SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-2650-96T2
KIMBERLY A. GERBER (GOLDEN),
Claimant-Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF REVIEW,
Respondent.
___________________________________
Submitted: May 6, 1998 - Decided: June 24, 1998
Before Judges King, Muir, Jr. and Kestin.
On appeal from the Board of Review,
Department of Labor.
Kimberly A. Golden, appellant pro se.
Peter Verniero, Attorney General, attorney
for the Board of Review (Mary C. Jacobson,
Assistant Attorney General, of counsel;
Alan C. Stephens, Deputy Attorney General,
on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
KESTIN, J.A.D.
Claimant appeals from a decision of the Board of Review denying her claim for unemployment benefits. In reaching its result, the Board adopted a decision of the Appeal Tribunal which held that claimant was disqualified for benefits because she had left work voluntarily without good cause attributable to the work. N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). We are in substantial agreement with the Board's conclusion that claimant's allegations of stress on the job
were not adequate as a compelling reason for leaving the job, and
were, in any event, not sufficiently established. When claimant
failed to support her allegation of job-related stress with medical
documentation, the Board was well warranted in concluding that she
had not satisfied the statutory "good cause attributable to [the]
work" requirement in that connection. Nevertheless, the record
suggests that the employer prevented claimant from beginning a new
job which she had obtained before leaving the subject employment.
We hold in the circumstances presented, if it is established to the
agency's satisfaction that claimant's unemployed status was the
direct result of the employer's conduct rather than claimant's own
choice, that, as a matter of law, the unemployment must be seen to
be attributable to the work as contemplated by the Unemployment
Compensation Act (the Act), and claimant is eligible for benefits
thereunder.
Claimant was employed by Allied Physicians Billing &
Management Resources (Allied), where she worked as an account
service representative. Claimant left Allied's employ on August 8,
1996, after finding other employment with Pinelands OB/GYN
(Pinelands) which was to commence on August 19, 1996. According to
claimant, she left Allied because of job-related stress, induced
primarily by various conflicts with her supervisor, Peg Bofsord.
Claimant alleged that Bofsord criticized her in front of other
employees, causing her unnecessary humiliation, and assigned
claimant to assist other employees in their tasks, which led her to
fall behind in her own work. On August 16, three days before she
was scheduled to begin work at Pinelands, claimant was notified
that Pinelands had withdrawn its offer of a position because Allied
had threatened a lawsuit should Pinelands employ her. Allied's
conduct in this regard was verified by its representative who
testified in the hearing before the Appeal Tribunal. Allied had
taken the position that Pinelands was bound by its agreement as a
former client of Allied not to hire any Allied employee for two
years following the employee's separation from Allied. The
validity of any such agreement is not at issue in this proceeding,
and the record is silent as to whether claimant and Allied were
parties to an employment contract with a restrictive covenant.
The finding that claimant's working conditions were not so
onerous as to constitute "good cause attributable to [the] work" is
sufficiently supported by credible evidence in the record to
require our deference. Self v. Board of Review,
91 N.J. 453, 459
(1982) ("If the factual findings of an administrative agency are
supported by sufficient credible evidence, courts are obliged to
accept them"); Close v. Kordulak Bros.,
44 N.J. 589, 598-99 (1965).
See also Brady v. Board of Review,
152 N.J. 197, 210-11 (1997)
(describing "limited" standard of review of administrative agency
decisions). Deference to agency determinations is especially
appropriate where the agency's decision is informed by its subject
matter expertise in the area delegated by the Legislature. See
Close v. Kordulak, supra, 44 N.J. at 599 (stating that courts
should give "due regard" to agency expertise "where such expertise
is a pertinent factor"); Brady v. Board of Review, supra, 152 N.J.
at 210 (noting that appellate courts must defer to agency
"expertise and superior knowledge of a particular field") (citing
Greenwood v. State Police Training Ctr.,
127 N.J. 500, 513 (1992)).
The on-the-job reprimands administered to claimant by her
supervisor, Bofsord, while public and arguably improper and
humiliating, were not so burdensome as to justify claimant's
departure from the job. Cf. Goebelbecker v. State,
53 N.J. Super. 53, 59 (App. Div. 1958). Moreover, claimant had discussed her
problems concerning Bofsord with Belinda Manix, Bofsord's
supervisor. Manix had instructed Bofsord that any future
reprimands with regard to claimant's work should occur in private,
and she arranged for Bofsord to attend a supervisor training
seminar. Furthermore, although claimant complained of severe
stress because of conditions on the job, which allegedly induced
physical symptoms and led to her physician prescribing
antidepressant medication, no medical documentation was presented
to establish either the nature and quality of the stress or its
causal connection with job conditions. Thus, if the question as to
claimant's eligibility for benefits were to be limited to the facts
surrounding her departure from Allied, the Board of Review's
determination that claimant left the employment without good cause
attributable to the work would command our deference as amply
supported by the record with due regard for the Board's expertise.
An alternative ground of eligibility presented by claimant was
unaddressed by the agency, however. The Attorney General argues on
behalf of the Board's decision:
Undoubtedly, it served no useful purpose under
the circumstances for Gerber to resign and join the
ranks of the unemployed, trading fair compensation
from employment for no compensation at all. Despite
indicating that she wanted to work things out with
her employer, she resigned suddenly, demonstrating
that she did not try hard enough to remain employed.
Plainly, "to allow [Gerber] to recover [benefits]
would subvert the express policy of providing aid to
those who are unemployed `through no fault of their
own.'" * * * The Unemployment Benefit Program was
not intended to pay benefits in these circumstances.
Rather, the Unemployment Compensation Law is
designed to "encourage persons to work," . . . and
unemployment benefits are not payable to those who
"would prefer benefits to suitable jobs." * * *
Gerber "left work at a time when her employer had
work for her," and she did not "do what was
necessary and reasonable in order to remain
employed." * * * It would be contrary to the purpose
of the Unemployment Compensation Law to grant
benefits to Gerber after she resigned from her job
without good cause attributable to the work within
the meaning of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a). (Citations
omitted.)
By suggesting that claimant voluntarily "join[ed] the ranks of the unemployed," "that she did not try hard enough to remain employed," and that she did not "do what was necessary and reasonable in order to remain employed[,]" this argument emphasizes different facts than claimant relies upon. It is claimant's position in a two-part alternative argument that, based upon the totality of facts, a determination of claimant's entitlement to unemployment benefits cannot rest alone on whether her "quit" from Allied was voluntary or involuntary. She argues that she did not become unemployed by reason of her own conduct or because of the vicissitudes of the working world. Rather, she stresses, she made careful arrangements to continue to be employed in a better job, for which she was hired, and only because of Allied's deliberate action in asserting
its legal claims against the new employer, her replacement job fell
through. Allied's conduct transforms claimant's situation from a
run-of-the-mill voluntary quit case to one calling for
reexamination of the fundamental principles of our Unemployment
Compensation Act, and the meaning of the statutory language,
"attributable to [the] work" in N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a).
N.J.S.A. 43:21-2 declares the purpose of the Act to be
protection against "economic insecurity due to [involuntary]
unemployment" by "lighten[ing] the burden which now so often falls
with crushing force upon the unemployed worker and his family." As
remedial legislation, it is to be liberally construed. Brady,
supra, 152 N.J. at 212. However, denial of benefits in appropriate
cases also advances the purposes of the Act by preserving the
compensation fund "against claims by those not intended to share in
its benefits." Ibid.
Before the Act was amended in 1961, the statutory standard
permitted benefits to those who left work simply "for good cause."
Yardville Supply Co. v. Board of Review,
114 N.J. 371, 374 (1989).
Under that unqualified test, "good cause" might include purely
personal reasons, including "the pressure of circumstances which
may reasonably be viewed as having compelled [an employee to leave
work]." Self, supra, 91 N.J. at 456 (citing Krauss v. A. & M.
Karagheusian, Inc.,
13 N.J. 447, 464 (1953)). The 1961 amendment
changed the standard to "good cause attributable to [the] work",
N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a), which had the effect of disqualifying those
claimants who had left work for personal, even if good, reasons.
White v. Board of Review,
146 N.J. Super. 268, 270 (App. Div.
1977).
Claimant argues that she left Allied for a better position
elsewhere, and that this constituted "good cause attributable to
[the] work" pursuant to the dictates of N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) when
the new job failed to materialize. Rider College v. Board of
Review,
167 N.J. Super. 42 (App. Div. 1979), is the precedent cited
in this regard. In that case, the court acknowledged: "[T]here
may be situations where a voluntary quit to take a better position
because of factors related to the work would constitute good cause
attributable to the work[.]" Id. at 47. This view has been
applied in New Jersey to validate a claim by one who left a part-time job to accept full-time employment. See Matter of A.F.,
92 N.J.A.R.2d 7 (N.J. Adm. Oct. 28, 1991). See generally Emmanuel S.
Tipon, Annotation, Unemployment Compensation: Leaving Employment
in Pursuit of Other Employment as Affecting Right to Unemployment
Compensation, 46 ALR5th 659 § 2[b], at 680 (1997) ("[C]laimants who
established that they left a temporary job for a better paying job
have generally been successful in obtaining benefits on the ground
that their reason for leaving the temporary job was connected with
the employment or attributable to the employer.")
The view articulated in Rider was expressly qualified by a
caveat, however: "the burden of proving that the voluntary
separation from employment meets the statutory test is upon the
claimant." Rider, supra, 167 N.J. Super. at 47. As we have
already indicated, concentrating on claimant's reasons for her
voluntary separation from employment with Allied....her relational
difficulties on the job, she has not met the burden.
The unique aspect of this case, which was not considered by
the agency, bears upon the second part of claimant's alternative
argument and entails a different focus, however: what was the
direct cause of claimant's status as an unemployed person when she
filed her claim? With this view of the matter, the question is
whether Allied's purposeful act....its assertion of contractual
rights against Pinelands, which caused Pinelands to withdraw its
offer of employment from claimant....constitutes "good cause
attributable to [the] work" pursuant to N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a) for
claimant having joined the ranks of the unemployed.
Self, supra,
91 N.J. 453, is considered "the leading case to
address the issue of what constitutes a voluntary quit under
N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(a)." Yardville, supra, 114 N.J. at 375. Self
held that workers unable to work because of transportation
difficulties had not left their employment for "good cause." Self,
91 N.J. at 457. There, the claimants had lost their transportation
to work because a fellow employee, who had previously provided them
with the transportation, had quit. The court was careful to
distinguish that situation from a scenario in which the employer
makes a change in its operations which increases the employees'
commuting distance. Id. at 460. The Self court reasoned that the
transportation problem of the employees in the actual case was not,
under the terms of the statute, attributable to the employment.
Ibid. The critical element was that the employer had done nothing
to bring about the employees' problems, such as requiring them to
work at a more distant facility. Ibid.
The concept of fault was likewise confronted in Yardville,
supra,
114 N.J. 371, which concerned unemployment benefits for a
truck driver who had lost his driver's license because of a drunk-driving incident which was not job-related. As a result of the
loss of license, the truck driver had lost his job. The Yardville
court observed: "[The employer] had no control over [claimant's]
reckless decision to gamble his driver's license. It would be
unfair to make [the employer] bear the economic cost of
[claimant's] misconduct." Id. at 375. To permit claimant to
receive benefits, the Court added, would "subvert" the policy
underlying the Act, which is to aid those "unemployed `through no
fault or act of [their] own.'" Ibid. (citing Schock v. Board of
Review,
89 N.J. Super. 118, 125 (App. Div. 1965), aff'd,
48 N.J. 121 (1966)). Most recently, in Casciano v. Board of Review,
300 N.J. Super. 570 (App. Div. 1997), we employed a rationale based on
public policy to vindicate the claimant's refusal to cooperate with
his former employer's illegal activity, and essentially invoked the
concept of fault as the basis for a determination of "good cause
attributable to [the] work[,]" id. at 577, albeit in a somewhat
different context.
The Attorney General argues that Allied's threat to sue
Pinelands has no relevance here. Yet the facts, along with a close
reading of Yardville and Self, interpreted in the light of the
purposes behind the Unemployment Compensation Act, suggest
otherwise. Crediting claimant's allegations, after she left her
job with Allied she was not unemployed, because she had secured
another job. She "joined the ranks of the unemployed" through no
fault of her own, but rather because of the deliberate actions of
her employer designed to eliminate her new job opportunity.
Focusing on Allied's conduct, the reasons for claimant's status as
an unemployed individual were not purely personal to her, as with
the employees in Self, who had lost their transportation to work
for reasons not attributable to the employer. Here, the conduct
which caused claimant's unemployed status, i.e., the unavailability
of claimant's replacement job secured before she left Allied, was
that of Allied itself. This is more akin to the hypothetical
situation described in Self as potentially leading to a different
result, i.e., the employer moving the place of employment further
away from the claimants.
As to whether, in terms used by the court in Yardville, it is
fair to require the employer to bear the economic cost of a
claimant's unemployment, we are constrained to note that this
claimant engaged in no misconduct. She was unhappy with her work
situation, and she found herself another job. She alleges she did
nothing to place herself in the ranks of the unemployed, as the
Attorney General argues. To the contrary, she took reasonable....and
successful, until the employer intervened....steps to assure that she
would remain employed with no significant hiatus between jobs.
Claimant's actions were neither foolish nor blameworthy in any way,
as had been those of the Yardville claimant. Nevertheless, had
claimant's new job failed to materialize by an accident of fate in
no way attributable to Allied, she would have had to bear the risk,
because her reasons for being out of work would have been
"personal" in the final analysis under existing case law. However,
it appears that Pinelands rescinded its offer of employment only
because of Allied's intervention. This was no fortuitous
occurrence resulting from a neutral act. Allied did more than make
a general decision which rendered claimant's status as an employed
person more difficult to maintain, such as moving its offices to a
distant location, which Self suggested would qualify as a
"condition attributable to the work rather than the employee."
Self, supra, 91 N.J. at 459. Allied's conduct was specifically
directed against claimant; it destroyed her future employment
opportunity through a threat to the new employer.
The test to be applied in determining "good cause" under the
Act is one of "ordinary common sense and prudence." Brady, supra,
152 N.J. at 214 (citing Zielenski v. Board of Review,
85 N.J.
Super. 46, 52 (App. Div. 1964). It appears that claimant did not
voluntarily join the ranks of the unemployed; nor is her status as
an unemployed person likely to have been the result, in any
proximately causal sense, of any choice she made to seek new
employment or of any conduct attributable to her. It appears that
claimant is unemployed solely because of the direct action her
erstwhile employer took that caused her to lose her job. These are
factual issues which the agency may view as requiring further
development. For the purposes of claimant's rights to unemployment
compensation, it is of no consequence whether or not the former
employer acted validly or reasonably to vindicate claimed
contractual rights it may have had vis à vis the new employer.
Especially in the absence of a restrictive covenant to which
claimant herself was a party, the unilateral action of the employer
cannot be seen to be in any way attributable to claimant for
unemployment compensation eligibility purposes.
The facts of this case are unusual. We regard the principle
we have developed in an effort to achieve substantial justice
within the framework of the Unemployment Compensation Act, to have
limited application.
The record before us leaves unresolved the question whether
claimant would have left her job with Allied in any event, even
without securing a replacement job. If that is found to be a
substantial likelihood, then claimant's status as an unemployed
person may be viewed to be attributable to her own choice rather
than to the conduct of the employer. This is also an issue of fact
subject to agency determination.
The Board of Review's order denying benefits is reversed.
Because of our regard for the agency's authority over its own
processes as well as the potential need for further factual
development, and in light of the fact that the dispositive issue
was unaddressed on the agency level, we remand for such
determinations of fact as may be seen to be necessary within the
bounds of the principle we have indicated should be applied.
Reversed and remanded.