SUPERIOR COURT 
OF THE 
STATE OF DELAWARE 

Re: Baker v. Tech Solutions 

C.A. No. 07A-05-004-RFS 
Date Submitted: November 13, 2007 
Date Decided: January 4, 2008 

Dear Mr. Baker: 

You have appealed a decision of the Unemployment Insurance Appeal Board to the Superior 
Court. After review, the decision of the Board must be affirmed under the applicable principles of 
law. 

BACKGROUND 

You were employed for about a month with Tech Solutions (hereafter "Tech"). A company 
credit card was given to you for gasoline expenses for a company car. Between December 13 - 24, 
2006, you used the credit card for personal expenses, including staying at a motel when the 
electricity in your residence failed. The credit card statement shows charges to Wal-Mart, 15 charges 
to various Food Lion stores and 2 charges for the Relax Inn. Tech did not authorize the charges 
which amounted to over $975. You were discharged on or about December 27, 2006, and those 
charges were deducted from your final pay check. 

The president of Tech, Douglas Church (hereafter "Church"), testified that he explained 
company rules to you that there was zero tolerance for making inappropriate expenditures of this 
nature. He said you acknowledged making poor decisions and were fired. However, you claim 
your remarks referred only to making a bad choice to work at Tech. You deny that Church had 
this conversation. You contend that an equity owner, Mr. Aaron Finney (hereafter "Finney"), 
told you on December 28, 2006 that the company was going in a different direction. You then 
decided to leave. Consequently, you feel that unemployment compensation should be awarded. 

DISCUSSION 

This Court will review the decisions of agencies to inquire whether they are supported by 
substantial evidence and are free from legal error General Motors Corp. v. Fritz, 2004 WL 
2829053, at *2 (Del. Super. Ct.). The evidence underlying the decision need only be that which 
"a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion." Id., quoting, DABCC v. 
Newsome, 690 A.2d 906, 910 (Del. 1996). However, the Court will not "weigh the evidence, 
determine questions of credibility, or make its own factual findings." Spicer v. Spicer Unlimited, 
2005 WL 914469, at *1 (Del. Super. Ct.), citing, Boulevard Elec. Sales v. Webb, 428 A.2d 11, 13 
(Del. 1981). 

There are three levels of administrative proceedings between the Claims Deputy, the 
Referee, and the Board. At every level, it was determined that Tech had just cause to discharge 
you for violating the company rule against unauthorized charges. While Tech did not appear at 
the last hearing with the Board, it was not obligated to be present. A major purpose of the Board 
is to listen as to why you disagreed with the Referee’s decision and to expand the record by 
additional evidence, if necessary. The Board can consider the administrative record from the 
earlier proceedings, including prior testimony from you and Church. 19 Del.C. § 3320(a); 
Boughton v. Division of Unemployment Ins. of Dep’t. of Labor, 300 A.2d 25 (Del. Super. 
Ct.1972). 

The question presented was whether Tech had just cause to terminate you for violation of 
its company rule. "Just cause" means a "willful or wanton act or pattern of conduct in violation 
of the employer’s interest, the employee’s duties, or the employee’s expected standard of 
conduct." Avon Prods., Inc. v. Wilson, 513 A.2d 1315 (Del. 1986). Tech had the burden to show 
this by a preponderance of the evidence; the standard simply means on which side the greater 
weight of the evidence is found. 

Church’s testimony is in direct conflict with your position, although you do admit the 
credit card expenses were reimbursed. You claim Church did not encounter you, and you 
decided to part ways based on Finney’s casual comments. The Board could properly decide 
against you as Church was the president and your supervisor. Also, in your email of Friday, 
February 9, 2007 to the Department of Labor, you stated: "Aaron is a gentleman who has some 
ownership in the company. On the same day (12/27/06) as I was laid off by one owner, he told 
me that he had been looking forward to working with me." The obvious reference is to Church 
as the person who terminated you on 12/27/06. Later, you also disputed the date, claiming 
12/28/06 as your last experience with Tech and Finney. The greater weight of evidence could 
reasonably be seen to be with Church’s version that you were fired for improper use of the credit 
card. 

In the expanded record before the Board, you elaborated on details of your conversation 
with Finney. You did not call Finney as a witness. The Board was correct that Finney’s alleged 
conversation would be hearsay and that a decision could not rest on this basis alone. Baker v. 
Hospital Billing & Collection Services, Ltd., 2003 WL 21538020 (Del. Super. Ct.). 

Also, you have a laundry list of complaints about your dissatisfaction with Tech and its 
general business operations. None of this is pertinent to the precise question presented to the 
Board. The Board was required to keep its eye on the issue without getting into a free-for-all 
discussion. 

CONCLUSION 

Considering the foregoing, the Board’s decision is hereby affirmed. 

IT IS SO ORDERED 

Very truly yours, 

Richard F. Stokes 

Original to Prothonotary 

cc: 
Tech Solutions 
UIAB