Skees v. Kentucky Unemployment Insurance Commission

347 S.W.3d 467, 2011 Ky. App. LEXIS 137, 2011 WL 3516301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedAugust 12, 2011
Docket2010-CA-000389-MR
StatusPublished

This text of 347 S.W.3d 467 (Skees v. Kentucky Unemployment Insurance Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skees v. Kentucky Unemployment Insurance Commission, 347 S.W.3d 467, 2011 Ky. App. LEXIS 137, 2011 WL 3516301 (Ky. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

THOMPSON, Judge:

Lesa Borntraeger Skees appeals from an Opinion and Order of the Jefferson Circuit Court affirming a decision of the Kentucky Unemployment Insurance Commission (KUIC) denying Skees’s claim for unemployment benefits. Skees contends that the KUIC’s determination that she was properly terminated from employment due to employee misconduct was not based *468 on substantial evidence and was contrary to law. We conclude that KUIC’s determination was based on an improper application of the law and reverse.

America’s Directories (Directories) is an Indiana based corporation which conducts business in Kentucky as a publisher of telephone books and directories. Its corporate office is located in Mishawaka, Indiana. On May 21, 2007, Skees began her employment with Directories as a full-time marketing consultant at its Louisville, Kentucky office.

When Skees began her employment, she was instructed to read and sign an “Employee Agreement” which set forth certain conditions of her employment. The agreement provided in relevant part that Skees would be required to engage in “out of town and overnight travel to other markets.” Skees testified that prior to signing the agreement, she requested to have its terms reviewed by her attorney but was told that the agreement “could not leave the office.” After commencing her employment, Skees requested a copy of the agreement but did not receive a copy until after her termination.

After receiving five-days’ training at the corporate headquarters in Mishawaka, she began her employment at the Louisville office. Skees worked for Directories at the Louisville location for approximately three months and was not requested or instructed to work out of town or travel overnight on company business.

On Friday, September 7, 2007, Directories’ Sales Director Otis Lockett initiated a conference call with the Louisville office employees, including Skees. According to Skees, Lockett summoned all the employees to the corporate headquarters in Mish-awaka, “as soon as possible” for an indeterminate period of employment at the corporate office for the purpose of boosting lagging advertising sales and to conduct a sales canvas. Mishawaka is approximately 260 miles north of Louisville.

Although Lockett testified that he described the relocation as temporary, Skees testified that when she inquired into the specific duration of her stay in Mishawaka, Lockett stated that it “might be for 3 or 4 weeks, or it might be longer. We (the company) don’t really know.” During the conference, the employees were told that the company would pay their food, gas, and lodging while in Mishawaka but were offered no details.

Skees became concerned with the apparent lack of information provided by Directories regarding the terms of the relocation, its duration, and the lack of specifics regarding lodging and transportation expenses. Skees informed Directories that the move would be difficult for her because she had a sick mother living in Louisville, a child attending the University of Kentucky, and a home in Louisville with three pets. She again asked Directories for specific information about the 260-mile relocation to Mishawaka. She was assured that such information would be forthcoming by the following Monday, September 10, 2007, the date scheduled for her relocation.

On the morning of September 10, 2007, Skees telephoned Lockett who asked her why she had not reported to the Mishawa-ka headquarters as directed the previous Friday. Skees responded that she could not relocate her employment to Mishawa-ka on an indefinite basis without information regarding the length of stay, hotel accommodations, and reimbursement of costs. Lockett testified that he asked Skees if it was possible to resolve the difficulties with the relocation, to which Skees replied that she could not come to Mishawaka at that time and was not sure if she ever could. Lockett then terminated Skees’s employment with Directories. As a result of the abrupt nature of the *469 request, coupled with the lack of information, six of the seven employees of the Louisville office resigned or had their employment terminated.

That same day, Skees filed an application for unemployment compensation benefits with the Division of Unemployment Insurance. Directories received notice of the application on September 11, 2007, and faxed a written protest to the Division of Unemployment Insurance on October 2, 2007.

The Division initially approved Skees’s application based on its determination that Skees left Directories for cause attributable to her employment. Additionally, the Division found that Directories failed to tender its protest within the time period set out in KRS 341.370 and 787 KAR 1:070.

The matter then went before a special referee. The referee affirmed that portion of the decision which denied Directories reserve account relief for lack of a timely protest, but found that Skees voluntarily quit her employment without good cause and was not entitled to unemployment benefits.

Skees appealed to the KUIC. The KUIC rendered a decision on January 28, 2008, finding that Directories discharged Skees from her employment for misconduct connected with her employment pursuant to KRS 341.370(6) and, therefore, denied unemployment benefits. It affirmed the referee’s determination that Skees improperly received benefits in the amount of $1,833.

Skees appealed to the Jefferson Circuit Court. The court determined that Lockett asked Skees to relocate to Mishawaka on a temporary basis for up to three or four weeks, and that this request was consistent with the terms of Skees’s employment as set out in the Employee Agreement. Citing Kentucky Unemployment Ins. Comm’n v. Duro Bag Mfg. Co., 250 S.W.3d 351 (Ky.App.2008), the court examined the statutory phrase “discharged for misconduct” and concluded that Skees’s failure to obey reasonable instructions to temporarily work out of the Mishawaka office justified Skees’s termination for cause. As such, it concluded that that the KUIC’s denial of unemployment benefits was supported by substantial evidence and that the KUIC applied the correct law. This appeal followed.

Skees argues that the circuit court erred in affirming the KUIC’s determination that Directories properly discharged her for cause because the commission’s decision was not based on substantial evidence and was contrary to law. She argues that the referee, the Commission, and the circuit court ignored uncontroverted evidence of record that she never received a copy of the employment agreement until after her employment was terminated; that Directories never relied on the agreement to order her relocation to the Misha-waka office; that she had never previously been told by Directories to engage in overnight travel; and, that she did not refuse to obey a “reasonable instruction of her employer” as set forth in KRS 341.370(6).

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.3d 467, 2011 Ky. App. LEXIS 137, 2011 WL 3516301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skees-v-kentucky-unemployment-insurance-commission-kyctapp-2011.