Tehven v. Job Service North Dakota

488 N.W.2d 48, 1992 N.D. LEXIS 156, 1992 WL 178638
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1992
DocketCiv. 910372
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 488 N.W.2d 48 (Tehven v. Job Service North Dakota) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tehven v. Job Service North Dakota, 488 N.W.2d 48, 1992 N.D. LEXIS 156, 1992 WL 178638 (N.D. 1992).

Opinion

VANDE WALLE, Justice.

Darlene Tehven appealed from a district court judgment affirming Job Service North Dakota’s denial of her request for unemployment compensation benefits. We affirm.

Tehven was a clerk in the medical records department of St. Luke’s Hospital for 8½ years. The Hospital had a general confidentiality policy for patient medical records. The Hospital also had a policy allowing a medical records employee or relative to have his or her medical records locked in the medical records supervisor’s desk so that other medical records employees would not have access to them. Teh-ven’s husband had requested that his records be locked in the records supervisor’s desk, and Tehven did not have his permission to have access to them.

While working the night shift on December 20, 1990, Tehven was purging records, which involved taking records out of old files so the records could be stored. Teh-ven discovered her husband’s “lab” and summary sheet, which had been misfiled about two years previously, when Tehven’s husband was a hospital patient. Tehven put the “lab” in her lunch sack in the bottom drawer of her desk, where it was discovered by a co-worker, who put it in an envelope and gave it to the records supervisor the next day. After noticing that the records had been removed from her desk, Tehven did not discuss the matter with anyone or report it to her supervisor. Teh-ven was fired for breach of confidentiality on January 3, 1991.

Job Service initially determined that Teh-ven was entitled to unemployment benefits. The Hospital appealed. After a telephone hearing, the appeals referee found, among other things, that Tehven was discharged “for breach of security” and issued the following “REASON POR THE DECISION”:

“The claimant breached a very significant security rule when she removed the file and did not immediately place it into the custody of her supervisor. It must be reasoned that her intent was not proper when she failed to notify her supervisor that the files were missing from her desk drawer. Under the circumstances, it must be ruled that she improperly took possession of the file which was a serious breach of company security. This must be ruled misconduct for the purposes of unemployment insurance benefits.”

The referee’s decision determined that Teh-ven was disqualified from benefits under § 52-06-02(2), N.D.C.C., because Tehven was discharged for misconduct. Job Service affirmed the referee’s decision and the district court affirmed. Tehven has raised the following issues on appeal: (1) Were the findings of fact supported by a preponderance of the evidence, the conclusions of law sustained by the findings, and the decision supported by the conclusions; and (2) Did Tehven’s conduct constitute misconduct?

In reviewing the factual basis of an administrative agency decision, we do not make independent findings of fact or substitute our judgment for that of the agency. Marion v. Job Service North Dakota, 470 N.W.2d 609 (N.D.1991). “We determine only whether a reasoning mind reasonably could have determined that the factual conclusions reached were proved by the weight of the evidence from the entire record.” Power Fuels, Inc. v. Elkin, 283 N.W.2d 214, 220 (N.D.1979). Whether or not a person’s actions constitute miscon *50 duct precluding eligibility for unemployment compensation benefits involves a mixed question of fact and law. Marion v. Job Service North Dakota, supra. For Job Service’s decision to be upheld on appeal, the evidence must support its findings of fact, which must sustain its conclusion of misconduct. Id.

The referee’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are sparse and poorly drafted. They “are not examples to be followed for compliance” with § 28-32-13, N.D.C.C., requiring the agency to “make and state concisely and explicitly its findings of fact....” Walter v. North Dakota State Highway Comm’r, 391 N.W.2d 155, 157 (N.D.1986). The findings are adequate, however, because “they enable a reviewing court to understand the basis of the agency’s decision.” F. O.E. Aerie 2337 v. North Dakota Workers Compensation Bureau, 464 N.W.2d 197, 199-200 (N.D.1990).

Tehven contends that the following finding of fact is not supported by a preponderance of the evidence: “After the supervisor investigated the incident she discharged the claimant for breach of security.” Tehven argues: “A preponderance of the evidence clearly shows Darlene was, in fact, discharged for a ‘breach of confidentiality’ not for a ‘breach of security’.” (Emphasis by Tehven.) Confidentiality and ■security are both terms dealing with the concept of limiting access or disclosure. The Hospital had a policy of maintaining secrecy of the contents of patient medical records. Only authorized persons were to have access to the information contained in them. An unauthorized person’s access to the information in a patient’s medical records is a violation of the Hospital’s policy, whether it be termed a breach of security or a breach of confidentiality. The finding is supported by a preponderance of the evidence.

Tehven argues that she “was fired for a breach of confidentiality ... [but] there was no breach of confidentiality because Darlene Tehven never revealed the confidential information to anyone.” (Emphasis by Tehven.) We disagree. Teh-ven was not supposed to have access to her husband’s medical records. By taking possession of her husband’s medical records and retaining her access to the information contained in them, Tehven violated the Hospital’s policy of confidentiality with regard to medical records. Disclosure to someone else of medical records wrongfully obtained is unnecessary to constitute a violation of the Hospital’s policy of confidentiality.

The findings of Job Service, while unnecessarily conclusory, indicate that Teh-ven’s intent “was not proper when she failed to notify her supervisor that the files were missing from her desk drawer.” The testimony at the agency hearing reveals Tehven and her husband were in the process of a divorce. Tehven’s explanation for placing the records in her lunch sack in the bottom drawer of her desk rather than leaving them where they were found and reporting to the records supervisor and subsequently failing to inform the supervisor when she discovered the records had been removed from her desk drawer, was that Tehven did not want anyone to know that her husband had been in the hospital and that she would be embarrassed to have people learn he had been in the hospital. Nevertheless, the agency, the trier of fact, could draw adverse inferences from the fact Tehven failed to bring the matter to the attention of the records supervisor until she was confronted by the supervisor nearly two weeks later. Thus the inference may be drawn that it was more than mere embarrassment which prompted Teh-ven to remove the records and fail to report the matter when she found the records missing from her desk.

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Bluebook (online)
488 N.W.2d 48, 1992 N.D. LEXIS 156, 1992 WL 178638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tehven-v-job-service-north-dakota-nd-1992.