Buddy HINER v. DIRECTOR, Arkansas Employment
Security Department; and Hiner Oils, Inc.
E 96-148___ S.W.2d ___
Court of Appeals of Arkansas
Division III
Opinion delivered March 25, 1998
1. Unemployment compensation -- factors on review. -- On appeal
in unemployment compensation cases, findings of fact by the
Board of Review are conclusive if supported by substantial
evidence, and review by the Court of Appeals is limited to
determining whether the Board could reasonably reach its
decision upon the evidence before it; substantial evidence is
such evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to
support a conclusion; the appellate court reviews the evidence
and all reasonable inferences deducible therefrom in a light
most favorable to the Board of Review's findings; the
appellate court does not conduct a de novo review of the
evidence in an appeal from a Board of Review decision; the
scope of judicial review is limited to a determination of
whether the Board could reasonably reach its decision upon the
evidence before it.
2. Unemployment compensation -- good cause defined -- what
constitutes. -- The term "good cause" means a justifiable
reason for not accepting the particular job offered; to
constitute good cause, the reason for refusal must not be
arbitrary or capricious, and the reason must be connected with
the work itself; the question of what is good cause must bedetermined in the light of the facts in each case; although
benefits will be denied an employee who leaves employment for
general economic reasons not connected with some specific
unfairness perpetrated by his employer, where the employer
does an act that causes economic injury to the employee that
act may be good cause connected with the work within the
meaning of the statute.
3. Unemployment compensation -- good cause sufficient for
successful unemployment-benefits claim -- dependent factors. -- Good cause sufficient to have a successful unemployment-benefits claim is cause that would reasonably impel an
average, able-bodied, qualified worker to give up his
employment; good cause depends not only on the good faith of
the employee involved, which includes the presence of a
genuine desire to work and to be self-supporting, but also
depends on the reaction of an average employee.
4. Unemployment compensation -- finding that appellant
voluntarily quit his position without good cause not supported
by substantial evidence. -- The appellate court, viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to the Board of Review,
was unable to find substantial evidence to support its finding
that appellant voluntarily quit his position without good
cause connected with the work; appellant attempted to resolvehis concerns about continued employment without success; there
were legitimate reasons for his resignation; the Board of
Review did not reasonably decide that appellant left his job
voluntarily and without good cause connected with the work.
5. Unemployment compensation -- purpose of legislation
concerning. -- Unemployment compensation laws were enacted to
provide a reasonable and effective means for the promotion of
economic security and to assist financially those employees
who are involuntarily unemployed because of the reduction of
an employer's work force due to adverse economic conditions;
they are not designed to penalize employers or reward
employees but are designed to promote the common good or
general welfare of the State; the goal is to provide for
employees who are able to work, available for work, but cannot
find work.
6. Unemployment compensation -- appellant did not voluntarily
leave job without good cause connected with work -- Board of
Review reversed and remanded. -- The appellate court, upon
considering the public policy purpose articulated in Ark. Code
Ann. § 11-10-102 (Repl. 1996), and in light of the undisputed
evidence concerning the imminent sale of the company for which
appellant had worked for twenty-eight years, the fact that
appellant would have not only been replaced as president ofthe business but was not promised employment except as a
short-term paid consultant without employee benefits, and the
fact that appellant was unemployed after his three-month
consultant situation expired following the sale, was unable to
hold that the Board of Review reasonably found that appellant
voluntarily left his job as president of the company without
good cause connected with the work; the case was reversed and
remanded to the Board of Review for an award of unemployment
benefits.
7. Appeal & error -- argument raised for first time on appeal not
addressed. -- The appellant's argument that the board of
review erred when it permitted the employer's attorney to
testify on behalf of the employer and remain its advocate was
not addressed because the record did not demonstrate that
appellant objected to the testimony by the lawyer; arguments
raised for the first time on appeal will not be considered.
Appeal from State of Arkansas Board of Review; reversed and
remanded.
Bagby law Firm, P.A., by: Philip A. Bagby, for appellant.
Phyllis Edwards, for appellee.
Wendell L. Griffen, Judge.
Buddy Hiner seeks reversal of a Board of Review decision that
he is not entitled to unemployment benefits. We hold that the
decision of the Board of Review that appellant voluntarily left his
work without good cause connected with the work is not supported by
substantial evidence. Therefore, we reverse the decision, and
remand the case to the Board so that an order awarding benefits can
be entered.
Appellant was employed by Hiner Oils, Inc., for twenty-eight
years. For most of that time he held the position of vice-president with the firm. After the murder of his brother, Gerald
Hiner, who was the president and owner of the firm, appellant
worked as company president. He was named co-executor of the
estate of Gerald Hiner along with Gerald Hiner's son, Paul Hiner.
Paul Hiner and his sister inherited all the stock of thecorporation after their father's death, and decided to sell the
firm to a new entity to be known as Hiner Distributing, contrary to
the desires of appellant. It is undisputed that because of
appellant's opposition to the sale Paul Hiner and his sister
contemplated initiating probate proceedings aimed at removing
appellant as co-executor of the estate of Gerald Hiner, and that
appellant's prospect for defeating that effort was dim because his
nephew and niece owned all the stock of Hiner Oils.
As part of an agreement connected with the sale of the
business to Hiner Distributing on September 1, 1994, appellant
agreed to resign as co-executor of the estate of Gerald Hiner and
as president of Hiner Oils, effective August 31, 1994. Appellant
signed a covenant not to compete with the new entity for five
years, for which he was paid $60,000. Appellant also agreed to
serve as consultant to the new firm for three months (September,
October, and November 1994), and was paid $5,000 per month for his
services. However, appellant was not retained as an employee of
the new firm. He had no employee benefits during the three months
that he was a paid consultant, and was unemployed afterward.
Believing that he had been laid off or discharged, appellant
filed a claim for unemployment insurance benefits with the
Employment Security Division of the Arkansas Department of Labor
(the Department). The Department denied benefits pursuant to Ark.
Code Ann. § 11-10-513 (Supp. 1997), finding that he voluntarily
left his last work without good cause connected with the work.
Appellant appealed to the Appeal Tribunal, which reversed theDepartment's determination, found that appellant was discharged for
reasons other than misconduct in connection with the work based on
Ark. Code Ann. § 11-10-514, and modified the decision by awarding
benefits. After the employer appealed to the Board of Review, the
Board reversed the Appeal Tribunal and found that appellant
voluntarily left his last work without good cause connected with
the work, pursuant to Ark. Code Ann. § 11-10-513(a)(1).
Although appellant's first argument is that substantial
evidence supports the decision by the Appeals Tribunal that awarded
him unemployment benefits and that the Board of Review erred in
reversing that decision, that argument does not correctly address
the standard of review applicable to appeals from decisions by the
Board of Review. On appeal in unemployment compensation cases,
findings of fact by the Board of Review are conclusive if supported
by substantial evidence, and review by the Court of Appeals is
limited to determining whether the Board could reasonably reach its
decision upon the evidence before it. Rodriguez v. Director, 59
Ark. App. 8, 952 S.W.2d 186 (1997). Substantial evidence is such
evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support
a conclusion. This Court reviews the evidence and all reasonable
inferences deducible therefrom in a light most favorable to the
Board of Review's findings. Rucker v. Director, 52 Ark. App. 126,
915 S.W.2d 315 (1996). We do not conduct a de novo review of the
evidence in an appeal from a Board of Review decision. Even when
there is evidence upon which the Board might have reached a
different decision, the scope of judicial review is limited to adetermination of whether the Board could reasonably reach its
decision upon the evidence before it. Cowan v. Director, 56 Ark.
App. 17, 936 S.W.2d 766 (1997).
The Board of Review held that appellant was disqualified from
receiving unemployment benefits because he voluntarily left his job
with Hiner Oils without good cause connected with the work pursuant
to Ark. Code Ann. § 11-10-513(a)(1). The term "good cause" means
a justifiable reason for not accepting the particular job offered.
Id.; Rowlett v. Director, 45 Ark. App. 99, 872 S.W.2d 83 (1994).
To constitute good cause, the reason for refusal must not be
arbitrary or capricious, and the reason must be connected with the
work itself. Id. The question of what is good cause must be
determined in the light of the facts in each case. Wacaster v.
Daniels, 270 Ark. 190, 603 S.W.2d 907 (Ark. App. 1980). Although
benefits will be denied an employee who leaves employment for
general economic reasons not connected with some specific
unfairness perpetrated by his employer, where the employer does an
act that causes economic injury to the employee that act may be
good cause connected with the work within the meaning of the
statute. Jackson v. Daniels, 269 Ark. 714, 600 S.W.2d 426 (Ark.
App. 1980).
We have recently held that good cause sufficient to have a
successful unemployment benefits claim is cause that would
reasonably impel an average able-bodied, qualified worker to give
up his employment. Garrett v. Director, 58 Ark. App. 7, 944 S.W.2d
865 (1997). Good cause depends not only on the good faith of theemployee involved, which includes the presence of a genuine desire
to work and to be self-supporting, but also depends on the reaction
of an average employee. Id.
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the Board
of Review, we are unable to find substantial evidence to support
its finding that appellant voluntarily quit his position as
president of Hiner Oils without good cause connected with the work.
Although appellant testified that he voluntarily signed a letter of
resignation and the covenant not to compete, and that he was paid
$60,000 as consideration for doing so and for resigning as co-executor of the estate of Gerald Hiner, there is no evidentiary
basis for concluding that he did so without good cause connected
with his work. Appellant's job was terminated because his employer
was being sold to another entity. Appellant had no power to halt
or otherwise control the circumstances of the sale because the
company was owned by his nephew and niece, who inherited Gerald
Hiner's stock following his demise. The undisputed evidence is
that the niece and nephew were preparing to initiate probate
proceedings to remove appellant as co-executor of their father's
estate in furtherance of their decision to sell the business. It
is also undisputed that appellant was neither promised nor offered
a job as an employee with the prospective purchaser of the
business. The sale of the firm to the new owner ended appellant's
status as an employee of Hiner Oils, left him without medical
coverage for his heart condition, and resulted in him being
retained by the owner as a consultant for only three months when hehad previously been vice-president and president of the business.
Like the appellant in Garrett v. Director, supra, the
appellant in this case attempted to resolve his concerns about
continued employment without success. He could not convince his
niece and nephew to keep the business they inherited. He could not
persuade the purchaser to retain him as an employee. These were
certainly legitimate reasons for resigning his positions as
president of Hiner Oils and co-executor of the estate of Gerald
Hiner. The fact that appellant voluntarily accepted $60,000 in
exchange for entering into a covenant not to compete with the new
firm and agreed to be a paid consultant with the new firm does not
mean that he lacked good cause to give up his job with Hiner Oils.
This undisputed proof prevents us from holding that the Board of
Review reasonably decided that appellant left his job as president
of Hiner Oils voluntarily and without good cause connected with the
work.
We reach this decision especially mindful of the purpose
behind our unemployment compensation legislation, and the benefits
provided thereby. As Judge George Howard wrote in Wacaster v.
Daniels, supra, unemployment compensation laws were enacted during
the Great Depression of the 1930s to provide a reasonable and
effective means for the promotion of economic security and to
assist financially those employees who are involuntarily unemployed
because of the reduction of an employer's work force due to adverse
economic conditions. These measures are not designed to penalize
employers or reward employees, but are designed to promote thecommon good or general welfare of the State. More particularly,
the goal is to provide for employees who are able to work,
available for work, but cannot find work.
The Arkansas General Assembly articulated this humane and
beneficent purpose by the following statement of legislative intent
when the Arkansas Employment Security Law was originally enacted:
Economic insecurity due to unemployment is a serious
menace to the health, morals, and welfare of the people
of this State. Involuntary unemployment is therefore a
subject of general interest and concern which requires
appropriate action by the Legislature to prevent its
spread and to lighten its burden which may fall with
crushing force upon the unemployed worker and his family.
The achievement of social security requires protection
against this great hazard of our economic life. This can
be accomplished by encouraging employers to provide more
stable employment and by the systematic accumulation of
funds during periods of employment from which benefits
may be paid for periods of unemployment, thus maintaining
purchasing power and limiting the serious social
consequences of poor relief assistance.
See Ark. Code Ann. § 11-10-102 (Repl. 1996).
When we consider this public policy purpose in light of the
undisputed evidence concerning the imminent sale of the company for
which appellant had worked for twenty-eight years, the fact that
appellant would have not only been replaced as president of the
business but was not promised employment except as a short-term
paid consultant without employee benefits, and the fact that
appellant was unemployed after his three-month consultant situation
expired following the sale, we are unable to hold that the Board of
Review reasonably found that appellant voluntarily left his job as
president of Hiner Oils without good cause connected with the work.
Therefore, we reverse and remand the case to the Board of Review sothat it can award appellant his unemployment benefits.
Appellant also argues that the Board of Review erred when it
permitted the employer's attorney to testify on behalf of the
employer and remain its advocate. While this argument appears to
have merit, we are unable to address it because the record does not
demonstrate that appellant objected to the testimony by the lawyer.
Based on our established position that arguments raised for the
first time on appeal will not be considered, we decline to reverse
the Board of Review on that ground. See Hooks v. Pratte, 53 Ark.
App. 161, 920 S.W.2d 24 (1996). However, attorneys for litigants
are reminded that Rule 3.7 of the Model Rules of Professional
Conduct adopted by our supreme court expressly provides that a
lawyer shall not act as advocate at a trial in which the lawyer is
likely to be a necessary witness except where the testimony relates
to an uncontested issue, the testimony relates to the nature and
value of legal services rendered in the case, or disqualification
of the lawyer would work substantial hardship on the client. The
general rule exists to prevent prejudice to opposing parties and
conflict of interest between lawyers and their clients. Arthur v.
Zearley, 320 Ark. 273, 895 S.W.2d 928 (1995).
Reversed and remanded.
Robbins, C.J., and Meads, J., agree.