IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 1998-SA-01538-SCT
CITY OF TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI
v.
MISSISSIPPI EMPLOYMENT SECURITY COMMISSION AND PEGGY L. THOMPSON
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/21/1998
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. THOMAS J. GARDNER, III
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LEE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: TACEY CLARK CLAYTON
WILLIAM HULL DAVIS, JR
ELIZABETH SCHLATER MITCHELL
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: MARK D. RAY
JIM WAIDE
ALBERT B. WHITE
DAVID CHANDLER
VICTOR ISRAEL FLEITAS
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - STATE BOARDS AND AGENCIES
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 10/07/1999
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED: 10/28/99
BEFORE PITTMAN, P.J., AND MILLS AND WALLER, JJ.
MILLS, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
¶1. After being terminated by her employer, the City of Tupelo (hereinafter the City), in March of 1998,
Peggy L. Thompson filed a claim for unemployment benefits. In April of 1998 the Claims Examiner
disqualified Thompson for the unemployment benefits. Thompson appealed the Claims Examiner's ruling,
and a hearing was held before the Mississippi Employment Security Commission Appeals Referee on May
13, 1998. On May 19, 1998, the Appeals Referee reversed the Claims Examiner's finding and ruled that
Thompson was not guilty of misconduct.
¶2. The City filed an appeal with the Mississippi Employment Security Commission Board of Review. The
Board of Review determined that City's appeal filed on June 4, 1998 was untimely; subsequently, the
Appeals Referee's decision had become final. The Board of Review dismissed the appeal. The Circuit
Court of Lee County affirmed the Board of Review's decision on the same ground that City had failed to file
its Notice of Appeal within fourteen (14) days of the mailing of the Appeals Referee's decision. Neither the
Board of Review nor the circuit court addressed the merits of Thompson's dismissal. From the circuit
court's judgment affirming the Board of Review's dismissal, the City appeals to this Court assigning the
following as error:
I. Whether the City of Tupelo's appeal of the Referee's decision was untimely pursuant to
M.C.A. section 71-5-519, such that dismissal by the Board of Review was proper?
II. Whether the City of Tupelo should be granted the opportunity to argue the issue of
Thompson's dismissal for good cause?
III. Whether Thompson's dismissal was for good cause within the parameters of M.C.A. §
71-5-513?
STATEMENT OF FACTS
¶3. Peggy L. Thompson had worked for the City of Tupelo as a police officer for six and one-half years
when she was terminated in March of 1998. The termination occurred after the police department
determined that Thompson falsely reported the circumstances of an auto accident in which she was involved
while on patrol. Thompson subsequently filed for unemployment benefits.
¶4. On April 1, 1998, the Claims Examiner disqualified Thompson for unemployment benefits based upon
her alleged misconduct regarding the auto accident pursuant to Miss. Code Ann. § 71-5-513A(1)(b)(Supp.
1999). Thompson then filed her notice of appeal from that determination on April 14, 1998. The notices of
the appeal were mailed to the City at "City of Tupelo, 220 North Front Street, Tupelo, MS 38801; and to
"UCCS Inc., 356 HWY 51 STE A, Ridgeland, MS 39157." A hearing was held before the Mississippi
Employment Security Commission Appeals Referee on May 13, 1998. Thompson was represented by her
attorney, Jim Waide, and the City was represented by Diane Johnson of Unemployment Compensation
Control ("UCCS") of Ridgeland, MS.
¶5. The Referee made his decision on May 19, 1998 finding that the City had failed to meet its burden of
proving that Thompson was terminated for disqualifying misconduct. The Referee's decision was mailed on
May 19, 1998 to the City at 220 North Front Street, Tupelo, MS 38801 and to the City's representative,
Diane Johnson, at the UCCS, Inc., 396 HWY 51 STE A, Ridgeland, MS 39157, the same two addresses
to which Thompson's notice of appeal to the Appeals Referee was mailed.
¶6. The City filed its notice of appeal to the Mississippi Employment Security Commission Board of Review
on June 4, 1998. The Board of Review dismissed the appeal as untimely. The Board of Review's decision
reads in pertinent part:
Section 71-5-519 of the Mississippi Code provides that the decision of the Referee shall become the
final decision of the Board of Review unless an appeal is filed within fourteen (14) days after the date
of notification or mailing of such decision. The Referee's decision was mailed to all interested parties
to their last known address on May 19, 1998. The appeal was not filed to the Board of Review until
June 4, 1998. The Referee's decision has become final and the appeal is herewith dismissed.
The appeal, in fact, was filed two (2) days in excess of the fourteen (14) day period.
ANALYSIS
I. WHETHER THE CITY OF TUPELO'S APPEAL OF THE REFEREE'S DECISION WAS
UNTIMELY PURSUANT TO M.C.A. SECTION 71-5-519, SUCH THAT DISMISSAL BY
THE BOARD OF REVIEW WAS PROPER?
¶7. The City of Tupelo's first and most significant concern is the question of whether its appeal of the
Referee's decision to the Board of Review was filed in a timely manner under Miss. Code Ann. § 71-5-519
(1995). That statute reads:
Unless such appeal is withdrawn, an appeal tribunal, after affording the parties reasonable opportunity
for fair hearing, shall affirm, modify or reverse the findings of fact and initial determination or amended
initial determination. The parties shall be duly notified of such tribunal's decision, together with its
reasons therefor, which shall be deemed to be the final decision of the board of review unless, within
fourteen (14) day after the date of notification or mailing of such decision, further appeal is initiated
pursuant to section 71-5-523.
Miss. Code Ann. § 71-5-519 (1995).
¶8. The City argues that it was not given reasonable notice of the Referee's decision and therefore could not
file an appeal with the fourteen (14) day time period. We have indicated that there is a due process
component to the notice provided by the Mississippi Employment Security Commission. Booth v.
Mississippi Employment Sec. Comm'n, 588 So.2d 422, 427-428 (Miss. 1991). In Booth, the question
of whether the Commission mailed adequate notice to the claimant was not in dispute. Id. In addressing the
issue of whether due process required notice to a claimant's attorney, we held that due process requires
"notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of
the action and to afford them an opportunity to present their objections." Id. (quoting Mullane v. Central
Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314 (1950). In regard to sending notice to the party's
attorney we stated: ". . . this Court . . . does not hold that there is a constitutional requirement for notice to
the attorney for the claimant as long as notice to the claimant is "reasonably calculated" to apprise the
claimant of necessary information." Id. Thus, only where there is a determination that notice was not
"reasonably calculated" will there be a requirement that notice be sent to the party's attorney.
¶9. This Court in Wilkerson v. Mississippi Employment Sec. Comm'n, 630 So.2d 1000 (Miss. 1994),
stated:
We interpret section 71-5-517 to mean that a party to the initial determination, claimant or employer,
has fourteen days from the time that the notification is mailed to appeal to the Board of Review. Only
if the notification is by means other than mail to the party's last known address will the time begin to
run upon notification of the claim.
Wilkerson, 630 So.2d at 1002. In Wilkerson, it was undisputed that the notice was sent to the
employer's last known address. The issue there was whether the Employment Security Commission
possessed the power to modify the statute in question by arbitrarily adding three days to the time for appeal.
Id. at 1001-02. This Court ruled that it did not have such power. Id. As a result, the employer was found
to have failed to file a timely appeal to the Board of Review where the appeal was made fifteen (15) days
following the mailing date of notification. Id. at 1002-03. However, the Wilkerson Court did intimate that
under certain conditions the strict adherence to the statutory standard of fourteen (14) days might be
remitted, specifically where "good cause" is shown. Id. The Court found that no "good cause" to relax the
statutory standard was shown by the employer in Wilkerson. Id.
¶10. In Cane v. Mississippi. Employment Sec. Comm'n, 368 So.2d 1263 (Miss. 1979), the
Commission denied an unemployment claimant a hearing on the merits of his case because his appeal was
not filed within the fourteen (14) day period. Id. Cane filed for unemployment compensation based upon his
prior employment at a school in Mississippi. Id. at 1263. When he initially applied for the benefits he was
living in Tennessee. Id. Thereafter, he changed addresses and notified the Commission via a form provided
by the Commission itself. Id. He continued to apply for benefits from his new address. Id. The Commission
mailed to Cane a "Notice of Non-Monetary Decision" but mailed it to Cane's old address. Id. Cane
eventually received the notice and, subsequently, filed an appeal. Id. However, the Commission dismissed
Cane's appeal because he failed to file within the fourteen (14) day period. Id. Cain maintained that his
failure to file on time was a direct result of the Commission's mistake in mailing the notice to the wrong
address. Id. In reversing the Board of Review's decision, we stated:
Obviously, mailing the notification to the wrong address was an inadvertent mistake on the part of the
Commission, but it would be unfair to penalize Cane because of a mistake not of his own making.
Inasmuch as the notification was not "mailed to his last known address," the fourteen day time frame
within which he had the right to appeal did not begin to run from the mailing of the notification, but
rather . . . it began to run "after notification thereof."
Id.
¶11. In the case sub judice, the City, in essence, attempts to make the same argument put forth in Cane-
the Commission failed to mail the notice to the correct address. The City insists that it was not afforded
proper notification since the notice of the Referee's decision was sent to "City of Tupelo, 220 North Front
Street, Tupelo, MS 38801." The City indicates that this is the address of the Tupelo city jail and police
station and not the Tupelo Police Department administrative offices, which are located at a separate
address several blocks away. In short, the City argues that the notice was mailed to the wrong address.
Furthermore, the City argues that the notice should have been addressed more specifically than simply "City
of Tupelo;" that is, the notice should have been addressed to an individual or a single department within the
City government. For these reasons, the City argues that the notice was not reasonably calculated to inform
adequately and timely the City of the Referee's decision, thereby denying the City the requisite time in which
to prepare a notice of appeal.
¶12. In conjunction with this argument the City cites this Court's assertion in Wilkerson that "[w]e have no
quarrel, either, with a relaxation of the standard for 'good cause . . . .'" Wilkerson, 630 So.2d at 1002. The
Court in Wilkerson pointed to the circumstances in Cane as an example where the fourteen (14) day
statutory standard for appeals may be relaxed. Id. Apparently, the City would have this Court believe that
the circumstances in Cane are similar to the ones presented here or, or at the very least, are such that
require a relaxing of the standard.
¶13. The Court in Wilkerson made it clear that only if notification is by means other than mail to the party's
last known address will the fourteen (14) day time period begin to run upon notification of the claim.
Wilkerson, 630 So.2d at 1002. The words "last known address" can only mean the party's address that
was made known by that party to the Commission either in its application for benefits if it is a claimant or in
its correspondence with the Commission concerning a matter before the that administrative body. If the
Commission is sending notice of a decision that has been reached by one of its tribunals then it stands to
reason that the parties concerned have represented themselves in one form or another before that body and
corresponded with that body prior to the tribunal's decision. Indeed, in the case sub judice, both the City
and Thompson had corresponded and represented themselves before the Appeals Referee on this matter.
On all pertinent documents the address for the City was designated as "City of Tupelo, 220 North Front
Street, Tupelo, MS 38801"-the address that the City now claims was not its proper address. First, the
record indicates that the "Notice of Hearing Before Referee" was mailed to this "220 North Front Street"
address. Second, the record indicates that this same address was used to send the Referee's
"Postponement of Hearing Before Appeals Referee" to the City after the City requested postponement.
Third, the second "Notice of Hearing Before the Referee" was mailed to the City at this address. Fourth, a
second "Postponement of Hearing Before Appeals Referee" was sent to the city after the City requested
postponement. Finally, the third and last "Notice of Hearing Before Appeals Referee" was sent to the City
at this same address. Furthermore, the record indicates that all but one of these documents were also sent
to the City's representative, UCCS, Inc. The City subsequently appeared and properly argued the matter
before the Referee.
¶14. We cite all of these notices to illustrate the number of notices that were sent to the City and the City's
acknowledgment of these notices. Nowhere does the record indicate that the City requested the
Commission to change the "220 North Front Street" address to another address. Nor did the City ever
request that correspondence directed to the City be specifically addressed to a particular individual or
department. The Referee mailed his decision to the City's "last known address." Furthermore, the notice
was also sent to the City's designated representative who appeared before the Referee and argued on
behalf of the City.
¶15. Even if the Court assumes, arguendo, that the "220 North Front Street" address was an incorrect
address and that sending correspondence to the City's jail under these circumstances was a flagrant
mistake, that mistake is now immaterial. The City has effectively waived this argument that it now so
persistently pursues. The City argues that the jail and station house to which the notice was sent could not
be the departments handling the MESC matter. The obvious question begs loudly to be answered-why is
the station house address that was used successfully to correspond with the City concerning Thompson's
claim before the Referee not the address to be used to mail the Referee's decision on that very same
matter? The City provides no answer to this question.
¶16. The City falls far short in its attempt to show that the Referee's notice was not "reasonably calculated"
to inform adequately and timely the City of its decision so that it could respond accordingly. Alternatively,
the City fails to show that there is "good cause" for this Court to relax the fourteen (14) day standard. The
Commission mailed the Referee's decision to the City at the same address that had been designated for the
City in previous notices and correspondences with the City. The City offers no proof or even claims that it
requested the Commission to send correspondence to any other address other than the one that had been
previously used in this matter. Only after the fact does the City come forward and claim that the "220 North
Front Street" address was an improper place for notices to be mailed. The Commission mailed the notice of
the Referee's decision on May 19, 1998. The City's notice of appeal was not filed until June 4, 1998, two
(2) days in excess of the fourteen (14) day statutory standard. The City, therefore, has no further recourse.
II. Whether the City of Tupelo should granted the opportunity to argue the issue of
Thompson's dismissal for good cause?
III. Whether Thompson's dismissal was for good cause within the parameters of M.C.A. §
71-5-513?
¶17. We do not address the merits of the other two issues concerning Thompson's alleged misconduct.
Those questions are now inconsequential. Moreover, even if these issues were found to warrant inquiry, it is
not for this Court to inquire since there has been no such inquiry by the Board of Review. It is well-settled
law in Mississippi that judicial review of a Board of Review's ruling is limited. Booth v. Mississippi
Employment Sec. Comm'n, 588 So.2d 422, 424 (Miss. 1991) (citing Piggly Wiggly v. Mississippi
Employment Sec. Comm'n, 465 So.2d 1062, 1064-65 (Miss. 1985)). This Court has further stated:
Judicial review of an Employment Security Commission ruling is limited to determination of whether
the decision is supported by substantial evidence.... This Court must review the record to determine
whether there is substantial evidence to support the Board of Review's findings of fact . . . . Further,
with supporting evidence and in the absence of fraud, the factual findings of the Board of Review are
conclusive and our review is limited to questions of law. Miss.Code Ann. § 71-5-531 (1995).
Halbert v. City of Columbus, 722 So. 2d 522, 524 (Miss. 1998).
¶18. The record in this case indicates that a hearing was not conducted on any of the issues presented to
this Court. The Board of Review dismissed the City's appeal because it was not timely filed. The dismissal
was correct, and there was no need to address the misconduct issue. Accordingly, there is no need now.
CONCLUSION
¶19. Where good cause is shown the fourteen (14) day time period of section 71-5-519 will be relaxed and
be deemed to start to run from the date of notification. Additionally, this Court may choose to apply the
relaxed notification standard where it determines that notice was not reasonably calculated to inform a party
of a Commission's decision. Therefore, it is incumbent upon the party seeking a relaxation to show such
good cause and/or failure of the Commission to reasonably inform that party. The City has shown neither.
The Commission mailed the notice of the Referee's decision to the City at the City's last known address-the
address that had been used for all purposes concerning the Thompson claim throughout the hearings. The
City at no time objected to this address or requested that it be changed in any way. The notice of the
Referee's decision was mailed to this address. The City failed to file a notice of appeal within the fourteen
(14) day statutory time period, and, subsequently, relinquished its right to argue the merits of its case. The
circuit court correctly affirmed the Board of Review's dismissal of the City's appeal. Therefore, we affirm
the judgment of the Lee County Circuit Court.
¶20. AFFIRMED.
PRATHER, C.J., PITTMAN, P.J., BANKS, McRAE, SMITH, WALLER
AND COBB, JJ., CONCUR. SULLIVAN., P.J., CONCURS IN RESULT
ONLY.