Tesla Industries, Inc. v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board

CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 21, 2019
DocketN18A-09-007 CLS
StatusPublished

This text of Tesla Industries, Inc. v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board (Tesla Industries, Inc. v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tesla Industries, Inc. v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board, (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

TESLA INDUSTRIES, INC., Appellant,

Vv.

UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE APPEAL BOARD, DELAWARE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, and DAWOEN WILSON,

) ) ) ) ) ) ) C.A. No. NI8A-09-007 CLS ) ) ) )

Appellees.

Date Submitted: May 1, 2019 Date Decided: August 21, 2019

Upon Appellant’s Appeal of the Decision from the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board AFFIRMED.

Scott L. Silar, Esquire, Reger Rizzo & Darnall LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Counsel for Appellant.

Daniel C. Mulveny, Esquire, Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware, Deputy Attorney General.

SCOTT, J. Introduction

This is an appeal from the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board (“UIAB” or “Board”’). Appellant-Employer, Tesla Industries, Inc., is seeking a review of the decision by the Board that it lacked just cause to terminate Claimant Dawoen Wilson. Having reviewed Appellant’s submissions and the record below, the Court

concludes that the Board’s decision must be AFFIRMED.

Background Procedural History From April 24, 2017 to May 30, 2018, Claimant worked full-time for

Appellant as a shipping and receiving assistant. Appellant is a government contractor. On September 5, 2017, Claimant received a written warning for leaving a package on the loading dock. Claimant received a second written warning on February 13, 2018 for calling in after his shift had begun to inform Appellant that he would be late. Thereafter, on May 16, 2018, Claimant received a final written warning for failing to ship a charging cord with a customer’s equipment. The final warning provided notice to Claimant that any further mistakes in shipping would result in his discharge. Less than a week later, Claimant was terminated for allegedly shipping a unit on May 21, 2018 that did not match the customer’s order.

Claimant filed for unemployment benefits shortly after he was fired. The

Claims Deputy approved his claim after determining that Appellant discharged Claimant without just cause.' Appellant timely appealed on the basis that there was just cause to discharge Claimant and therefore he is ineligible to receive unemployment benefits. After a hearing on the issue, the Appeals Referee affirmed the Claims Deputy’s decision, finding that “since Employer did not provide written evidence that the mistake was made after the issuance of the final warning, the tribunal cannot conclude that the Claimant engaged in willful or wanton misconduct.” Appellant appealed the Appeals Referee’s decision to the UIAB and, after another hearing on the matter, the Board affirmed. Appellant now appeals the Board’s decision to this Court.?

The Board’s Hearing At the hearing, Kevin Roberts, the shipping manager at the time of the

incident, and Jessica Roberts, an inside sales customer service manager, testified on Appellant’s behalf. Ms. Roberts testified that when Appellant receives a customer’s order, it is assigned an order number for purposes of internal tracking and billing and then a “work order” is created. A work order identifies details of the order including

the date the order was received, the model number for the requested unit and any

'R. at 7.

2R. at 15. 3 The State of Delaware on behalf of the UIAB notified the Court that it did not

intend to take a position on the merits of Appellant’s appeal. D.I. 7 (Feb. 1, 2019); see Wilmington Trust Company v. Barron, 470 A.2d 257, 261 (Del. 1983).

3 associated cables, as well as the respective quantities of those items.’ A work order also functions to identify which orders are scheduled to be shipped that day.> A copy of each work order is provided to the shipping and receiving department.® Claimant was responsible for fulfilling each work order.

Mr. Roberts testified that the assembly process for each unit is tracked, initialed, and dated “in-process unit build sheet” (“build sheet”) at every step.’ The final step before the unit is transferred to the shipping department is the “QC tests.” The QC test entails a final inspection of the unit to ensure it adheres to the customer’s order.’ Once completed, the QC test on the build sheet is signed and dated before the unit is boxed and shipped.” According to Mr. Roberts’ testimony, no unit can be shipped or boxed until it receives a final inspection.'? Ms. Roberts reiterated that before any unit is shipped or boxed, it must have undergone a final inspection.'' To fulfill a work order, Claimant was required to visit the QC area and write down the

serial number for the listed unit(s).!*_ After recording the serial number, Claimant

4R. at 144-45.

5 Id. at 132.

® Id. at 145.

1 Id. at 135-36.

8 Id. at 138.

? I.

'9 Td. at 137-38. '' fd. at 141.

'2 Td. 156-57. was then responsible for providing the serial number to Ms. Roberts, which she then records on the order’s invoice, '?

Ms. Roberts reviewed the build sheet for the May 21 order and testified that the build sheet reveals the order received a final inspection on May 21, 2018, which also indicates the date the order was eligible to be boxed and shipped.!* Immediately

below that, next to “Packing/Shipping,” is another signature dated with the same date.'° Mr. Roberts testified that Claimant was the only individual working in the shipping department on May 21.'° Ms. Roberts testified that though the serial number Claimant provided to her for the order in question was the correct serial number for that particular work order, Claimant selected the wrong unit for

shipment.!’

The Board’s Written Decision In its decision that became final on September 29, 2018, the Board noted that

it considered the evidence presented during the hearing “[i]n addition to the evidence presented to the Referee, the Referee’s Decision, and Employer’s Notice of

Appeal.”!® In affirming the Referee’s decision, the Board observed:

'3 Id. at 157.

'4 Td.

'S Td.

'6 Td. at 136-37. '7 Id. at 157-58. '§ Td. at 109. Employer has not met its burden to show there was just cause to terminate Claimant for making a mistake on May 21. At the hearing, while they alleged he did it, none of Employer’s witnesses actually saw Claimant select the incorrect unit. The Board finds this evidence insufficient to show Claimant made the alleged mistake in selecting the wrong unit.

The Board also believes Claimant’s testimony that Employer’s shipping procedures leave a lot of room for error. This testimony is supported by the admitted lack of adequate controls to ensure the correct product was selected at the outset before it is shipped.

Based on these findings, the Board concludes that Employer failed to show by a preponderance of the evidence that there [sic] Claimant selected the wrong unit that was shipping on May 21. Employer lacked just cause to terminate Claimant for the May 21 misshipment incident.'”

Appellant’s Assertions

Appellant argues that the Board’s decision is a clear error of the law and is not supported by the evidence of the record. According to Appellant, the evidence that the order was boxed no earlier than May 21 as established by the QC check on May 21, the company invoice with a shipment date of May 21, and the Fed Ex freight bill dated for the same day demonstrates that the Board committed legal error when it held Appellant failed to show by a preponderance of the evidence Claimant was responsible for the May 21 shipping error.”” Appellant claims that rather than considering its documents and witnesses’ testimonies proving that the only date the

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Related

Wilmington Trust Co. v. Barron
470 A.2d 257 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1983)
Johnson v. Chrysler Corporation
213 A.2d 64 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1965)
Avon Products, Inc. v. Wilson
513 A.2d 1315 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1986)
Delgado v. Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board
295 A.2d 585 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1972)
Murphy & Landon, P.A. v. Pernic
121 A.3d 1215 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2015)

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