The Arkansas Board of Review denied unemployment benefits to claimant under the provisions of Section 5 (a) of the Arkansas Employment Security Act, on the grounds that claimant quit his last work without good cause. The Board also found that his base period wages should be reduced 25% under Section 3 (h) of the Act.
On this appeal, claimant contends that his resignation was with good cause because of the breach of the employment agreement by the employer. We agree with claimant’s contention.
Claimant was employed as a residential field appraiser for H 8c P Appraisal in Garland County. When the employer’s work was finished in Garland County, some of the employees were given employment, with expenses paid, when the employer’s operation was moved to Howard County. Other employees, including claimant, were offered a job in Howard County but were told that the employer would not pay their out-of-town expenses. Claimant testified that at the time he was hired the employer agreed to provide expenses for any change in location of the job site.
Claimant worked one day in Howard County, by agreement with the employer, to see what his expenses would be. Claimant resigned when he discovered that his wages would not cover his expenses. The only testimony to refute the evidence presented by claimant was a telephone conversation between the employer and an employee of the Employment Security Division. In that conversation, the employer stated that there had been no agreement regarding out-of-town expenses when claimant was hired.
The telephone conversation between the employer and the Agency employee was hearsay, and does not constitute substantial evidence to support the decision of the Board.
In Smith v. Director of Labor, 276 Ark. 430, 637 S.W.2d 537 (1982), the Arkansas Supreme Court held that hearsay evidence may constitute substantial evidence, but the court did not say that any hearsay would do so. The same conclusion was reached in Bockman v. Arkansas State Medical Board, 229 Ark. 143, 313 S.W.2d 826 (1958), relied upon in Smith v. Director, but in Bockman the evidence which the court found to be substantial consisted of affidavits and certified copies of court decisions.
Under these facts the reported telephone conversation does not rise to the dignity of substantial evidence, and since that item of evidence was the only evidence upon which the Board could have based its decision, we must hold that claimant is entitled to benefits.
Reversed.
Mayfield, C.J., concurs.