Gary & Leo's Fresh Foods, Inc. v. State

Decision Date09 October 2012
Docket NumberNo. DA 12–0158.,DA 12–0158.
CourtMontana Supreme Court
PartiesGARY & LEO'S FRESH FOODS, INC., Petitioner and Appellee, v. STATE of Montana, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND INDUSTRY, Respondent and Appellant.

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

For Appellant: Patricia L. Bik, Special Assistant Attorney General; Helena, Montana.

For Appellee: Amy D. Christensen, Kate McGrath Ellis; Hughes, Kellner, Sullivan & Alke, PLLP; Helena, Montana.

Justice JIM RICE delivered the Opinion of the Court.

[366 Mont. 314]¶ 1 The Montana Department of Labor & Industry (the Department) appeals from the First Judicial District Court's order reversing the Board of Labor Appeals' (the Board) award of unemployment benefits to Kaylee Reed (Reed). We affirm the District Court and address the issues:

¶ 2 1. Did the Department properly preserve its evidentiary arguments for appeal?

¶ 3 2. Did the District Court err by concluding that Reed's conduct constituted misconduct under the “carelessness standard” of Admin. R.M. 24.11.460(1)(d)?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶ 4 Reed worked as a deli clerk for Gary & Leo's Fresh Food, Inc. (Gary & Leo's), a Havre grocery store, from February 22, 2009, until October 16, 2010. Reed's job consisted of filling shoppers' orders for deli items, such as sliced meats, salads, sandwiches, fried food, and coffee. Gary & Leo's terminated Reed's employment on October 16, 2010, after receiving complaints from shoppers regarding poor service and use of inappropriate language by Reed.

¶ 5 Reed applied for unemployment insurance benefits. The Department initially determined that Reed was eligible for benefits, but after Gary & Leo's requested a redetermination, it concluded that Reed was not qualified for benefits because she had been discharged for misconduct. Reed appealed and a hearing was conducted by a hearing officer on April 14, 2011.

¶ 6 At the hearing, Gary & Leo's manager Tracy Job testified that he had been prompted to fire Reed because of multiple customer complaints, a number of which were memorialized in her personnel file as reports. The first report was dated March 14, 2009, and was signed by a customer who said that Reed acted rudely toward her. The second and third reports, dated March 14, 2010, and May 1, 2010, documented similar complaints from other customers. The fourth report, dated October 12, 2010, documented a “very upset” customer who complained after Reed “was swearing and saying she didn't know how to make a meat and cheese tray.” The fifth report, also dated October 12, 2010, documented a customer complaint that Reed was “extremely rude” and “obviously didn't want to help her in any way.” Reed said that she had no objection to these reports, and the hearing officer admitted them into evidence.1 Reed testified and denied the allegations contained in the reports. While Reed admitted to using profane language at work, she testifiedthat she did so out of earshot of customers.

¶ 7 The hearing officer found that five customer complaints regarding Reed's service had been made in her year-and-a-half employment with Gary & Leo's. However, the hearing officer concluded that Reed had not intentionally acted rudely toward customers. Citing Admin. R.M. 24.11.460(1)(a)-(b), the hearing officer noted that misconduct was defined as the “deliberate disregard of the employer's rights and interests or the deliberate disregard of employee standards of behavior the employer had the right to expect.” While Reed had been issued written warnings regarding her rude behavior toward or in front of customers, the hearing officer concluded that Reed had not been deliberately rude and reinstated benefits.

¶ 8 Gary & Leo's appealed to the Board, arguing that the hearing officer erred by failing to apply an alternate definition of misconduct contained in subsection (d) of the Admin. R.M. 24.11.460(1), which provides that misconduct also includes: “carelessness or negligence of such degree or reoccurrence to show an intentional or substantial disregard of the employer's interest” (hereinafter “carelessness standard”). The Board affirmed, reasoning that the hearing officer was in the best position to judge the credibility of the parties and had “correctly applied the law to the facts.” The Board briefly mentioned the carelessness standard but its analysis of the misconduct issue focused on a different definition of misconduct under the regulations.

¶ 9 Gary & Leo's petitioned for judicial review, arguing the Board had erred by failing to address Reed's conduct under the carelessness standard. The Department and the Board filed a joint notice of non-participation indicating they would not be participating in the proceeding but reserving the right to intervene if issues arose pertaining to them. In addition, the notice addressed the standards of review and their application to the case. Reed did not participate in the proceeding. Gary & Leo's filed an opening brief, serving Reed and the Department, and likewise filed and served a reply brief after Reed's and the Department's response time expired.

¶ 10 The District Court reversed the Board's decision, holding that Reed's conduct as established by the hearing officer's findings of fact constituted misconduct as a matter of law under the carelessness standard:

[A]pplying the law to the facts as determined by the hearing officer, the substantial evidence in the record establishes that Reed acted with a careless or negligent disregard of the employer's interest. The legal conclusions of the hearings officer and the [Board] constitute an error of law.

The court reasoned that Reed failed to correct behavior for which she was on notice and which related to the employer's interests:

The administrative record demonstrates repeated warnings to Reed about her inappropriate behavior to or around customers with no demonstrated effort to correct it after the warnings. Reed admitted to an ongoing anger problem. Her employer is a customer service business—employee misconduct toward customers is a legitimate concern of the employer.... Reed was discharged for misconduct.

Following this ruling, the Department and the Board filed a joint motion to alter the court's judgment, arguing the District Court had cited to the wrong statute in applying the standard of review. Gary & Leo's agreed and the District Court revised its order to cite to the correct statute. This revision did not change the outcome as a substantially similar standard of review is provided under both statutes.2

¶ 11 The Department appeals the District Court's ruling.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 12 In unemployment insurance cases, this Court reviews the factual findings to determine if they are supported by substantial evidence. Wheelsmith Fabrication v. Mont. Dept. of Lab. & Indus., 2000 MT 27, ¶ 8, 298 Mont. 187, 993 P.2d 713. “With regard to questions of law, however, our task is to determine whether the agency's interpretation of the law is correct.” Wheelsmith, ¶ 8. Whether an employee's conduct constitutes misconduct is a question of law which this Court reviews for correctness. Mont. Dept. of Corrections v. Dept. of Lab. & Indus., 2006 MT 298, ¶ 14, 334 Mont. 425, 148 P.3d 619 (citing Hafner v. Mont. Dept. of Lab. & Indus., 280 Mont. 95, 100, 929 P.2d 233, 236 (1996)).

DISCUSSION

¶ 13 1. Did the Department properly preserve its evidentiary arguments for appeal?

¶ 14 The Department offers that the hearing officer and the Board gave no weight to the five customer complaints against Reed because the complaints constituted “inadmissible hearsay.” The Department argues that the District Court erred by considering this evidence, and that the court thus impermissibly re-weighed the evidence in determining that Reed's actions constituted misconduct.

¶ 15 Gary & Leo's urges the Court to reject the Department's arguments as untimely and not properly before the Court. It argues that, because the Department notified the District Court that it would not participate in the proceedings and did not answer the briefing, the Department failed to preserve the issues raised in its appeal. The Department counters that it preserved the issues by way of the discussion provided in its notice of non-participation, reservation of the right to re-enter the case, and motion to alter or amend the judgment.

¶ 16 “In Montana, the general rule is that an issue which is presented for the first time to the Supreme Court is untimely and cannot be considered on appeal.” Day v. Payne, 280 Mont. 273, 276–77, 929 P.2d 864, 866 (1996). This rule is applied in unemployment insurance proceedings, Wheelsmith, ¶ 12, and is rooted in fundamental fairness to the parties and to the trial court, Day, 280 Mont. at 276–77, 929 P.2d at 866. Similarly, motions to alter or amend a judgment “cannot be used to raise arguments which could, and should, have been made before judgment issued.” Nelson v. Driscoll, 285 Mont. 355, 360–61, 948 P.2d 256, 259 (1997) (citations omitted); accord Lee v. USAA Casualty Ins., 2001 MT 59, ¶ 76, 304 Mont. 356, 22 P.3d 631;Cook v. Hartman, 2003 MT 251, ¶ 24, 317 Mont. 343, 77 P.3d 231.

¶ 17 While addressing the issue of substantial evidence generally, the Department did not make the inadmissible hearsay argument in its notice of non-participation. To the extent that the Department attempted to raise the hearsay argument in its motion to alter or amend, that attempt falls squarely within the prohibition stated in Nelson, Lee, and Cook. In sum, the Department failed to properly raise and preserve its inadmissible hearsay argument in the District Court. Thus, its argument that the five reports of customer complaints, though admitted by the hearing officer, were...

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