Wagstaff v. Department of Employment Security

826 P.2d 1069, 179 Utah Adv. Rep. 31, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 36, 1992 WL 24469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 6, 1992
Docket900436-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 826 P.2d 1069 (Wagstaff v. Department of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wagstaff v. Department of Employment Security, 826 P.2d 1069, 179 Utah Adv. Rep. 31, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 36, 1992 WL 24469 (Utah Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

ORME, Judge.

Petitioner, a former Air Force employee discharged for drug use, challenges a decision of the Board of Review of the Industrial Commission denying him unemployment compensation benefits. Petitioner claims that, since Air Force disciplinary regulations in effect at the time of his drug use did not sanction discharge of first-time offenders, he was not terminated for just cause. We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

Petitioner, Dennis L. Wagstaff, began working at Hill Air Force Base (HAFB) as a store checker in 1978. After receiving several promotions and a “secret” security clearance, Wagstaff became a jet aircraft hydraulic mechanic. After nearly twelve years as an employee at HAFB, Wagstaff s work record was unblemished.

In July 1989, the Air Force Office of Special Investigations (OSI) received information that civilian maintenance personnel at HAFB were using illegal drugs both on and off the base. OSI immediately initiated an investigation into the alleged drug use. As a result of that investigation, several civilian employees were apprehended for possession, use, and distribution of controlled substances. They were immediately removed from their employment on the base. Several of Wagstaff’s co-workers were among this group.

Although the OSI investigation did not turn up any tangible evidence concerning *1071 Wagstaff, according to an OSI report several of Wagstaff’s co-workers implicated him in the illegal use of drugs. Consequently, in October 1989, OSI called Wag-staff in for questioning. Under OSI examination, Wagstaff admitted using drugs on one occasion while employed at the base. According to Wagstaff, in June or July, 1989, during a lunch break, he went with several of his co-workers to a park in Clear-field where someone produced a small bag of cocaine, which they all snorted. Wag-staff maintained, however, that aside from that one incident, and trying marijuana in high school some twenty years earlier, he had never used drugs. Following his interview with OSI, Wagstaff voluntarily submitted to a urinalysis. The test proved negative for drug metabolites.

Based on Wagstaff’s admission concerning the incident in the park, and apparently on implications of other illegal drug use contained in the OSI report, the Air Force terminated Wagstaff s employment in January 1990. After his removal, Wagstaff applied for unemployment benefits through the Department of Employment Security. Because the Department found the Air Force terminated Wagstaff for just cause, it denied his claim for benefits. Wagstaff challenged the initial decision and requested a formal hearing.

At the formal hearing before an administrative law judge, 1 Wagstaff admitted participating in the lunchtime cocaine incident at the park, but denied any other illegal drug use, and claimed that the park incident was a one-time indiscretion. To support its argument that Wagstaff’s use of cocaine at the park was not a one-time affair, the Air Force introduced the OSI report through the testimony of one of several OSI investigators who participated in the report’s preparation. The Air Force failed, however, to produce at the hearing the two co-workers who had implicated Wagstaff in other incidents of alleged drug use.

Because the administrative law judge found that the Air Force did not adequately establish the culpability element of a “just cause” discharge, he reversed the Department’s initial decision. The judge found that despite Wagstaff’s knowledge that his use of cocaine during his lunch break violated Air Force standards, no actual or even potential threat to the Air Force or its rightful interests was posed, as required to establish culpability and thereby justify denial of unemployment benefits. According to the judge’s findings, the lack of a real threat was evidenced by, inter alia, the fact that the Air Force allowed Wagstaff to continue working for at least six months following the alleged drug use and for several months after serious drug charges were leveled against him based, in part, on his own admission. Consequently, the administrative law judge concluded that Wag-staff’s termination was not for just cause, and, in accordance with Utah Code Ann. § 35-4-5(b)(l) (Supp.1991) and the applicable administrative rules, he should not have been denied benefits.

The Industrial Commission’s Board of Review, by a 2-1 vote, reversed the administrative law judge. Wagstaff now appeals that decision, claiming that (1) the Board erroneously considered inadmissible hearsay evidence when reaching its decision, (2) Wagstaff's conduct was not sufficiently culpable to bring him within the “just cause” rubric, and (8) due to the leniency of the disciplinary scheme existing at the time of his drug use, Wagstaff’s actions did not satisfy the “knowledge” element of a just cause termination.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

Wagstaff’s claim hinges in large part on the Board’s construction of the “just cause” proviso. The Utah Supreme Court recently held that where “there is a grant of discretion to [an] agency concerning the language in question, either expressly made in the statute or implied from the statutory language,” the agency is entitled *1072 to a degree of deference such that it should be affirmed if its decision is reasonable and rational. Morton Int'l, Inc. v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 814 P.2d 581, 589 (Utah 1991). We perceive the requisite grant of discretion as having been made by the Legislature to the Board, as evidenced by the statutory language permitting a denial of benefits where a termination is for “just cause ... if so found by the commission.” Utah Code Ann. § 35-4-5(b)(1) (Supp.1991) (emphasis added). See Department of the Air Force v. Swider, 824 P.2d 448, 451-52 (Utah App.1991). Accordingly, we will reverse the Board’s decision only if we determine that it is unreasonable or irrational.

I. ADMISSIBLE EVIDENCE SUPPORTS A FINDING OF ONLY ONE INSTANCE OF DRUG USE

At Wagstaff’s evidentiary hearing before the Department’s administrative law judge, the Air Force introduced the OSI report, which included statements by several of Wagstaff’s former co-workers implicating him in other illegal drug use. The Board acknowledged in its opinion, with our emphasis, that “[bjecause the Air Force did not call as witnesses the former fellow workers of the claimant who had identified him as using drugs on and off base, much of the OSI report is hearsay evidence as it relates to Mr. Wagstaff’s claim for unemployment benefits.” However, because hearsay evidence is admissible in administrative proceedings, Yacht Club v. Utah Liquor Control Comm’n, 681 P.2d 1224

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Bluebook (online)
826 P.2d 1069, 179 Utah Adv. Rep. 31, 1992 Utah App. LEXIS 36, 1992 WL 24469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wagstaff-v-department-of-employment-security-utahctapp-1992.