FILED
FOR PUBLICATION
Apr 18 2012, 9:39 am
CLERK
of the supreme court,
court of appeals and
tax court
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
DUSTIN STOHLER GREGORY F. ZOELLER
Law Office of Dustin Stohler Attorney General of Indiana
Pendleton, Indiana
STEPHANIE L. ROTHENBERG
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
ALEBRO, LLC, )
)
Appellant, )
)
vs. ) No. 93A02-1110-EX-970
)
REVIEW BOARD OF THE INDIANA )
DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE )
DEVELOPMENT AND JASON SCHEIDELL, )
)
Appellee. )
)
APPEAL FROM THE INDIANA DEPARTMENT OF
WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT
Cause No. 11-R-04361
April 18, 2012
OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
VAIDIK, Judge
Case Summary
Alebro, LLC, appeals the decision of the Unemployment Insurance Review Board
of the Indiana Department of Workforce Development (“Review Board”) granting its
terminated employee, Jason Scheidell, unemployment benefits. Alebro argues that the
Review Board erred in failing to admit documents as evidence at the hearing, used the
wrong burden of proof, and erred in allowing Scheidell to rebut Alebro’s prima facie case
of just cause for termination by arguing instead that he had committed a different
terminable offense. We hold that if an employee’s explanation for the behavior that led
to his termination is another terminable offense, that provides just cause for termination.
We therefore reverse.
Facts and Procedural History
Alebro, LLC, is a retail seller of salt that employed Jason Scheidell from June 16,
2004, until June 20, 2011. Alebro had noticed for some time that it had been missing
inventory, but it did not know why. In June 2011, a customer of Alebro, Mr. Adams,
notified Alebro that Scheidell had offered to sell him what he claimed was his own salt at
a price lower than that at which Alebro would sell it. Alebro instructed Mr. Adams to go
through with the transaction, so Mr. Adams agreed to buy one pallet of salt from
Scheidell for $150. The purchase took place at Alebro’s warehouse at the far end of the
loading dock.
Alebro fired Scheidell for theft, alleging that the salt that he sold to Mr. Adams
was actually Alebro’s missing salt. Scheidell filed for unemployment compensation and
was denied. Scheidell appealed. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) conducted a
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telephonic hearing, during which documents Alebro claimed proved the salt was its own
were not admitted into evidence because proper procedure was not followed, specifically,
Alebro did not send the documents to Scheidell before the hearing. Also, Scheidell
attempted to rebut Alebro’s prima face case of theft by admitting instead that he only
breached his duty of loyalty to Alebro by selling salt on Alebro’s property at a lower
price than Alebro sold it for, another terminable offense. The ALJ reversed, determining
that Scheidell had not been terminated for just cause for theft. The ALJ did not consider
that Scheidell’s explanation for his behavior was an admission that he committed another
terminable offense. The finding was upheld by the Review Board, which adopted the
findings and conclusions of the ALJ.
Alebro now appeals.
Discussion and Decision
The Indiana Unemployment Compensation Act (“the Act”) provides that any
decision of the Review Board shall be conclusive and binding as to all questions of fact.
Ind. Code § 22-4-17-12(a). When the Review Board’s decision is challenged as contrary
to law, the reviewing court is limited to a two-part inquiry into (1) the sufficiency of the
facts found to sustain the decision and (2) the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the
findings of fact. Ind. Code § 22-4-17-12(f). Under this standard, courts are called upon
to review: (1) determinations of specific or basic underlying facts; (2) conclusions or
inferences from those facts, or determinations of ultimate facts; and (3) conclusions of
law. Chrysler Group, LLC v. Review Bd. of Ind. Dep’t of Workforce Dev., 960 N.E.2d
118, 122 (Ind. 2012). The Review Board’s findings of basic fact are subject to a
3
“substantial evidence” standard of review. Id. In this analysis, the appellate court neither
reweighs the evidence nor assesses the credibility of witnesses and considers only the
evidence most favorable to the Review Board’s findings. Id. The Review Board’s
conclusions as to ultimate facts involve an inference or deduction based on the findings
of basic fact. Id. Accordingly, they are typically reviewed to ensure that the Review
Board’s inference is “reasonable” or “reasonable in light of [the Review Board’s]
findings.” Id. at 1318. Legal propositions are reviewed for their correctness. Id.
The Act was enacted to “provide for payment of benefits to persons unemployed
through no fault of their own.” Ind. Code § 22-4-1-1; P.K.E. v. Review Bd. of Ind. Dep’t
of Workforce Dev., 942 N.E.2d 125, 130 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied. An
individual is disqualified for unemployment benefits if he or she is discharged for “just
cause,” Ind. Code § 22-4-15-1; P.K.E., 942 N.E.2d at 130, which includes gross
misconduct, Ind. Code § 22-4-15-6.1. As set forth in Indiana Code section 22-4-15-6.1,
(b) “gross misconduct” means any of the following committed in connection with
work, as determined by the department by a preponderance of the evidence:
* * * * *
(5) Theft or embezzlement . . . .
When an employee is alleged to have been discharged for just cause, the employer
bears the burden of proof to make a prima facie showing of just cause. P.K.E., 942
N.E.2d at 130. Once the employer meets its burden, the burden shifts to the employee to
rebut the employer’s evidence. Id. Here, the ALJ found that Scheidell was not
terminated for just cause for theft of Alebro’s salt. The Review Board adopted the ALJ’s
findings and conclusions.
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Alebro contends that the Review Board erred in determining that Scheidell was
not properly terminated for just cause because: (1) the ALJ failed to admit documents
into evidence that showed that Scheidell stole salt from Alebro; (2) the ALJ improperly
put the burden of proof on Alebro to prove that Scheidell was ineligible for benefits; and
(3) Scheidell attempted to rebut the allegation that he stole from Alebro by admitting
instead that he only breached his duty of loyalty to Alebro, another terminable offense.
We address each of these arguments in turn.
I. Admission of Documents
Alebro contends that the ALJ erred in failing to admit into evidence certain
documents showing that the salt sold by Scheidell belonged to Alebro. We disagree. The
Indiana Administrative Code squarely addresses this issue, stating in relevant part:
(d) When a hearing before an administrative law judge, or the review board,
is scheduled by telephone, either with one (1) or both parties participating
by telephone, the parties shall:
(1) exchange any exhibits to be introduced into the record at the
hearing; and
(2) mail a copy of those exhibits to the administrative law judge, or
to the review board, no later than four (4) days prior to the scheduled
hearing date.
646 Ind. Admin. Code 5-10-24(d) (emphasis added).
Additionally, in the hearing instructions sent to both parties with the Notice of
Hearing is a section concerning the admission of evidence. The instructions said, in
relevant part:
If you wish to have exhibits/evidence considered at your hearing, you must
label each document with a letter or number, as well as your case number
so the judge can easily refer to them. You must confirm you have sent
copies to the other party. Failure to do so may result in the judge refusing
to allow them to be used or discussed at the hearing.
5
Ex. 8-9 (emphasis added). It is clear that Alebro was required to send the documents in
question to Scheidell before the telephonic hearing. Alebro failed to do so, and based on
the rules of the hearing, the ALJ was acting well within his discretion when he properly
refused to admit the documents into evidence.
II. Burden of Proof
Alebro also contends that the ALJ improperly placed the burden of proof on
Alebro to prove that Scheidell was ineligible for benefits. When an employee is alleged
to have been discharged for just cause, the employer bears the burden of proof to make a
prima facie showing of just cause. P.K.E., 942 N.E.2d at 130. Once the employer meets
its burden, the burden shifts to the employee to rebut the employer’s evidence. Id.
Alebro argues that the ALJ required it to initially prove its case against Scheidell instead
of just providing a prima facie case of his theft. We disagree.
A review of the ALJ’s decision shows that Alebro provided a prima facie case and
Scheidell rebutted that case by claiming the salt was his. With no evidence to disprove
Scheidell’s claim as a result of certain documents being excluded from evidence, the ALJ
found that Scheidell had sufficiently rebutted Alebro’s prima facie case. Appellant’s
App. p. 6.
The ALJ did not require Alebro to first prove its case against Scheidell; it merely
found that Scheidell provided enough evidence to rebut the prima facie case that Alebro
presented without the documents that may have proved the theft. We therefore find that
the ALJ did not place the wrong burden of proof on Alebro.
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III. Breach of Duty of Loyalty
Finally, Alebro contends that Scheidell is ineligible for benefits because he
attempted to rebut the allegation that he stole salt from Alebro by admitting instead that
he only breached his duty of loyalty to Alebro by selling salt on Alebro’s property
cheaper than Alebro did, another terminable offense. We agree.
Scheidell argues that our review is limited to Alebro’s stated grounds for
discharge, in this case, theft. See Voss v. Review Bd. of Dep’t of Emp’t and Training
Servs., 533 N.E.2d 1020, 1021 (Ind. Ct. App. 1989). In Voss, Voss was fired for
unauthorized and excessive use of the company phones for personal phone calls. Id. The
Review Board found that Voss was terminated for just cause, but considered other
grounds for his termination besides his unauthorized and excessive use of the company
phones. We held that the Review Board’s decision was “in error to the extent it
determined that any other basis existed for Voss’s discharge,” and that our review of his
unemployment benefit denial was confined solely to his employer’s stated grounds for
termination. Id.
While we agree that Voss limits the scope of the review that may be conducted, we
must limit the breadth of Voss so that we do not create illogical and absurd results. The
rule in Voss limits the scope of unemployment-benefit hearings to the stated offense or
offenses that were the reason for terminating an employee. The reasoning of Voss is so
employees are not surprised with additional allegations that were not charged. Put
differently, the policy reason behind Voss is fair notice of the allegations so the employee
may defend against them. In that sense, Voss is a logical limitation on unemployment-
7
benefit hearings. However, the reasoning of Voss is no longer applicable when an
employee defends his behavior against a stated offense by admitting another terminable
offense. He no longer requires the protection of fair notice because he is the one setting
forth the allegations of his terminable offenses, not his employer. To do otherwise would
allow an employee to turn the shield of Voss into a sword, using his own terminable
offenses to obtain undeserved unemployment benefits. This would turn Voss on its head
and accomplish the opposite of what the holding in Voss is designed to do.
In this case, Scheidell denies that the salt that he sold to Mr. Adams was Alebro’s
salt; instead, he claims it was his own. Since the documents that may have showed that
the salt was Alebro’s were excluded from evidence, Alebro cannot refute Scheidell’s
claim. However, Scheidell’s refutation of theft included an admission that he sold the
salt on Alebro’s property at a lower price than Alebro sold it for, a clear breach of duty
reasonably owed to his employer.
The Indiana Administrative Code defines a breach of duty reasonably owed to an
employer, in relevant part, as:
conduct which establishes that the claimant:
* * * * *
(3) chose a course of action that the claimant knew, or should have
known, would negatively impact the employer’s financial interests;
(4) demonstrated an intentional or substantial disregard for the
employer’s interests;
(5) intentionally or knowingly injured, or attempted to injure, the
employer’s financial interests;
(6) intentionally chose a course of action that pitted the claimant’s
interests against the employer’s interests to the detriment of the
employer; . . . .
8
646 Ind. Admin. Code 5-8-6(b). Scheidell breached the duty he reasonably owed to
Alebro by undercutting its price for salt and selling to one of its customers. Scheidell
acted contrary to Alebro’s financial interests and stole one of its customers, a blatant
violation of his fiduciary duty to Alebro.
We therefore find that Scheidell’s explanation for the theft alleged by Alebro was
another terminable offense. Because we limit the holding in Voss, we hold that the
Review Board erred in finding Scheidell eligible for unemployment-insurance benefits.
Reversed.
BRAFORD, J., concurs.
CRONE, J., concurs with separate opinion.
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IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
A., )
)
Appellant, )
)
vs. ) No. 93A02-1110-EX-970
)
REVIEW BOARD OF THE INDIANA )
DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE )
DEVELOPMENT and J.S., )
)
Appellees. )
CRONE, Judge, concurring
I fully concur in the majority’s reasoning and result, but I write separately to
express my disagreement with its disclosure of the full names of both the unemployment
claimant and the employer in what I believe to be a contravention of Indiana law.
Indiana Administrative Rule 9(G)(1) says, “The following information in case
records is excluded from public access and is confidential: … [(b)](xviii) All records of
the Department of Workforce Development as declared confidential by Ind. Code § 22-4-
19-6.” Indiana Code Section 22-4-19-6 says,
Except as provided in subsections (d) and (f) [which are not relevant here],
information obtained or obtained from any person in the administration of
this article and the records of the department relating to the unemployment
tax or the payment of benefits is confidential and may not be published or
10
be open to public inspection in any manner revealing the individual’s or the
employing unit’s identity, except in obedience to an order of a court or as
provided in this section.
Ind. Code § 22-4-19-6(b). Finally, Administrative Rule 9(G)(4)(d) says,
Orders, decisions, and opinions issued by the court on appeal shall be
publicly accessible, but each court on appeal should endeavor to exclude
the names of the parties and affected persons, and any other matters
excluded from public access, except as essential to the resolution of
litigation or appropriate to further the establishment of precedent or the
development of the law.
(Emphasis added.)
As I said in my concurring opinion in S.S. LLC v. Review Board of Indiana
Department of Workforce Development, 953 N.E.2d 597 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), I do not
see how the foregoing provisions “can be read to allow the disclosure of the full names of
unemployment claimants and employers in decisions issued by this Court.” Id. at 607
(Crone, J., concurring). Our supreme court’s recent decision in Recker v. Review Board
has not changed my mind.
In that case, the court “acknowledge[d] that the identities of the claimant and
employing unit are generally subject to the confidentiality requirements prescribed in
Indiana Code Section 22-4-19-6(b)” as “expressly implemented as to judicial proceedings
by Indiana Administrative Rule 9(G)(1)(b)(xviii).” Recker v. Review Bd. of Ind. Dep’t of
Workforce Dev., No. 93S02-1105-EX-285, 2011 WL 6848389, at *1 n.4 (Ind. Dec. 29,
2011). The court then said that Administrative Rule 9(G)
further provides, however, that when information excluded from public
access is presented in court proceedings open to the public, “the
information shall remain excluded from public access only if a party or a
person affected by the release of the information, prior to or
contemporaneously with its introduction into evidence, affirmatively
11
requests that the information remain excluded from public access.” Adm.
R. 9(G)(1.2) (emphasis added).
Id. The court went on to say,
The decisions of the ALJ and the Review Board in this case were each
expressly labeled as a “Confidential Record” pursuant to Indiana Code
Section 22–4–19–6. Appellant’s App’x at 2, 5. In the course of this
appeal, the Appellee’s Appendix filed by the employer was identified as
“Confidential,” but the Appellant’s Appendix filed by the employee was
not so labeled, and it disclosed her full name. Both the claimant-appellant
and the Board-appellee used only initials to identify the claimant in their
briefs, but the briefs of both revealed the identity of the employer. Neither
the claimant, the employer, nor the Review Board, made any affirmative
request pursuant to Administrative Rule 9(G)(1.2) to continue the exclusion
from public access the identities and information confidential under the
statute and rule. Pursuant to Administrative Rule 9(G)(1.2), in light of the
absence of an affirmative request for continued confidentiality of the
identities of the employee and the employing entity, we fully identify the
parties. As to the facts of the case that derive from the records of the
Department and are discussed in this opinion, we deem such information to
be public as essential to the resolution of the litigation and appropriate to
further the establishment of precedent and the development of the law.
Adm. R. 9(G)(3) and 9(G)(4)(d).
Id.
The Recker court’s rationale for disclosing the parties’ identities omits a critical
component of Administrative Rule 9(G)(1.2), which reads in its entirety as follows:
During court proceedings that are open to the public, when information in
case records that is excluded from public access pursuant to this rule is
admitted into evidence, the information shall remain excluded from public
access only if a party or a person affected by the release of the information,
prior to or contemporaneously with its introduction into evidence,
affirmatively requests that the information remain excluded from public
access.
(Emphasis added.) Because appellate courts do not conduct trials or evidentiary hearings
and thus do not admit “information in case records … into evidence,” I fail to see how
Administrative Rule 9(G)(1.2) can be used to justify the disclosure of parties’ identities in
12
unemployment cases for the first time on appeal. Until the relevant provisions of
Administrative Rule 9(G) are amended by our supreme court, I intend to continue to use
initials in unemployment cases that I write.1
1
In the even more recent case of Chrysler Group, LLC v. Review Board of Indiana Department
of Workforce Development, 960 N.E.2d 118 (Ind. 2012), our supreme court elected to identify the
individual claimant by initials but identified the employer by name because it saw “little merit in
attempting to conceal the identity of a global automotive manufacturer that faced a massive economic
collapse in 2008 and whose initials are ‘C.G.’” Id. at 121 n.1. No such considerations are at play here.
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