SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-217-00T2
WILLIAM J. BOROWINSKI,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BOARD OF REVIEW and SPEVACK & CANNAN,
Defendants-Respondents.
_______________________________
Argued: November 28, 2001 - Decided:
December 21, 2001
Before Judges Baime, NewmanSee footnote 11 and Axelrad.
On appeal from a Final Decision of the Board
of Review, 00-B-2513-000-XO.
William J. Borowinski, appellant, argued the
cause pro se.
Alan C. Stephens argued the cause for
respondent, Board of Review (John J. Farmer,
Jr., Attorney General of New Jersey, attorney;
Michael J. Haas, Assistant Attorney General,
of counsel; Mr. Stephens, Deputy Attorney
General, on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
AXELRAD, J.T.C. (temporarily assigned).
Claimant, William J. Borowinski, Esquire, appeals from the
denial of unemployment benefits from February 8, 2000 through March
l8, 2000, based on his discharge for misconduct connected with work
as a result of refusing a direct instruction from his senior
partner to attend a proceeding in evening municipal court on behalf
of one of the firm's clients.
Borowinski worked as an associate for defendant law firm of
Spevack & Cannan for approximately ten months before he was
terminated on February 9, 2000. He filed a claim for unemployment
benefits effective February 27, 2000. The Deputy Director
("Deputy") of the Division of Unemployment and Disability Insurance
found Borowinski ineligible for benefits from March 19, 2000
through March 25, 2000 because he missed a telephone interview
scheduled that week with the Division. Borowinski was also held
ineligible for benefits from February 27, 2000 on the ground that
he was unavailable for work. The Deputy also found Borowinski
disqualified from unemployment benefits pursuant to N.J.S.A. 43:21-
5(a), on the ground that he left work voluntarily without good
cause attributable to the work. Borowinski appealed these
determinations to the Appeal Tribunal ("Tribunal") and a hearing
was held on May l0, 2000.
In a decision mailed on May 25, 2000, the Tribunal reversed
the Deputy's determinations and found that Borowinski was eligible
for benefits from March 19, 2000 through May 6, 2000, except that
it found that he was disqualified for benefits under N.J.S.A.
43:21-5(b) on the ground that he had been discharged from his
employment for misconduct connected with the work. Borowinski
appealed to the Board of Review, who affirmed the decision of the
Tribunal. This appeal followed.
On appeal, Borowinski asserts that he did not engage in
misconduct; therefore, the Tribunal's decision was erroneous and
unreasonable. He claims that he had been hired specifically to
conduct PIP litigation and to fill in on worker's compensation
cases when the calendar necessitated his attention but that he was
assigned other work, including evening municipal court appearances.
According to Borowinski, his work hours substantially exceeded the
original agreement between he and his employer. Borowinski claims
that he was unsuccessful in his plea to the senior partner, Ronald
Spevack, for relief from his work load.
Borowinski was discharged from his employment solely because
of his refusal to attend a hearing at Woodbridge Municipal Court on
the evening of February 8, 2000, on behalf of one of the firm's
clients. When he asked the senior partner if another associate
could attend the proceedings because he was tired, he was
instructed that failure to appear at court, as assigned, would
result in his termination. Borowinski indicated that this was an
"unacceptable" assignment and he "packed up his stuff and left."
Borowinski was not under medical care at the time and there was no
pressing personal obligation or other reason for his refusing to
accept the assignment.
The Board of Review, in BR-51391-E, defined "misconduct" under
N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(b), as behavior which would "injure the employment
relationship." The Tribunal found that Borowinski's refusal to
appear, without any substantial reason, "was behavior which he was
made aware, would 'injure the employment relationship.'"
Therefore, as Borowinski was discharged over that incident, his
termination occurred for conduct connected with the work.
We agree. Borowinski did not sustain his burden of proof to
establish his right to unemployment compensation. Brady v. Board
of Review,
152 N.J. 197, 218 (1997). The New Jersey Unemployment
Compensation Law requires that an individual shall be disqualified
from unemployment benefits "[f]or the week in which the individual
has been suspended or discharged for misconduct connected with the
work, and for the five weeks immediately following that week . . .
." N.J.S.A. 43:21-5(b). Employee misconduct has been defined as:
an act of wanton or willful disregard of the
employer's interest, a deliberate violation of
the employer's rules, a disregard of standards
of behavior which the employer has the right
to expect of his employee, or negligence in
such degree or recurrence as to manifest
culpability, wrongful intent, or evil design,
or show an intentional and substantial
disregard of the employer's interest or of the
employee's duties and obligations to the
employer.
[Beaunit Mills, Inc. v. Board of Review,
43 N.J. Super. 172, 183 (App. Div. l956), certif.
denied,
23 N.J. 579 (1957) (quoting Am. J.
Soc. Sec., s. 38, at 541 (1943))].
During the relevant time, the firm of Spevack & Cannan was
comprised of two partners and four associates. Borowinski knew
from the outset that his employment as an associate in defendant's
law firm, as common in this profession, required more than a 9-to-5
commitment. Borowinski conceded that during the negotiations for
employment, he was informed by Spevack that all of the associates
were required to work two late nights per week. When one of the
associates who was handling the municipal court work left the firm,
he inherited the assignment. The February 8 municipal court
appearance, located one mile from the law office, in which he was
to observe and monitor the testimony of a client the firm was
representing in a personal injury case, would have been his second
evening assignment during that week. Borowinski did not contradict
Spevack's testimony that by attending the two court appearances
that week he was not being required to do anything more than the
other associates in the firm.
Borowinski acknowledged that he was not working harder than
anyone else in the firm, but claimed that since he had worked on
Saturday, he should have been excused from the night duty. He also
asserted that his actions did not cause potential injury to anyone,
since another associate could have monitored the municipal court
hearing or the firm could have obtained a transcript of the
proceeding.
We disagree. It is irrelevant that Borowinski was assigned to
handle municipal court matters while an associate hired after him
was not. The bottom line is that associates were required to work
a certain number of evenings, whether in the office or elsewhere.
This is the real world. Division of the duties is up to the senior
partners of the firm, not an associate who has been with the firm
less than a year. It was not up to Borowinski to suggest that the
firm acquire a transcript of the municipal court proceedings in
lieu of his appearance because he was too tired to attend.
Besides, the cold record of the transcript does not fully reflect
what kind of a witness the client would be in a courtroom, a
subject which would, no doubt, be discussed with the senior
partner. See, e.g., State v. Padilla,
321 N.J. Super. 96, 113-14
(App. Div. l999) (holding that deference is given to "credibility
findings that are often influenced by matters such as observations
of the character and demeanor of the witnesses and common human
experience that is not transmitted by a cold record.").
To make matters worse, after Borowinski's request was declined
by Spevack and he was given the ultimatum of attending the
proceeding or being fired, he dug in his heels and chose the
latter. Borowinski must be willing to accept the consequences of
his unwarranted behavior. Spevack's directive was within the scope
of Borowinski's job duties and he had no good cause to refuse the
assignment. Borowinski's behavior constituted insubordination and
was in clear disregard of his employer's interests and in clear
disregard of the standards of behavior which the employer law firm
had the right to expect from its associate. Beaunit Mills, Inc.,
supra,
43 N.J. Super. 172.
Affirmed.
Footnote: 1 1Judge Newman did not participate in oral argument. However,
the parties consented to his participation in the decision.