IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
JUANITA FILLMORE,NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES 
TO FILE REHEARING MOTION AND 
Appellant, DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED. 
v. CASE NO. 1D03-2142 
FLORIDA UNEMPLOYMENT 
APPEALS COMMISSION and La 
PETITE ACADEMY INC., 
Appellees. 
Opinion filed May 28, 2004.

An appeal from an order of the Florida Unemployment Appeals Commission.
Juanita Fillmore, pro se, appellant.
Geri Atkinson-Hazelton, General Counsel, and John D. Maher, Deputy General
Counsel, Unemployment Appeals Commission, Tallahassee, for appellees.
DAVIS, J. 

Appellant seeks review of an order of the Unemployment Appeals Commission 
(UAC) which affirmed an appeals referee’s determination that appellant was 
disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits. We affirm. 

The appeals referee determined that appellant left her employment voluntarily 
without good cause attributable to the employer. See Brown v. Unemployment 
Appeals Comm’n, 820 So. 2d 457 (Fla. 5th DCA 2002)(stating that whether an 
employee left employment voluntarily and whether the leaving was without good cause 
are questions of fact). The issue on appeal is whether the referee's findings of fact are 
supported by competent, substantial evidence. If there is competent, substantial 
evidence in the record, although there may be evidence to support a contrary finding, 
this court must affirm. Id. at 458. 

Appellant was employed as a morning pre-school teacher and had additional 
duties as an afternoon van driver and after-school teacher. On the day in question, 
appellant was dealing with an unruly child in her pre-school class. Instead of taking 
the child to the school director’s office as required by the employer’s procedures, 
appellant marched all the children in her class to the director’s office and announced 
that she was going home. Appellant then made comments about the unruly child in 
front of the other children and, when told that the comments were inappropriate, 
appellant stated that she was leaving. Appellant left the children in the director’s office 
and returned to her classroom. The director sent an employee to ask appellant if she 
was coming back and appellant stated that she did not know. She then left the school 
premises. Appellant was never given permission to leave by the director. The director 
had to arrange for another teacher to take over appellant’s pre-school class, for 
another driver to take her afternoon van route and for another teacher to take her afterschool 
class. 

Because there was competent, substantial evidence for the determination that 
appellant left her employment voluntarily without good cause attributable to the 
employer, appellant was properly disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits. 
See § 443.101(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (2002); Smith v. Unemployment Appeals Comm’n, 823 
So. 2d 873, 874 (Fla. 5th DCA 2002). Accordingly, the ruling of the UAC is 
AFFIRMED. 
BROWNING, J., concurs; ERVIN, J., dissents with written opinion. 

ERVIN, J., dissenting 
Omitted from the majority’s, the Commission’s, and the appeal referee’s recital 
of facts are certain additional facts, also supported by the record, which were outlined 
in Commission Chairman Forst’s dissenting opinion. In Chairman Forst’s review of 
the evidence, with which I agree, he considered that the case involved a 
miscommunication between the claimant and the employer’s director. Chairman Forst 
noted that when confronted with problems controlling one of her pre-school students, 
claimant acted appropriately by reporting the situation to the director and informing the 
director that she would rather go home than continue to deal with the difficult child 
in her classroom. Chairman Forst then set out the following critical facts: 

   The employer did not respond to this situation by informing 
   the claimant that she could not leave for that day, and that 
   by doing so she was surrendering her job. Instead, the 
   employer’s director merely informed the claimant that she 
   had to "do what’s best." The claimant then left her 
   students with the director, straightened up her room in a 
   manner consistent with one leaving for the day, rather than 
   one quitting a job, and went home, returning to work the 
   following day. As such, the employer did not convey the 
   message that a reasonable person would understand to be 
   that leaving work early that day would constitute a quit; nor 
   did the claimant convey the message that her leaving early 
   that day was a resignation from her job. 

In reaching its decision to affirm, the Commission ignored a large body of case 
law recognizing if an employer fails to inform an employee that absence from 
employment is not acceptable, and such failure leads the employee to believe that the 
absence is excusable, the worker’s absence cannot support a finding that he or she 
voluntarily left employment without good cause attributable to the employer so as to 
preclude the payment of unemployment compensation (UC) benefits. See Rodriguez 
v. Arby’s, Inc., 709 So. 2d 632 (Fla. 2d DCA 1998); Goodman v. Engle Homes, Inc., 
621 So. 2d 523 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993); Meyers v. Quality Extruded Prods., Inc., 611 
So. 2d 54 (Fla. 3d DCA 1992); Keays v. State Unemployment Appeals Comm’n, 592 
So. 2d 1255 (Fla. 2d DCA 1992). The above rule is no doubt derived from the 
statutory canon of construction instructing that the UC Law, being remedial legislation, 
is to be liberally construed in favor of the claimant, and its disqualification provisions, 
narrowly interpreted. See Mason v. Load King Mfg. Co., 758 So. 2d 649 (Fla. 2000); 
Langley v. Unemployment Appeals Comm’n, 444 So. 2d 518 (Fla. 1st DCA 1984). 

The determination of whether an employee’s absence from work constitutes a 
voluntary separation from employment, thereby disqualifying him or her from UC 
benefits, turns as much on the de novo review standard as it does on that of 
competent, substantial evidence; it is a mixed question of both law and fact. For 
example, in Goodman, 621 So. 2d at 524, the court made the following pertinent 
observation: "We disagree with the UAC’s conclusion that a bona fide leave of 
absence for purposes of unemployment compensation law requires that the employer 
and employee agree upon a specific term for the leave." (Emphasis added.) In Arby’s, 
the court applied the rule adopted in Keays, stating that a duty is initially placed on the 
employer to inform the employee of acceptable terms of leave, and if no such 
communication is conveyed, the worker’s absence cannot support a finding that the 
employee voluntarily left work. Arby’s, 709 So. 2d at 633. 

In the present case, because the employer failed in its duty to convey to claimant 
a communication that any reasonable person would understand to mean that leaving 
work early would be considered a resignation from employment, competent, 
substantial evidence cannot as a matter of law support the determination that claimant 
was disqualified from receiving UC benefits. I would therefore REVERSE the order 
of denial and REMAND the case with directions that the requested benefits be 
awarded.