Case Western Reserve Univer. v. Director, Unpublished Decision (8-8-2002)
Case Western Reserve Univer. v. Director, Unpublished Decision (8-8-2002)
Opinion of the Court
By letter dated November 17, 2000, CWRU informed Andress that his employment was terminated for three reasons: (1) his keeping of live bullets in his work area, which the school stated endangered life or property, constituted disruptive behavior, poor judgment and the possession of a weapon at his workplace; (2) his failure to disclose prior criminal convictions on his original employment applications; and (3) criminal convictions committed by Andress subsequent to his hire, which were discovered by CWRU through the criminal background check that was undertaken as part of the above-mentioned investigation.
The failure-to-disclose rationale is based on Andress's failure to list convictions for marijuana and aggravating menacing on his first application for (temporary) employment. Andress claims that he thought the marijuana conviction had been expunged from his record and that the menacing charge had been dismissed. He further claims that he learned soon after this application that the marijuana conviction had not been expunged. About a month later, on his second application for (permanent) employment, Andress left the prior-criminal-conviction question blank until asked about it by Lynn Peterson, a CWRU employment specialist. Andress claims that he explained to her the situation, that he then filled in the marijuana conviction and that she accepted his explanation and offered him the job.
On January 17, 2001, the director's redetermination upheld the initial decision. Andress filed an appeal from this redetermination to the Unemployment Compensation Review Commission, in front of hearing officer Jeffrey M. Hersh.
Hersh made, among others, the following findings of fact:
Claimant first applied for temporary work at CWRU in June of 1997. On his application claimant indicated that he had not been convicted of any crimes. Although he had a minor marijuana conviction in 1991, at the time he believed it had been expunged.
On July 21, 1997, claimant completed a second application. This was for permanent employment. He left the question about crimes blank. He had checked with his attorney in the meantime and learned that the expungement had not gone through. Claimant discussed this with Ms. Peterson.
He added the marijuana conviction to his application.
Claimant was hired.
Shortly after he was hired, claimant put up a display in his office of several large caliber bullets. An additional bullet was given to him by Mr. Whittaker [a student friendly with Andress] soon thereafter and it too was prominently displayed. The bullets were on top on a speaker mounted behind claimant's head at eye level of every one that entered claimant's office.
As a result of a dispute that claimant had with a student, an investigation was begun. A criminal background check was run. The check showed the marijuana conviction and, in error, an aggravating menacing charge. In fact, the menacing charge had been dismissed. In addition, Professor Matthiesen, after years of going into claimant's office suddenly claimed to first notice the bullets. Claimant was dismissed.
Unemployment Compensation Review Board Decision at 2. Hersh concluded that Andress's failure to disclose his prior convictions was excusable since, on the second application, he corrected his earlier omission, which was based on his mistaken belief that the marijuana conviction had been expunged from his record. Further, Hersh found that the menacing charge had been dropped and that therefore Andress did not need to disclose it.
Hersh did find that Andress made an error in judgment by bringing the live bullets into his work place, but that the bullets had been prominently displayed for at least three years. Hersh did not believe Matthiesen's testimony that he had never noticed the bullets until October of 2000 and stated that Matthiesen should have dealt with the problem when if first arose.
Hersh ultimately reversed the Director's redetermination, thereby finding that Andress was dismissed without just cause and allowing Andress's unemployment compensation claim.
CWRU appealed this decision to the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, which affirmed the decision of the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Review Commission, holding that the Commission's decision was neither unreasonable, unlawful nor against the manifest weight of the evidence.
CWRU appeals the trial court's decision.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR: THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT AFFIRMED THE UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION REVIEW COMMISSION'S FINDING THAT APPELLEE, DAVID ANDRESS, WAS NOT TERMINATED FOR JUST CAUSE PURSUANT TO R.C.4141.29 AND WAS THEREFORE ENTITLED TO UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION BENEFITS, EVEN THOUGH HE BROUGHT LIVE BULLETS INTO THE WORK PLACE, OMITTED CRIMINAL CONVICTIONS ON TWO DIFFERENT APPLICATIONS FOR EMPLOYMENT, AND HAD A PATTERN OF REPEATED CRIMINAL CONVICTIONS.
CWRU argues that it had just cause to terminate Andress's employment because he brought live bullets into the workplace, because he failed to reveal previous crimes on his employment applications, and because he had a pattern of repeated criminal convictions subsequent to his hire.
In order to have just cause for discharge, pursuant to R.C.
In keeping with the intent and purpose of the Ohio Unemployment Compensation Act, `fault' must be further determined from the employee's perspective. Ohio Turnpike Comm'n. v. Conrad (Dec. 1, 1994), 8th Dist. No. 66405 at *14, citing Morris v. Ohio Bur. of Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review (1993),
Finally, absent a contractual provision allowing CWRU to terminate Andress's employment for post-hire criminal convictions, CWRU cannot show it had just cause to fire him. Sellers, supra.
It is ordered that appellee recover of appellant its costs herein taxed.
The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal. It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the Common Pleas Court to carry this judgment into execution.
A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
MICHAEL J. CORRIGAN JUDGE TIMOTHY E. McMONAGLE, A.J., and DIANE KARPINSKI, J., CONCUR.
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