Court Opinion

ID: 9527395
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-07 03:30:18.520077+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:25:46.681264
License: Public Domain

CATES, Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the Marshall Circuit Court denying a claim for unemployment compensation benefits.
Mrs. Stewart worked in the Saratoga Victory Mill in Albertville as a battery *385hand on cotton looms. Her duties were to replace quills (bobbins) of thread as the looms used them up. She was paid by the hour.
Ownership of the mill changed hands and a different type of quill was put in. The work load of a battery hand was raised from 88 batteries to 100 and then to 153. There was some evidence that the change in the work arrangements made a battery hand’s job lighter.
Mrs. Stewart first claimed she quit work because she had too much work, although on cross-examination in the circuit court she said her real reason for leaving was that her “boss” was cussing her. Samples of this language were:
“Why in hell I couldn’t keep it up and everything like that.”
“ * * * some terrible language. I wouldn’t repeat it.”
“What the hell is wrong. Are you getting so damned old you can’t run your job?”
“He wanted to know where I had been and get up off my damn you know what and go to work.”
Mrs. Stewart contends that this language gave her a good cause to quit and that this cause was connected with her work. She also pointed out that while she did not use this on her initial claim form, nevertheless on the next step she testified to it before the appeals referee.
The mill had given out a book as to taking up complaints with the ascending levels of management, but though Mrs. Stewart took it home she did not read it.
Failure to comply with an employment rule or practice is not a failure to comply with the Unemployment Insurance Act, Code 1940, Tit. 26, § 180 et seq., unless that statute provides therefor. However, if the rule is reasonable and no excuse is shown for not following it, failure to comply can be evidence of a wilful disregard of the consequences.
The burden was on Mrs. Stewart to show good cause connected with her work. Avondale Mills v. Burnett, 268 Ala. 82, 106 So.2d 885. It has been said that a good cause must be based on good faith. Johnson v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 187 Pa.Super. 607, 146 A.2d 152.
“ * * * A claimant who neglects to take those precautions to guard his job which a reasonably prudent person would have taken has, in effect, left his employment voluntarily * * *.” Junda v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 188 Pa.Super. 254, 146 A.2d 344, 347.
Mrs. Stewart, according to the evidence, did nothing to get her boss’s language corrected by his superiors. From her failing to show it was futile to try to do this, the court below could reasonably have inferred that she was indifferent as to whether or not she worked.
Affirmed.