Court Opinion

ID: 4292780
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-07-10 15:08:04.151481+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:38:11.627159
License: Public Domain

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

ELLA J. DOYLE,                        :
                                      :
                   Appellant,         :         K17A-10-003 JJC
                                      :         In and for Kent County
                   v.                 :
                                      :
MATTHEW SMITH, LLC and                :
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE                :
APPEAL BOARD,                         :
                                      :
                   Appellees.         :

                    MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER

                            Submitted: June 6, 2018
                             Decided: July 9, 2018

Ella J. Doyle, pro se

Daniel C. Mulveny, Esquire, Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware,
Attorney for Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board.

Victoria W. Counihan, Esquire, Department of Justice, Wilmington, Delaware,
Attorney for The Delaware Division of Unemployment Insurance.

Clark, J.
          Appellant Ella J. Doyle (hereinafter “Ms. Doyle”) appeals an adverse decision

by the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board (hereinafter “the Board” or “the

UIAB”) terminating her unemployment benefits. She challenges the Board’s

decision that she was ineligible for unemployment benefits between July 29, 2017

and August 24, 2017 because she did not participate in a “work search audit.” Under

the circumstances of this case, the Board committed legal error when it denied her

appeal.

          The record evidences a combination of procedural and substantive errors that

require reversal. Namely, the Division of Unemployment Insurance (hereinafter the

“Division”) denied Ms. Doyle’s benefits because she did not appear at two scheduled

work search audits, despite the fact that she was not required to appear based on her

status.     Furthermore, neither the claims deputy’s initial determination nor the

Division’s appeals referee hearing notice cited accurate reasons for terminating her

benefits. Finally, the notices did not quote or cite the particular regulations Ms.

Doyle allegedly violated, and the two notices addressed different substantive issues.

Given these circumstances, the Board committed legal error in accepting the appeals

referee’s decision where the referee refused to consider the unrebutted fact that Ms.

Doyle was not required to perform the audits at issue.     For these reasons and those

set forth below, the Board’s decision is REVERSED and the matter is

REMANDED for action consistent with this decision.

                                            2
         I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND AND FACTS OF RECORD

         On June 25, 2017, Ms. Doyle applied for unemployment benefits during the

summer break because, as a school bus driver, she was temporarily laid off. She

drove for Matthew Smith, LLC and filed her unemployment benefits application

online. She did not include a return to work date in her filing. She then called to

confirm that her application was complete and testified that she was told that it was.1

The claims deputy testifying at her appeals referee hearing confirmed that she would

not have been told if it was incomplete unless she asked the correct questions.

Rather, the claims deputy testified that the customer service representative on the

phone would have merely told her that it was considered submitted. 2

         On July 17, 2017, the Division of Unemployment Insurance (hereinafter the

“Division”) sent Ms. Doyle a letter instructing her to report on July 26, 2017 for an

audit of her work search logs. She did not appear for the audit. On the scheduled

day, the Division sent her another letter rescheduling the appointment for August 2,

2017. She also failed to appear on that date. On August 4, 2017, a Division claims

deputy sent a letter declaring Ms. Doyle ineligible for continued benefits after July

1
    Record at 16.
2
    Record at 19-20.
                                          3
29, 2017. The noticed cited subsection 3315(1) of Title 19 of the Delaware Code as

the basis for the denial.

       On August 10, 2017, Appellant appealed the denial. On August 16, 2017, she

filed a letter from her employer with the Division that provided her return to work

date of August 24, 2017.3 Thereafter, on August 18, 2017, the Division sent her a

notice for an appeals referee hearing to be held on September 6, 2017. That notice

of hearing provided a “Statement of Issues” that referenced the subject of the

upcoming hearing. Namely, the notice stated incorrectly that her benefits were

subject to termination after a hearing because “[t]he claimant is not an unemployed

individual and is ineligible for benefits.”4 At the hearing, the transcribed testimony

demonstrated Ms. Doyle’s confusion.5 Likewise, because of the error in the notice,

the appeals referee did not initially understand the issues to be covered in the

hearing. 6

       During a preliminary discussion before the hearing, the claims deputy that

issued the denial stated that the scope of the hearing should have been identified as

a “Section 3315(1)” issue. 7 The appeals referee then corrected the notice at the

3
  Appellant’s Opening Br., Ex. 1.
4
  Record at 9.
5
  Appellant inquired about the “reason you said we were here today, I – I didn’t understand that
good.” She then stated she thought it was a challenge to whether she was unemployed, which
was the reason stated in the notice. Record at 13-14.
6
  Record at 15.
7
  Id.
                                                4
hearing by crossing out the listed purpose and wrote on it, the following: “3315(1)

Comply w/ Work Search Audit.”8 The appeals referee then stated “[s]o the only

issue we’re going to be discussing today is whether or not you complied with the

Work Search Audit Program.”9

       The relevant undisputed evidence at the hearing can be summarized in several

relevant parts. First, in submitting an online claim, Ms. Doyle did not include a

return to work date in the appropriate field. Second, from the outset, Ms. Doyle

understood she was not required to perform audits since she was a school bus driver

who was to be unemployed for only a short period of time. Third, the Division’s

claims deputy confirmed that bus drivers with her status were not required by

Division policy to participate in the audits. Fourth, because Ms. Doyle did not

include a return to work date in her online application, the Division sent two separate

notices for her to appear for an audit. She did not appear for either, claiming her

post office box was closed. Finally, three weeks prior to her appeals referee hearing,

Ms. Doyle provided a letter from her employer confirming that her return to work

date was August 24, 2017.10 The Division received that letter on August 16, 2017

and date and time stamped it.11

8
  Record at 9 and 15.
9
  Record at 15.
10
   Appellant’s Opening Br.
11
   Id.
                                           5
       On September 6, 2017, the appeals referee found Ms. Doyle ineligible for

unemployment benefits effective July 29, 2017 for failing to comply with Division

regulations. The stated reason for denying her benefits was that she did not attend

“an REA workshop” as required by 19 Del C. § 3315(1).12 Despite the statutory

reference to her violating 19 Del. C. § 3315(1), neither the appeals referee, nor the

claims deputy before her, referenced any regulation Ms. Doyle allegedly violated.

Furthermore, despite amending the hearing notice on the day of the hearing to cite

work audit requirements, the appeals referee refused to consider Ms. Doyle’s

defense relevant to that very issue. Namely, Ms. Doyle argued strenuously that

given her temporary lay-off status, she was not required to participate in a work

search audit. Despite the fact that three weeks prior to that de novo hearing she had

submitted evidence of her return to work date, the appeals referee terminated her

benefits effective July 29, 2017.

       Ms. Doyle then appealed the appeals referee’s findings to the UIAB. The

UIAB elected not to receive further evidence and relied solely on the appeals referee

hearing record.13 It then affirmed the referee’s decision based on the record below

without a further hearing. In its decision, it declined to permit additional evidence

to address the incorrect notice issue, or to address the substantive issue below

12
   Record at 33.
13
   See 19 Del. C. § 3320(a) (giving the Board the discretion to decide a matter on the appeals
referee’s record without receiving additional evidence).
                                                6
ignored by the appeals referee. In its final order, the Board also did not cite any

regulation requiring a claimant to appear at a Division office upon request. The

Board merely wrote in its decision that “[a] claimant must follow the regulations that

the Department proscribes.”14

                              II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       The UIAB is not an agency subject to the case decision requirements of

Delaware’s Administrative Procedures Act.15 Nevertheless, the UIAB’s enabling

statute provides claimant appeals rights and the Superior Court’s standard of review

for such appeals. Pursuant to 19 Del. C. § 3323(a), the Superior Court's jurisdiction

is limited to a review for errors of law, together with a limited factual review.

Namely, the review is “limited to the question of whether there is substantial

evidence in the record to support the Board's findings and whether such findings are

free from legal error. In such an appeal, this Court “does not weigh the evidence,

determine questions of credibility, or make its own factual findings.” 16

       Due process requires that a claimant receives adequate notice and an

opportunity to be heard.17 Proper notice includes informing “the affected individual

14
   Record at 41.
15
   See 29 Del. C. § 10161(a), (b) (itemizing the state agencies that are subject to the
Administrative Procedures Act’s case decision requirements).
16
   Murphy & Landon, PA v. Pernic, 121 A.3d 1215, 1222 (Del. 2015).
17
   Vincent v. Eastern Shore Markets, 970 A.2d 160, 163-164 (Del. 2009).
                                                  7
of, and permitting adequate preparation for, an impending hearing. 18 Proper notice

must also reasonably apprise a party of the issues involved, and provide that party a

reasonable time to prepare a defense.

                                          III. Analysis

       Here, the Board committed legal error by terminating Ms. Doyle’s benefits

after an appeal referee proceeded with an improperly noticed hearing and refused to

consider evidence that Ms. Doyle was not required to participate in a work search

audit pursuant to Department of Labor regulations. With regard to the improper

notice, the Division identified the scope of the upcoming hearing as covering

whether she was an “unemployed individual.” 19 The notice’s stated purpose for the

hearing was incorrect. Namely, at no time in the entire process did the Division, the

appeals referee, or the Board raise or consider a question regarding her status as an

unemployed individual except in that mistaken notice.

       Due process requires in addition to an opportunity to be heard, adequate notice

of the scope of any hearing. 20 The Division’s violation of this requirement cannot

18
   Bell Atlantic – Delaware, Inc. v. Public Service Comm’n, 705 A.2d 601, 605 (Del. Super.
1997).
19
   See Record at 9.
20
   Furthermore, Delaware’s Unemployment Insurance Claimant Handbook provides with regard
to an appeals referee hearing, that “an appeal hearing is scheduled within a few weeks after an
appeal is filed. All parties are mailed a Notice of Hearing that provides the time, date, location,
and issue(s) to be covered in the hearing.” Claimant Handbook at 20, available at
https://ui.delawareworks.com/documents/UI%20Claimant%20Handbook.pdf (emphasis added).
                                                 8
be found to be harmless given the evidence of record. First, no regulation was cited

by the claims deputy in her initial determination. Second, the exchange on the record

at the later hearing established that Ms. Doyle and the appeals referee were confused

about the scope of the hearing. After the claim deputy clarified her intent that the

issues should have been identified as “3315(1),” the appeals referee hand wrote the

changed scope of the hearing on the notice.         Such a practice does not provide

sufficient notice to provide a claimant due process.

         After the hearing, the appeals referee found that Ms. Doyle failed to attend

two work search audits. Even independent of the improper notice, the only law cited

by the appeals referee justifying the denial of benefits was subsection (1) of Section

3315 of Title 19 of the Delaware Code (hereinafter “subsection 3315(1)”). The

appeals referee cited no regulation justifying her decision. Subsection 3315(1) refers

to regulations and most importantly refers to regulations that permit the Division to

waive that subsection’s requirements. The statutory subsection at issue provides:

         that the individual: (1) [h]as registered for work at and thereafter
         continued to report at an employment office in accordance with such
         regulations as the Department prescribes, except that the Department
         may, by regulation, waive or alter either or both of the requirements of
         this paragraph as to individuals attached to regular jobs . . ..21

21
     19 Del. C. § 3315(1) (emphasis added).
                                              9
Throughout the process, the Division, the appeals referee, and the Board failed to

cite any regulation addressing work search requirements, mandatory appearances at

an office, or return to work date submission requirements. 22

       Ms. Doyle’s confusion at the hearing was understandable since she correctly

understood that someone in her status need not participate in the audit.                   Namely,

she testified that she understood that because she was short-term unemployed, she

was not required to participate in a work search. 23 The Court’s review of the

evidence is extremely limited, but it cannot ignore when all evidence of record in an

administrative proceeding establishes a given fact. Here, in addition to Ms. Doyle’s

testimony, the record includes the following testimony from the Division’s only

witness, the claims deputy:

       typically bus drivers when they come in and apply or apply online, they
       automatically report a recall date for the new school year that prevents
       them from having to do the work search . . . If she had responded to the
       initial letter, called us, or come in and stated, I’m a bus driver. Do I
       have to attend this program? We would have advised her, no, she did
       not.24

       The claims deputy, the appeals referee’s, and the Board’s generic references

to regulations prompted the Court to review the Department of Labor’s published

regulations relevant to Ms. Doyle’s status that could be fairly considered to be those

22
   See Record at 6, 32, 33, 40, 41 (where all three entities in the unemployment claims process in
this case identified no regulations in their decisions despite generically referencing a violation of
regulations).
23
   Record at 21-22.
24
   Record at 15-16.
                                                 10
referenced in subsection 3315(1). Although not referenced at any stage of the

process below, Department of Labor regulations provide for a consistent outcome

with the unrebutted testimony at the hearing. First, they provide:

         the following unemployed individuals will not be required to register
         for work with . . . [t]he Division to be eligible for the receipt of benefits:
         . . . [a]ny individual on a temporary layoff who has a definite “return
         to work” date which has been verified by [t]he Division . . . with the
         individuals separating employer. 25

Second, Department of Labor regulations provide elsewhere that:

         [a claimant] will not be ineligible for such week if the Division of
         Unemployment Insurance finds that: the claimant is attached to a job
         for which the date of return to employment is known and reasonably
         certain and is sufficiently near in time to make it futile to actively seek
         work . . .26

          Ms. Doyle’s attempted to raise this issue before the appeals referee in her only

de novo hearing. The appeals referee declined to consider it, which under the

circumstances of this case, was fundamentally unfair. As noted above, regulations

incorporated by reference in subsection 3315(1) only serve to qualify the obligations

created in that subsection.          Because the record was devoid of any referenced

regulations requiring submission to audits, coupled with all evidence establishing

that work search requirements were inapplicable to Ms. Doyle, the Board committed

legal error in denying her benefits.

25
     19 Del. Admin. C. §§-20.2, 20.2.1
26
     19 Del. Admin. C. §§-6.3, 6.3.1
                                               11
       The Court recognizes that the Division must have the ability to impose

consequences for non-compliance with its procedural requirements. The orderly

administration of benefits requires nothing less. This decision in no way should be

read to imply that the Division cannot impose consequences upon individuals who

do not comply with procedural requirements. Due process requires, however, that

in circumstances where the cited reasons for termination of benefits have changed

from step to step in the process, at a minimum, the sole de novo evidentiary hearing

provided to a claimant by Act of the General Assembly must consider substantive

defenses to a claimed procedural non-compliance.

       If procedure is to trump substance, which at times is admittedly appropriate

in a claims process to aid in the efficient administration of benefits, at a minimum,

the agency must accurately cite a procedural rule that was violated before denying

benefits. Here, it did not.

       Approximately three weeks before the appeals referee hearing, Ms. Doyle

presented a return to work date as evidenced by a clocked-in copy of a letter from

her employer. 27 The regulations cited above provide that the Division should have

verified that date with her employer.28 As a consequence, the Board’s decision is

REVERSED and REMANDED for the reinstatement of Ms. Doyle’s benefits for the

27
   See Murphy & Landon, P.A., 121 A.3d at 1222 (finding legal error by the Board when it failed
to redress an appeals referee’s decision to inappropriately restrict the issues before her).
28
   19 Del. Admin. C. §§-20.2, 20.2.1
                                              12
weeks in question provided the employer verifies, after the Division requests

verification, that her return to work date was as alleged in the letter she filed with

the Division.

                                      IV. Conclusion

      For the aforementioned reasons, the Board’s decision denying benefits is

reversed and remanded for action consistent with this order. Specifically, the matter

is remanded so the Division can verify, as required by its regulations, that Ms. Doyle

in fact returned to work. In that event, benefits are due Ms. Doyle from July 29,

2018, through her verified return to work date. If Ms. Doyle did not return to work

as alleged in the employer’s letter she filed with the Division, then the Board shall

conduct proceedings as are otherwise consistent with this order and its processes.

      IT IS SO ORDERED

                                                    /s/Jeffrey J Clark
                                                          Judge

                                          13