on which evidence the deputy relied in reaching this conclusion. The deputy’s determination [197]*197assessed an overpayment against Sheridan-Kautzi in the amount of $2,240 for those six weeks. Nevertheless, in light of that deputy’s determination, the Commission’s decision stated that the “records do not indicate that claimant has filed an appeal from that determination” but “directed the Division to consider claimant’s October 31, 2012, communication as a timely appeal.”

Sheridan-Kautzi appealed that decision from the Commission to this court in Case No. WD76046.

Meanwhile, because the Commission had ordered Sheridan-Kautzi’s application for review to be treated as a timely appeal of the deputy’s decisions regarding unavailability/inability to work and overpayment, the Appeals Tribunal held an in-person hearing on these issues. The sole witness at that hearing was Sheridan-Kautzi, who testified that she was willing and able to work in the days following the birth. Sheridan-Kautzi testified about her pregnancy, her childbirth, and her physical health. Sheridan-Kautzi was under doctor’s care until the birth of her son and was able to work while under that care until her termination. She had a normal birth “with no complications so a six-week check-up is typically normal to ensure ... the healing process had taken course and it had.” She had no need to see her doctor prior to the regularly scheduled appointment six weeks after birth. Sheridan-Kautzi was using a telephone and computer during that time frame. She was searching for “desk-bound” work before and immediately after childbirth and would have taken a job if offered one. She reached out to contacts within her industry of catering and hospitality sales, including prior employers. She was seeking full-time work and had lined up childcare arrangements prior to the baby’s birth. She had transportation the entire time. She stated that no event rendered her “unavailable to accept work or to actually perform work.” The only point at which Sheridan-Kautzi “paused” in her efforts to obtain work was the Wednesday that her son was born through that weekend. She kept records of all the employers that she reached out to until she eventually found employment. Sheridan-Kautzi testified that she could have returned to work July 30 and would have been “physically capable” of working. She would have gone back to work then because she had the “fear of not finding anything sooner than that” because she “had three children at home ... family to support” and “certainly it would not have been ideal going back [to work] at two weeks or five days or even six weeks but I had a family.” The job she ultimately obtained is “desk-bound,” primarily involving use of a telephone and computer.

Because of her proceedings with the Division and at the request of an employee of the Division, Sheridan-Kautzi secured a written note from her doctor regarding her ability to work, well after she had completed her six-week check-up.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
425 S.W.3d 193, 2014 WL 1202438, 2014 Mo. App. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheridan-v-division-of-employment-security-moctapp-2014.