Nichols v. Employment Department
Nichols v. Employment Department
Opinion of the Court
The Employment Department (department) seeks reconsideration of our opinion reversing and remanding this case to the Employment Appeals Board (board) because the board affirmed, without explanation, the opinion of the administrative law judge (ALJ). Nichols v. Employment Department, 249 Or App 178, 274 P3d 312 (2012). The department argues that we made a factual error because we did not review the board’s decision on reconsideration.
The relevant facts are procedural. Petitioner left work and filed a claim for unemployment benefits. Petitioner received benefits for nearly three months until the department denied benefits, finding that petitioner voluntarily left work. That decision became final on March 30, 2010. In September 2010, the department issued a notice of overpayment. Petitioner filed a timely request for a hearing, essentially arguing that she was entitled to unemployment benefits and, therefore, could not have been overpaid benefits. The ALJ affirmed the overpayment notice. Petitioner requested review by the board. The board, on reconsideration, affirmed the ALJ, noting that petitioner’s arguments were, in essence, a collateral attack on the prior final notice that she voluntarily left work.
On judicial review, petitioner argues that the board erred in affirming the AL J’s refusal to admit a letter from her former employer stating that she was laid off and testimony on the same issue as not relevant to the issue before the ALJ: whether the overpayment notice was correct.
Reconsideration allowed; former opinion withdrawn; affirmed.
The department initially waived appearance and appeared only on reconsideration.
In addition, the board did not consider petitioner’s written argument and request for additional time to file her written argument because neither were timely submitted. However, the board stated that, had the documents been timely received and considered, the documents would not affect the board’s decision.
Petitioner’s position on judicial review is that, although she was found to have voluntarily quit her job at Lodestar in March 2008, she was entitled to unemployment benefits from the date that Lodestar went out of business on April 15, 2008, because Lodestar could no longer provide employment to her after that date.
Petitioner’s second and third assignments of error also concern her entitlement to benefits; therefore, we reject them on the same basis.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.