Wagner v. Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Servs.

2012 Ohio 2286
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 23, 2012
Docket26147
StatusPublished

This text of 2012 Ohio 2286 (Wagner v. Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Servs.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagner v. Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Servs., 2012 Ohio 2286 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as Wagner v. Ohio Dept. of Job and Family Servs., 2012-Ohio-2286.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF SUMMIT )

JANE WAGNER C.A. No. 26147

Appellant

v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND COURT OF COMMON PLEAS FAMILY SERVICES COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO CASE No. CV 2011-06-3180 Appellee

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: May 23, 2012

DICKINSON, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

{¶1} Jane Wagner applied for unemployment benefits after the school she worked for

terminated her because of a lack of work. A couple of days after she submitted her application,

the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services emailed her a request for additional

information. According to Ms. Wagner, she did not receive the request because the agency had

the wrong email address on file for her. When the agency did not receive the additional

information, it processed her application and allowed her benefits that were limited to the school

year. It emailed its eligibility determination to Ms. Wagner, who, allegedly, did not receive it.

By the time Ms. Wagner learned that the agency had made a determination and filed an appeal,

she had missed the 21-day appeal deadline. Following a hearing, a hearing officer denied her

appeal as untimely, and the Unemployment Compensation Review Commission disallowed her

request for review. She appealed to the Summit County Common Pleas Court, but it upheld the 2

Commission’s decision. She has appealed the common pleas court’s decision, arguing that the

Commission incorrectly concluded that her appeal from the Department’s eligibility

determination was untimely. We reverse because the Department was required to send its

determination by regular mail and the record does not establish that Ms. Wagner knowingly

waived that right.

UNEMPLOYMENT DETERMINATION APPEAL DEADLINE

{¶2} Ms. Wagner’s assignment of error is that the common pleas court incorrectly

affirmed the Commission’s decision. She has argued that the Commission incorrectly concluded

that the deadline for her appeal was not subject to extension under Section 4141.28.1(D)(9) of

the Ohio Revised Code. She has also argued that the court incorrectly concluded that the

Commission’s decision was supported by competent, credible evidence.

{¶3} Under Section 4141.28.1(A) of the Ohio Revised Code, “[a]ny party notified of a

determination of benefit rights or a claim for benefits determination may appeal within twenty-

one calendar days after the written determination was sent to the party or within an extended

period as provided under division (D)(9) of this section.” Section 4141.28.1(D)(9) provides, in

part, that, “[if] an interested party provides evidence, which evidence may consist of testimony

from the interested party, that is sufficient to establish that the party did not actually receive the

determination or decision within the applicable appeal period under this section, and the director

or the commission finds that the interested party did not actually receive the determination or

decision within the applicable appeal period, then the appeal period is extended to twenty-one

days after the interested party actually receives the determination or decision.” Section 4141-27-

10(A) of the Ohio Administrative Code further provides that “[a]n appeal filed pursuant to

section 4141.281 of the Revised Code is timely filed if filed within twenty-one calendar days 3

after the director’s notice of determination or redetermination was sent to the interested party’s

last known post office address.” “In determining whether an appeal . . . was filed timely, the

director and the unemployment compensation review commission shall take administrative

notice of and accept the ‘date mailed’ appearing on the notice of determination or

redetermination as sufficient evidence to establish the date on which the determination or

redetermination was sent.” Ohio Admin. Code 4141-27-10(B); see also R.C. 4141.28.1(D)(1)

(“The date of the mailing provided by the director or the commission is sufficient evidence upon

which to conclude that a determination, redetermination, or decision was sent to the party on that

date.”).

{¶4} At a hearing before the Unemployment Compensation Review Commission, Ms.

Wagner testified that she did not receive the emails that the Department attempted to send to her

regarding its request for additional information and its eligibility determination. The hearing

officer, however, did not decide Ms. Wagner’s case on the basis of whether she received the

emails. She noted, instead, that, if a determination contains the “date of mailing,” there is

sufficient evidence to establish that the determination was sent on the specified day. R.C.

4141.28.1(D)(1); Ohio Admin. Code 4141-27-10(B). She noted that the Department’s eligibility

determination indicated that it had been “issued” on “September 29, 2010,” and found that the

Department had “sent [it] to the last known address of [Ms. Wagner]” that same day.

Accordingly, the reason that the hearing officer determined that Ms. Wagner’s appeal was

untimely was because she found that Ms. Wagner had received the eligibility determination by

regular mail. The Commission disallowed Ms. Wagner’s request for review without explanation.

{¶5} In its brief to the common pleas court, the Department conceded that it had only

sent its determination to Ms. Wagner by email, arguing that “it was [Ms. Wagner’s] decision to 4

receive all notifications via e-mail,” that “[s]he chose not to receive correspondence via the

postal service,” and that “[t]he [Department] did its full duty when it sent her the determination

to the e-mail address which she provided.” It has repeated those statements in its brief to this

court. The Department, however, has not directed this Court to any statutory or regulatory

provision that allows it to send a determination of benefit eligibility by electronic mail. Rather,

Section 4147-27-10(A) of the Ohio Administrative Code specifically provides that an applicant’s

time to appeal begins after the determination “was sent to the interested party’s last known post

office address.”

{¶6} The Department has argued that Ms. Wagner waived her right to receive notices

by regular mail. Assuming Ms. Wagner’s consent could alter Section 4147-27-10(A), there is no

evidence in the record to support the Department’s assertion. While the record indicates that Ms.

Wagner applied for unemployment compensation benefits by telephone and contains a summary

of the conversation, the only indication that she agreed to receive notices by email is a line for

“Correspondence:” that says “E-mail.” That one word is insufficient, however, to establish that

Ms. Wagner knowingly waived her right to have the Department’s eligibility determination sent

to her post office address, as required under Section 4141-27-10(A).

{¶7} The principles of due process apply to applications for unemployment

compensation benefits. Howard v. Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, 10th Dist. No. 11AP-

159, 2011-Ohio-6059, at ¶ 15. Although the burden of persuasion remains always on the

discharged employee, “the burden of proof of some single fact . . . lies on the person who wishes

the court to believe in its existence . . . .” Silkert v. Ohio Dep’t of Job and Family Servs., 184

Ohio App. 3d 78, 2009-Ohio-4399, at ¶ 26 (2d Dist.).

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Related

Silkert v. Ohio Department of Job & Family Services
919 N.E.2d 783 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2009)

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