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THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
___________________________
Department of Employment Security
No. 2015-0605
APPEAL OF ANNELIE MULLEN
(New Hampshire Department of Employment Security)
Argued: June 9, 2016
Opinion Issued: September 30, 2016
New Hampshire Legal Assistance, of Portsmouth (Kay E. Drought on the
brief and orally), and Concord (Sarah Mattson Dustin on the brief), for the
petitioner.
Joseph A. Foster, attorney general (Brian W. Buonamano, assistant
attorney general, on the brief and orally), for the New Hampshire Department of
Employment Security.
CONBOY, J. The petitioner, Annelie Mullen, appeals a decision of the
New Hampshire Department of Employment Security (department). She
challenges the decision by the department’s commissioner to require the
department’s appeal tribunal (tribunal) to reopen the department’s case against
the petitioner. We affirm.
This is the third time this case has come before us. See Appeal of
Annelie Mullen (Mullen II), No. 2014-0556 (N.H. Apr. 8, 2015); Appeal of Mullen
(Mullen I), 165 N.H. 344 (2013). The following pertinent facts are taken from
the record or from our prior decisions. In 2011, the department determined
that, while receiving unemployment benefits in 2010, the petitioner had
“knowingly failed to report [her] work and earnings” and, thus, the department
had overpaid her benefits. See RSA 282-A:164 (2010) (amended 2012). As a
result, the department informed the petitioner that she was required to repay
the overpaid benefits. See RSA 282-A:165 (2010). The petitioner appealed the
department’s determination to the tribunal, which upheld the determination.
Mullen I, 165 N.H. at 344. The petitioner then requested that the
commissioner reopen the record before the tribunal. See RSA 282-A:60 (2010).
The commissioner granted her request and ordered the tribunal to conduct a
de novo hearing. Mullen I, 165 N.H. at 344.
In January 2012, the tribunal found that the petitioner was overpaid
benefits in 2010, but that she was “without fault in creating the overpayment.”
As a result, the tribunal determined that the petitioner was not required to
repay the state unemployment benefits. In March, the commissioner, on her
own initiative, informed the parties that she was again reopening the record
before the tribunal because she believed that the tribunal had mistakenly
excluded the testimony of a particular witness. Id.; see RSA 282-A:60. The
commissioner ordered the tribunal to conduct a de novo hearing and provided
“additional guidance for the next hearing.” See RSA 282-A:61 (2010) (amended
2013).
The petitioner appealed the commissioner’s decision to the department’s
appellate board (board). Mullen I, 165 N.H. at 344. The board determined
that, pursuant to RSA 282-A:64, it did not have jurisdiction at that juncture to
review the commissioner’s decision. Id. at 344-45; see RSA 282-A:64 (2010).
The petitioner’s motion for reconsideration was denied and she appealed to this
court. Mullen I, 165 N.H. at 345.
On appeal, the petitioner argued that the commissioner’s decision to
reopen the record deprived her of due process. Id. We determined that we
lacked statutory authority to review the issues raised by the petitioner because
the tribunal had not yet issued a final decision and the board had not had an
opportunity to review that decision. Id.; see RSA 282-A:67, II (2010). Thus, we
dismissed the petitioner’s appeal. Mullen I, 165 N.H. at 345.
Subsequently, the tribunal held a third de novo hearing. In April 2014,
the tribunal issued a decision upholding the initial determination that the
petitioner was overpaid benefits and requiring the petitioner to repay them.
The petitioner appealed to the board, but the board declined to accept
jurisdiction because the petitioner had not first requested that the
commissioner reopen the tribunal decision. See RSA 282-A:60, :64.
The petitioner then requested that the commissioner reopen the case,
reverse the tribunal’s April 2014 decision, and reinstate the January 2012
2
decision in her favor. Pending a decision on her request, the petitioner also
appealed to this court. Subsequently, the commissioner ordered a limited
reopening for the tribunal to issue a decision amending the number of penalty
weeks imposed upon the petitioner. In December 2014, the tribunal issued a
decision modifying the penalty period, but which was identical in all other
respects to its April 2014 decision. In April 2015, we dismissed the petitioner’s
appeal without prejudice because she had failed to exhaust her administrative
remedies. Mullen II, No. 2014-0556 (N.H. Apr. 8, 2015); see RSA 282-A:67, II.
That same month, the petitioner requested that the commissioner reopen
and reverse the April 2014 tribunal decision as modified by the December 2014
decision, and reinstate the January 2012 tribunal decision, but the
commissioner declined to do so. Thereafter, the petitioner again appealed to
the board and the board upheld the tribunal’s decision. The petitioner’s
motion for reconsideration was denied, and this appeal followed.
Judicial review of department decisions is governed by RSA 282-A:67
(2010). Mullen I, 165 N.H. at 345. Our review is confined to the record and we
cannot substitute our judgment as to the weight of the evidence on questions
of fact for that of the tribunal. RSA 282-A:67:IV, :V; see Appeal of Niadni, Inc.,
166 N.H. 256, 259 (2014). We may reverse or modify the tribunal’s decision
only in limited circumstances. Appeal of Niadni, Inc., 166 N.H. at 259.
The court shall reverse or modify the decision of the appeal
tribunal, or remand the case for further proceedings, as
determined by the court, only if the substantial rights of the
appellant had been prejudiced because the administrative findings,
inferences, or conclusions are:
(a) In violation of constitutional or statutory provisions;
(b) In excess of statutory authority;
(c) Made upon unlawful procedures;
(d) Clearly erroneous in view of the substantial evidence on
the whole record; or
(e) Affected by other error of law.
Otherwise, the court shall affirm the appeal tribunal’s decision.
RSA 282-A:67, V.
On appeal, the petitioner argues that the commissioner’s March 2012
decision to reopen the case violated her rights to due process under the State
3
and Federal Constitutions. See N.H. CONST. pt. I, arts. 2, 15; U.S. CONST.
amends. V, XIV. She further contends that the commissioner’s March 2012
decision to reopen violated her rights under RSA chapter 282-A and exceeded
the commissioner’s authority under the chapter. We address each argument in
turn.
I. Due Process
The petitioner argues that the commissioner’s March 2012 decision to
reopen the case violated her procedural and substantive due process rights.
We begin by noting that, although the petitioner refers to substantive due
process, her brief addresses only procedural due process concerns. Merely
referring to substantive due process is insufficient to articulate a substantive
due process argument. See In the Matter of Stapleford & Stapleford, 156 N.H.
260, 263 (2007). “[J]udicial review is not warranted for complaints regarding
adverse rulings without developed legal argument, and neither passing
reference to constitutional claims nor off-hand invocations of constitutional
rights without support by legal argument or authority warrants extended
consideration.” Guy v. Town of Temple, 157 N.H. 642, 658 (2008) (quotation
omitted). Accordingly, we will conduct only a procedural due process analysis.
We first address the petitioner’s argument under the State Constitution,
citing federal authority only to aid in our analysis. State v. Ball, 124 N.H. 226,
231-33 (1983). “Because this issue poses a question of constitutional law, we
review it de novo.” State v. Veale, 158 N.H. 632, 636 (2009) (quotation
omitted).
Part I, Article 15 of the State Constitution provides, in relevant part: “No
subject shall be . . . deprived of his property, immunities, or privileges, put out
of the protection of the law, exiled or deprived of his life, liberty, or estate, but
by the judgment of his peers, or the law of the land . . . .” N.H. CONST. pt. I,
art 15. “Law of the land in this article means due process of law.” Veale, 158
N.H. at 636 (quotation omitted). “We engage in a two-part analysis in
addressing procedural due process claims: first, we determine whether the
individual has an interest that entitles him or her to due process protection;
and second, if such an interest exists, we determine what process is due.”
Gantert v. City of Rochester, 168 N.H. 640, 647 (2016) (quotation omitted). At
its most basic level, the requirement to afford due process forbids the
government from denying or thwarting claims of statutory entitlement by a
procedure that is fundamentally unfair. Appeal of Eno, 126 N.H. 650, 653
(1985); see Saviano v. Director, N.H. Div. of Motor Vehicles, 151 N.H. 315, 320
(2004) (“The ultimate standard for judging a due process claim is the notion of
fundamental fairness.”). “Fundamental fairness requires that government
conduct conform to the community’s sense of justice, decency and fair play.”
Saviano, 151 N.H. at 320.
4
For purposes of this appeal, we assume, as does the department, that
the petitioner has a sufficient interest in the unemployment compensation
benefits at issue in this case to entitle her to due process. We, therefore,
proceed to the next step of the analysis; that is, what process is due. To
determine what process is due, we balance three factors: (1) the private interest
that is affected; (2) the risk of erroneous deprivation of that interest through
the procedure used and the probable value of any additional or substitute
procedural safeguards; and (3) the government’s interest, including the fiscal
and administrative burdens brought about by additional procedural
requirements. Gantert, 168 N.H. at 647-48. “The requirements of due process
are flexible and call for such procedural protections as the particular situation
demands.” Id. at 648 (quotation omitted).
Even assuming that the petitioner’s private interest in this case is
substantial, given the extensive appeal process afforded to her pursuant to RSA
chapter 282-A, we conclude that the risk of erroneous deprivation of that
interest is minimal. Cf. Appeal of Sch. Admin. Unit #44, 162 N.H. 79, 85
(2011) (where respondent afforded “elaborate process” under the State Board of
Education administrative rules prior to her termination there was minimal risk
of erroneous deprivation). RSA 282-A:165, III entitled the petitioner to appeal
the department’s determination that she had fraudulently obtained
unemployment benefits. Pursuant to RSA 282-A:53 and :56, the petitioner was
afforded a de novo hearing before the tribunal. See RSA 282-A:53 (2010)
(“Appeal from a certifying officer’s determination and a decision made pursuant
to RSA 282-A:164 shall be to an impartial tribunal appointed by the
commissioner.”), :56 (2010) (providing that a de novo hearing “shall be
conducted in such a manner as to ensure a fair and impartial hearing to the
interested parties”). Following the tribunal’s decision, the petitioner appealed
to the commissioner, who reopened the case and ordered the tribunal to
conduct a second de novo hearing. See RSA 282-A:60. After the decision of
the second tribunal, the commissioner reopened the case upon her own
initiative and ordered the tribunal to conduct a third de novo hearing. See id.
At each of those hearings, the tribunal was not “bound by prior findings or
determinations of the department.” RSA 282-A:56. Following the third
hearing, the petitioner again appealed to the commissioner to reopen the case.
See RSA 282-A:60. The commissioner granted her request in part and the
tribunal then reduced the petitioner’s penalty period. Thereafter, the petitioner
again requested that the commissioner reopen the case. When the
commissioner denied her request, she appealed to the board, see RSA 282-
A:64, and then to this court, RSA 282-A:67, II.
The petitioner argues that it is fundamentally unfair to allow the
commissioner, on her own initiative, to reopen cases involving unemployment
compensation fraud when the claimant has prevailed before the tribunal. She
maintains that, because the commissioner serves as the administrator of the
department which investigates and brings the fraud charges against a
5
claimant, the commissioner is necessarily “adverse” to the claimant. She
further contends that, because the department bears the burden of proof to
demonstrate that the claimant committed fraud, the commissioner serves as an
“interested party” in appeals before the board and before this court. According
to the petitioner, this results in the commissioner functioning as an “interested
party, adverse party, appellate authority, and de facto controller of the outcome
of the hearing process.” She contends that this “creates a ‘fundamentally
unfair’ process for claimants accused of unemployment fraud.”
“When a single individual commingles investigative, accusative, and
adjudicative functions, the mere appearance of prejudice may be sufficient to
violate due process.” Appeal of Trotzer, 143 N.H. 64, 68 (1998). However, the
combination of investigative, accusative, and adjudicative functions does not,
in and of itself, constitute a denial of due process. Appeal of Office of
Consumer Advocate, 134 N.H. 651, 659 (1991); see Withrow v. Larkin, 421
U.S. 35, 52, 46-55 (1975); Burhoe v. Whaland, 116 N.H. 222, 223 (1976). We
have long recognized that the legislature does not offend due process merely by
assigning investigative and adjudicative functions to the same administrative
body. Appeal of Trotzer, 143 N.H. at 68. Where investigative, accusative, and
adjudicative functions are commingled within a single administrative agency, a
party alleging a due process violation must show actual bias in order to prevail.
Id. Without such a showing, administrative officials who serve in an
adjudicatory capacity are assumed “to be of conscience and capable of reaching
a just and fair result.” Appeal of Office of Consumer Advocate, 134 N.H. at 660
(quotation omitted). The party alleging bias has the burden of presenting
sufficient evidence to rebut the presumption. Appeal of Trotzer, 143 N.H. at
68.
The petitioner has presented no evidence of any actual bias on the part of
the commissioner. Rather, the petitioner maintains that she need not
demonstrate bias because the commissioner commingled investigative,
accusative, and adjudicative functions when she unilaterally reopened the case
after the petitioner prevailed before the tribunal. The petitioner’s argument,
however, equates the functions of the entire department with those of the
commissioner. Here, as in all unemployment compensation appeals, the
commissioner served solely as the “second level of appeal.” RSA 282-A:60.
Although the investigator in this case worked for the department, which is
administered by the commissioner, RSA 282-A:112, I (2010) (amended 2015),
there is no evidence to suggest that the commissioner conducted the
investigation. Nor is there evidence, and the petitioner does not allege, that the
commissioner participated in the third tribunal hearing following the March
2012 decision to reopen. Cf. Burhoe, 116 N.H. at 223-24 (determining that
insurance department hearing officer violated plaintiff’s due process rights by
rigorously cross-examining plaintiff and his employee, seeking to discredit their
testimony and to secure admissions of wrongdoing, and then deciding case and
issuing an order, and thereafter affirming his order upon plaintiff’s rehearing
6
request). Due process is not offended by the fact that multiple functions are
assigned to the same administrative body. See Appeal of Office of Consumer
Advocate, 134 N.H. at 659.
Contrary to the petitioner’s contention, the commissioner is not given
unfettered authority to reopen a case. Nor is the commissioner a “de facto
decision maker” in appeals involving unemployment compensation fraud. The
commissioner is given the limited authority to reopen “on the basis of fraud,
mistake, or newly discovered evidence.” RSA 282-A:60. The commissioner
does not make the determination regarding whether the department has proven
that a claimant committed unemployment compensation fraud — that decision
is for the tribunal. See RSA 282-A:53, :58 (2010), :60.
The petitioner maintains that, in the March 2012 reopening letter, the
commissioner provided “detailed written instructions to the new [tribunal]
hearing officer . . . on how to conduct the third de novo hearing.” She suggests
that, by doing so, the commissioner controlled the appeals process and the
third de novo hearing and that this rendered the process “‘fundamentally
unfair.’” We disagree. In the letter directed to the petitioner’s counsel, the
commissioner explained that she was reopening the case because it was “a
mistake [for the tribunal] to not allow [a certain witness] to testify.” The
commissioner then stated that, because “it is necessary to reopen,” she
“want[ed] to provide additional guidance for the next hearing.” The
commissioner went on to comment on certain evidence submitted by the
petitioner at the prior hearing related to findings the tribunal made in its
January 2012 decision. The commissioner concluded the letter by ordering the
tribunal to conduct a de novo hearing. See Town of Hinsdale v. Town of
Chesterfield, 153 N.H. 70, 73 (2005) (“De novo review means that the reviewing
[authority] decides the matter anew, neither restricted by nor deferring to
decisions made below.”).
Under RSA 282-A:56, “although the records of said department shall be
part of the evidence to be considered by the tribunal,” the tribunal “shall not be
bound by prior findings or determinations of the department.” RSA 282-A:56.
The petitioner has not demonstrated that the tribunal did not, in fact, conduct
a de novo hearing. At the third hearing, the hearing tribunal chairman
explained that the hearing would be de novo and that the tribunal was “not
bound by any previous decisions.” Although the chairman acknowledged that
he read the reopening letter which contained “certain instructions,” he then
stated: “[T]hat being said . . . I do take my position very seriously and I do take
the fact that I have judicial independence from the department very seriously
and that is how I will be conducting this hearing.” Thus, regardless of the
propriety of the commissioner’s comments in the reopening letter, we cannot
conclude that those comments rendered the procedure in this case
fundamentally unfair.
7
Relying upon unemployment compensation statutes from other
jurisdictions, the petitioner contends that the commissioner’s “control of
hearings and appeals in fraud cases is contrary to the commissioner’s role” in
those jurisdictions. (Capitalization and bolding omitted.) Our task here,
however, is to examine whether there is a substantial risk of erroneous
deprivation of the petitioner’s interest under our unemployment compensation
statute; the unemployment statutory schemes of other states do not control
our analysis. Moreover, the petitioner’s argument is based upon the faulty
premise that the commissioner “controlled all aspects of the fraud case.” As we
have explained above, the commissioner served as the second level of appeal
pursuant to her statutory authority under RSA 282-A:60.
We hold that the statutory procedure authorizing the commissioner to
reopen a case involving unemployment compensation fraud on her own
initiative, regardless of whether the claimant has prevailed before the tribunal,
adequately ensures that the process of reviewing tribunal decisions is
fundamentally fair. The appeal procedures under RSA chapter 282-A “as a
whole would appear designed to minimize inaccuracies and to assure quality
and fairness in adjudication.” Petition of Kilton, 156 N.H. 632, 645 (2007)
(quotation omitted).
The petitioner further argues that the commissioner’s role violates the
guidelines in a United States Department of Labor handbook appended to the
department’s brief to this court in Mullen I. The appended document, entitled
“Handbook for Measuring Unemployment Insurance Lower Authority Appeals
Quality,” states, in relevant part: “The appeal hearing must be fair both in form
and substance. In addition, the hearing must appear fair both to the
participants and to any casual observer. A hearing that is technically fair, but
gives the appearance of unfairness, is unfair in practical effect.” (Capitalization
omitted.) The petitioner contends that “[r]eopening and ordering the third
[tribunal] hearing was not fair to” her. She further claims, without
explanation, that her third hearing “was not fair in either form or substance.”
Assuming, without deciding, that the cited document applies here, it appears,
based upon the portions of the handbook provided to us, that the word “fair” as
used in the handbook is derived from “traditional concepts of what constitutes
due process.” Because we hold that the procedure in this case was
fundamentally fair in accordance with due process principles, we find no
violation of the guidelines in the appended document.
Next, we turn to the third prong of the due process analysis and examine
the government’s interest. See Gantert, 168 N.H. at 648. Allowing the
commissioner to reopen cases, regardless of whether the claimant has
prevailed before the tribunal, supports the government’s strong interest in the
integrity and accuracy of administrative hearings. See Appeal of Sch. Admin.
Unit #44, 162 N.H. at 86.
8
In balancing the three factors, we conclude that, given the petitioner’s
assumed property interest, the low risk of an erroneous deprivation of that
interest, and the government’s interest in ensuring an accurate proceeding,
due process is not violated by allowing the commissioner, on her own initiative,
to reopen cases involving unemployment compensation fraud in which the
claimant has prevailed before the tribunal. If alternative procedures are to be
provided, “it is for the Legislature to say so, for constitutional due process does
not command it.” Petition of Kilton, 156 N.H. at 645 (quotation omitted).
The Federal Constitution offers the petitioner no greater protection than
does the State Constitution under these circumstances. See Withrow, 421 U.S.
at 52; Appeal of Sch. Admin. Unit #44, 162 N.H. at 90. We, therefore, reach
the same result under the Federal Constitution as we do under the State
Constitution.
II. RSA chapter 282-A
The petitioner next argues that the commissioner’s March 2012 decision
to reopen the case under RSA 282-A:60 violated her rights under RSA chapter
282-A and exceeded the commissioner’s authority under the chapter.
Resolution of these arguments requires that we interpret the relevant statutory
provisions of RSA chapter 282-A.
Statutory interpretation is a question of law that we review de
novo. We are the final arbiter of the intent of the legislature as
expressed in the words of a statute considered as a whole. In
interpreting a statute, we first look to the language of the statute
itself, and, if possible, construe that language according to its plain
and ordinary meaning. Unless we find that the statutory language
is ambiguous, we need not look to legislative intent. Furthermore,
we interpret statutes in the context of the overall statutory scheme
and not in isolation.
Appeal of Niadni, Inc., 166 N.H. at 260 (quotation omitted).
RSA 282-A:60 provides that the “second level of appeal” in
unemployment compensation appeals “shall be to the commissioner.” “The
commissioner may, upon written request of an interested party or upon his
own initiative, in any case in which a decision has been rendered, reopen the
case on the basis of fraud, mistake, or newly discovered evidence.” RSA 282-
A:60. “Any party aggrieved by a decision of the appeal tribunal may appeal.”
RSA 282-A:66, I (2010). RSA 282-A:64 provides that the board shall hear
appeals from “decisions of the appeal tribunal or final decisions of the
commissioner under RSA 282-A:95.” “The parties to such appeal shall be the
claimant, all interested parties as defined in this chapter, and the
commissioner.” RSA 282-A:66, I. “An interested party who has exhausted all
9
administrative remedies within the department and who is aggrieved by a final
decision of the . . . tribunal as reversed, modified, or affirmed by the . . . board
. . . may appeal that decision to the supreme court . . . .” RSA 268-A:67, II.
The petitioner argues that, although RSA 282-A:60 permits the
commissioner to reopen a case upon her own initiative, to interpret the statute
as allowing the commissioner to do so in cases involving unemployment fraud
when the claimant has prevailed leads to an absurd and unjust result because
the commissioner, “as the ‘interested party’ and the adverse party with the
burden of proof, can reopen a fully litigated administrative fraud hearing an
unlimited number of times, while simultaneously thwarting the claimant’s right
to appeal to any higher appellate authority.” She maintains that “the most
reasonable way to interpret RSA 282-A:60 [together with] RSA 282-A:64, RSA
282-A:66 and RSA 282-A:67 . . . is to conclude that in a fraud case,” where the
commissioner plays “a multiplicity of roles and bears the burden of proof, she
may not unilaterally reopen and reverse the [tribunal] decision in favor of the
claimant.” Rather, she suggests that the commissioner must appeal the
tribunal decision to the board. This argument, however, is based upon the
same mistaken premise as is her argument regarding due process. The
commissioner’s role under RSA 282-A:60 does not encompass the multiple
functions alleged by the petitioner.
Under RSA 282-A:60, the commissioner is not an “interested party.” As
we explained, the commissioner serves as the second level of review in all
unemployment compensation appeal cases. RSA 282-A:60. Nothing in the
statute limits the commissioner’s authority to reopen only cases that are
decided unfavorably to claimants, nor gives the commissioner unfettered
authority to repeatedly reopen a case because the commissioner merely
disagrees with the tribunal decision. The plain language of the statute permits
the commissioner “upon written request of an interested party or upon his own
initiative, in any case in which a decision has been rendered, [to] reopen the
case on the basis of fraud, mistake, or newly discovered evidence.” RSA 282-
A:60 (emphasis added). If the commissioner decides to reopen on the limited
basis of fraud, mistake, or newly discovered evidence, the case returns to the
tribunal for either a de novo hearing or “the introduction of evidence or
argument relative to and concerning the factors which constitute the basis or
ground for the reopening.” RSA 282-A:61. If the commissioner declines a
party’s request to reopen, the party may appeal the tribunal’s decision to the
board. RSA 282-A:64. We are not persuaded that this process leads to an
absurd result. Rather, we agree with the department that the commissioner’s
“adjudicatory role, as expressly permitted by [RSA 282-A:60] . . . streamlines
review and enables correction of errors earlier in the process.” Accordingly, we
conclude that when the commissioner reopened the March 2012 decision, she
did not exceed her authority or violate the petitioner’s rights under RSA
chapter 282-A.
10
Finally, to the extent that the petitioner raised issues for the first time at
oral argument, we decline to address them. See State v. Mitchell, 166 N.H.
288, 292 (2014) (declining to address argument made at oral argument that
was not briefed).
Affirmed.
DALIANIS, C.J., and HICKS, LYNN, and BASSETT, JJ., concurred.
11