Facet Enterprises, Inc. v. Deloatch
Facet Enterprises, Inc. v. Deloatch
Opinion of the Court
The judgment appealed from upheld a decision of the Employment Security Commission that respondent Deloatch, who was discharged by the plaintiff on 24 May 1985, is not disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits. Under our Employment Security Law an employee that is discharged for “misconduct connected with his work,” G.S. 96-14(2), or for “substantial fault connected with his work,” G.S. 96-14(2A), is disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits, and the only issue raised in the Commission hearing was whether petitioner fired respondent for a disqualifying reason. The Commission found and concluded that respondent was not fired for a disqualifying reason; and the Superior Court judge ruled that the facts found by the Commission were based upon competent evidence and that the law was
Though petitioner argues otherwise the evidence presented, including its own, supports the central findings of fact upon which the judgment rests. For petitioner’s evidence was to the explicit effect that it fired respondent for no other reason but being absent from work for three consecutive days without notifying the company as its work rule required; and respondent’s evidence was to the effect that he was excused from giving notice, and notice was unnecessary in any event, because he was in the hospital with a broken back as the company knew. Based on this and other competent evidence the Commission found that: On 7 May 1985, while on authorized leave due to a prior on-the-job injury, respondent employee was injured in a motorcycle accident and suffered three crushed lumbar vertebra; that two days later respondent’s immediate supervisor visited him in the hospital and learned about his broken back; that the next day the supervisor again visited respondent in the hospital, noted that he was heavily sedated, and was told that his doctor had advised him he would not be able to return to work for one or two months; that after being released from the hospital on 17 May 1985 respondent reported to the employer’s place of business on 20 May 1985 and told both his immediate supervisor and the plant secretary of his injury, hospitalization, and doctor’s advice; and that the petitioner fired respondent on 24 May 1985 for allegedly failing to give notice of his absence from work as its rule required. From these findings the Commission concluded as a matter of law that the petitioner had failed to show that it discharged respondent for misconduct or substantial fault connected with his work and that respondent is not disqualified for unemployment benefits.
Though petitioner proposes several other questions for our consideration, the only questions properly raised by its appeal are whether the Commission’s findings of fact 11 and 12 are supported by competent evidence and if so whether they and the other facts found support the Commission’s decision. This is because these are the only questions petitioner raised in appealing from the Commission that have not been abandoned. In authorizing the judicial review of Employment Security Commission decisions, G.S. 9645(h) requires the appellant to act within 30 days of notification or mailing, whichever is earlier, and to explic
The other contentions that petitioner undertakes to make— that the Commission misapplied the law in various respects — are not properly before us, and were not properly before the Superior Court, because they are not based on timely exceptions to the Commission’s decision, as G.S. 96-15(h) requires. Petitioner’s only timely exceptions that have not been abandoned have already been discussed and overruled. The purported exceptions that are the basis for these contentions were stated without effect in an
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.