Stephanie Stark v. Director, Division of Workforce Services

2024 Ark. App. 86, 684 S.W.3d 323
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 7, 2024
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2024 Ark. App. 86 (Stephanie Stark v. Director, Division of Workforce Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephanie Stark v. Director, Division of Workforce Services, 2024 Ark. App. 86, 684 S.W.3d 323 (Ark. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Cite as 2024 Ark. App. 86 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. E-22-627

Opinion Delivered February 7, 2024

APPEAL FROM THE ARKANSAS STEPHANIE STARK BOARD OF REVIEW APPELLANT

[NO. 2022-BR-00385] V.

DIRECTOR, DIVISION OF WORKFORCE SERVICES AFFIRMED APPELLEE

WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

Stephanie Stark appeals the decision of the Arkansas Board of Review (Board)

denying her unemployment benefits upon finding that she was discharged for misconduct

in connection with her work. On appeal, Stark contends that the Board’s decision is not

supported by substantial evidence. Because substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding

of misconduct, we affirm.

Stark began working for the Piggott Community Hospital as a housekeeper on

February 23, 2021. She was discharged on June 22, 2021, and her claim for unemployment

benefits was denied by the Division of Workforce Services upon finding that she was

discharged for misconduct in connection with her work—specifically, insubordination. Stark

appealed to the Appeal Tribunal (Tribunal), which affirmed the denial of benefits. Stark appealed the Tribunal’s decision to the Board, which also affirmed the denial of benefits

based on misconduct.1

At the Tribunal hearing, Tracy Spinks, the housekeeping supervisor, represented the

employer. She testified that Stark’s employment ended on June 22, 2021, when Stark refused

to attend a disciplinary meeting. Spinks explained that she was trying to issue a written

reprimand to Stark and that Margrette Crawford was in the office with her. Spinks said that

Stark refused to come into the office and requested Tonya Jordan, the human-resources

manager, to participate. Spinks testified that Jordan was called and reported immediately,

but Stark stated that she felt uncomfortable participating in the meeting with the three

participants and left for a short period of time. Spinks stated that when Stark returned, she

informed Jordan that she wanted a neutral party to be present. According to Spinks, Jordan

informed Stark that she was a neutral party and that no one else would be called to

participate. Spinks added that Jordan told Stark to come into the office for the meeting and

listen to what Spinks had to say, but Stark continued to refuse, at which point Jordan told

Stark that if she did not attend the meeting, she no longer had a job there.

1 In her appeal to the Board, Stark requested and was granted an additional hearing to address evidentiary objections raised at the Tribunal hearing, including the denial of her request to subpoena witnesses and the Tribunal’s reliance on hearsay evidence contained in written documents without Stark having the opportunity to cross-examine the declarants. The Board agreed with Stark and concluded that “considering this [documentary] evidence as substantive would violate the claimant’s due process rights” and that because “the hearsay testimony in question concerned events outside of the relevant incidents which led to [Stark’s] discharge, the Board will not be considering the testimony regardless of whether it is hearsay.” Stark makes no argument that the Board improperly considered excluded evidence, and our review is limited to the evidence considered by the Board.

2 Spinks testified that Stark was fired for insubordination because she did not attend

the meeting and sign a reprimand. Spinks stated that the reprimand related to a text message

she sent Stark about a telemetry machine, tagged as having been cleaned by Stark, that was

dirty and needed to be cleaned. During the text exchange, Stark denied that she left the

machine dirty and told Spinks to “watch her tone.” Spinks also said that Stark repeatedly

demanded to know who told Spinks that the machine was dirty but did comply with the

request to clean the machine.

Margrette Crawford, an administrative assistant, testified that she was inside Spinks’s

office when Stark was called for the disciplinary meeting. Crawford stated that Stark was in

the hallway and was asked several times to come inside. She confirmed that Stark requested

Jordan; that Stark still refused to come inside after Jordan had arrived; that Stark asked for

a neutral party; that Jordan informed Stark that she, as the human-resources manager, was a

neutral party; and that Jordan discharged Stark when she continued to refuse to come inside

the office.

Stark testified that on her last day of work, she was told that Spinks needed to speak

with her. Stark said that when she got to the office, she told Spinks and Crawford that she

was not comfortable meeting with them and wanted a neutral party. Stark denied asking for

Jordan. Stark testified that Jordan was called to the office, but she did not feel like Jordan

was a neutral party because Stark had reported Spinks to Jordan for disclosing the results of

Stark’s pre-employment drug test to coworkers and felt like Jordan had not acted on the

report. Stark stated that Spinks’s attitude toward her changed after she made the report,

3 explaining that Spinks would critique her work daily, give her extra work, and not schedule

her correctly. Stark denied that Jordan told her that she would be fired if she did not attend

the meeting.

In regard to the text exchange involving the telemetry machine, Stark said that she

thought Spinks was “yelling” at her because Spinks used exclamation points after she texted

Stark that the machine needed to be cleaned. Stark said that she did not want to be in trouble

for the telemetry machine being cleaned incorrectly, explaining that the nurse who used it

must have forgotten to take the tag off. Stark also testified that her discharge was not handled

according to company policy because she was not suspended prior to being discharged until

a full investigation was conducted, and a review of a dismissal recommendation was not

conducted prior to her discharge.

When questioned by the hearing officer, Stark admitted she had sent the text

message telling Spinks to watch her tone. Stark said she did not believe that requesting a

neutral party was “too much to ask for.” She claimed that the meeting was not the issue, but

she did not trust the people in the meeting. Stark said that she was unaware of a policy that

allowed her to have a neutral party but that no one ever said it was not allowed. Stark denied

that anyone told her that Jordan was the neutral party and no one else would be allowed.

Stark said she wanted a neutral party who could “vouch” for what happened in the meeting.

Hunter Samples, a housekeeper and Stark’s coworker, testified that she learned of

Stark’s failed drug test from Spinks. Samples said that Spinks treated Stark worse after she

reported Spinks to Jordan for disclosing the test results, but Samples did not believe that

4 Stark was given extra work. Samples said that Stark was nervous about the disciplinary

meeting and asked Samples to stand in the hallway. Samples testified that Stark asked for a

neutral party but did not hear Stark request Jordan. Samples said that she was nervous

because she was not supposed to be there and left when Jordan arrived.

In addition to the testimony, the documentary evidence introduced at the hearing

included Stark’s June 25 “Discharge General-Claimant Statement.” In her explanation of

the final incident leading to discharge, Stark wrote:

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Related

Mark Meredith v. Director, Division of Workforce Services
2026 Ark. App. 81 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2026)

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