IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
Terrance Brannigan, : 
Petitioner : 
: 
v. : 
: 
Unemployment Compensation Board : 
of Review, : No. 651 C.D. 2005 
Respondent : Submitted: September 30, 2005 
BEFORE: HONORABLE JAMES GARDNER COLINS, President Judge 
HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge 
HONORABLE JAMES R. KELLEY, Senior Judge 
OPINION BY PRESIDENT JUDGE COLINS FILED: December 8, 2005 

As noted by the late Judge Theodore O. Rogers: “F. Scott Fitzgerald, 
chronicler of a less serious age than the present, observed that the bouquet of 
alcohol, not unseemly to a cavalry officer or bond broker, is altogether unfitting to 
a surgeon or clergyman.” Klink v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
289 A.2d 494 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1972). In the instant matter, we must determine 
whether the same standards shall apply to all hospital employees. 

Terrance Brannigan (Claimant) petitions for review of the order of the 
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (Board), which reversed the 
decision of the referee granting him benefits. The Department of Labor and 
Industry issued a determination denying Claimant benefits based on Section 
402(e.1) of the Unemployment Compensation Law (Law), 43 P.S. §802(e.1),1 
dealing with failure to submit to a drug and/or alcohol test. The referee issued a 
decision granting Claimant benefits after a hearing during which Claimant, with 
counsel, and Thomas Jefferson University Hospital (Employer), represented by an 
unemployment compensation consultant and three witnesses, appeared. The Board 
reversed the referee. We affirm the Board. 

Claimant was employed as a nursing assistant at a pay rate of 
$17.51/hour from May, 1997 until September, 2004. Employer had a policy under 
which employees may be given a drug or alcohol test as a result of suspicion of 
impairment due to drugs or alcohol. (Board’s Findings of Fact Nos. 1-2.) The 
policy is entitled “Job Fitness Evaluations,” and states that employees may be 
referred by their department for suspicion of impairment due to drugs or alcohol. 
This policy also specifies that refusal to consent to testing will be reported to the 
employee’s supervisor and to Employee Relations and that further disposition will 
be at the department’s discretion. (Employer Exhibit No. 4.) Employer also has a 
policy, entitled “Drug and Alcohol Policy,” stating, inter alia, that no employee 
shall report to work under the influence of alcohol and that violators may be 
subject to disciplinary action, up to and including discharge. This policy further 
states that employees whose behavior indicates that they are unfit for duty may be 
referred for evaluation, which may include alcohol screening, although such a test 
is not required to establish a violation of the policy. (Employer Exhibit No. 2.) 
Employer’s Medical Director for University Health Services, Dr. 
Ellen O’Connor, a board-certified general internist and medical review officer 
suspension from work due to failure to submit and/or pass a drug test conducted pursuant to an 
employer’s established substance abuse policy, provided that the drug test is not requested or 
implemented in violation of the law or of a collective bargaining agreement. 
(Medical Director), testified that on September 30, 2004, she received a phone call 
from the operating room nurse manager, who also appeared at the hearing, 
indicating that Claimant smelled of alcohol and had exhibited abnormal behavior. 
Because she suspected Claimant was impaired, and pursuant to Employer’s policy, 
the nurse manager referred him for a “fitness for work evaluation.” A nurse 
practitioner in the employee health office conducted the initial interview with 
Claimant and subsequently requested that the Medical Director examine him, 
validate her findings, and discuss the drug (alcohol screening) test with him. The 
Medical Director examined Claimant and testified that, based upon the smell of 
alcohol, she believed that he was impaired and, in order to complete her evaluation 
and prior to permitting him to return to duty, it would be necessary to verify his 
alcohol level. (N.T., at 14-16.) 

At the hearing, Claimant testified that he drank three or four beers on 
the evening before, consumed the last beer at 12:30 AM, and had been unable to 
shower prior to leaving for work for the 10:00 AM shift. (N.T., at 30-31.) 
Claimant refused to take the alcohol screening test. At that time, the Medical 
Director reminded Claimant of an agreement he had previously signed with 
Employer and the fact that his refusal to take the test could result in his 
termination.2 Claimant then requested to speak with his union representative who, 
he testified, advised him not to take the test. In his testimony, Claimant denied that 
the Medical Director told him he could be terminated for failure to take the test, 
and stated rather that he thought she had told him that if he took the test and 
alcohol was detected, he could be terminated. (N.T., at 27.) 

The referee concluded that Employer failed in its duty to demonstrate 
that Claimant was aware of the details of its substance abuse policy, which had 
been revised subsequent to the previous instance when Claimant had taken and 
failed an alcohol screening test. The referee further reasoned that Employer failed 
to follow the substance abuse policy itself, because there was no competent 
evidence that Claimant exhibited behavior indicating that he was unfit for duty. 

The Board reversed the referee and found that Employer discharged 
Claimant for his refusal to submit to an alcohol test in accordance with its policy. 
(Board’s Finding of Fact No. 14.) The Board noted that Claimant was aware of 
Employer’s policy regarding drugs and alcohol, which states that employees may 
be given a test as a result of suspicion of impairment. The Board found credible 
Employer’s testimony that Claimant smelled of alcohol when he arrived for work 
on September 30, 2004. This appeal followed.3 

On appeal, Claimant argues that Employer presented no evidence, nor 
was he aware, that the drug and alcohol policy in effect at the time he was 
terminated made drug testing mandatory; thus, his refusal to take a test should not 
subject him to termination. He argues further that the smell of alcohol alone is 
insufficient to establish that he was intoxicated or unfit for his job duties, and 
therefore there was no violation of the drug and alcohol policy. 

This Court has held that Section 402(e.1) of the Law requires an 
employer to demonstrate that it had adopted a substance abuse policy that was 
violated by the employee in order for that employee to be rendered ineligible for 
benefits. UGI Utilities, Inc. v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 851 
A.2d 240 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004). The Board made specific findings that (1) 
Employer did in fact adopt a substance abuse policy, and (2) such policy was 
violated by Claimant. In unemployment compensation proceedings, the Board is 
the ultimate factfinder and is empowered to resolve conflicts in the evidence and to 
determine the credibility of witnesses. Kelly v. Unemployment Compensation 
Board of Review, 776 A.2d 331 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2001). Findings made by the Board 
are conclusive and binding on appeal if the record, when examined as a whole, 
contains substantial evidence to support those findings. Id. 
We reject Claimant’s argument that he should not be terminated for 
refusing a drug test because he was not made aware that a refusal could result in 
termination. The record is replete with evidence that he knew of the drug and 
alcohol policy. Claimant had been suspected of impairment previously and, at that 
time, had submitted to a blood screening test, and failed. He had signed an 
agreement specifying that any future violation of the drug and alcohol policy 
would result in termination. The Medical Director testified as to her conversation 
with Claimant regarding his refusal to take the test: 
	Q. Okay. After he told you he did not want to have the test, 
	what did you say to him? 
	A. I told him that given his history, that this could result in 
	termination, but we cannot force someone to be tested, that we needed 
	his permission to be tested. 

(N.T., at 15.) The Medical Director, who was found credible by the Board, 
adjudged Claimant to be impaired after detecting a strong smell of alcohol. At 
least two other employees, a nursing supervisor and a nurse practitioner, also 
reported that Claimant smelled of alcohol. Claimant’s argument that the smell of 
alcohol alone is insufficient to establish that he was unfit for duty must also fail. 
This Court has held an employee can commit willful misconduct by arriving at 
work smelling of alcohol even if that employee does not drink at work and is able 
to perform all required duties. Klink. 

In the case sub judice, where Claimant worked as a nursing assistant 
whose duties included running specimens, transporting patients, and scrubbing in 
during joint procedures to assist in the operating room (N.T., at 25), it is manifest 
that any suspicion of alcohol impairment must be acted upon. 

In Lindsay v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 789 
A.2d 385, 390 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2001), our Court held, “[T]he olfactory evidence that 
claimant imbibed intoxicating liquor before arriving for work, let alone Claimant’s 
admissions to the same, is enough to support a finding of willful misconduct under 
Section 402(e) of the Law.” 

Under Employer’s policy, an employee suspected of impairment due 
to alcohol could not be forced to submit to an alcohol screening test; however, such 
refusal would be reported to Employee Relations for further disposition and action. 
Claimant knew or should have known of this policy. The Board properly denied 
benefits in accordance with Section 402(e.1.) of the Law. Accordingly, the order 
of the Board is affirmed. 
______________________________________ 
JAMES GARDNER COLINS, President Judge 

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA 
Terrance Brannigan, : 
Petitioner : 
: 
v. : 
: 
Unemployment Compensation Board : 
of Review, : No. 651 C.D. 2005 
Respondent : 
O R D E R 
AND NOW, this 8th day of December 2005, the Order of the 
Unemployment Compensation Board of Review entered in the above-captioned 
matter is hereby AFFIRMED. 
_______________________________________ 
JAMES GARDNER COLINS, President Judge 












NOTES:

2 On March 3, 2003, Claimant had reported to work smelling of alcohol. He was sent 
for testing, which indicated a positive result. He admitted he had consumed alcohol the prior 
evening and agreed to enter an alcohol assistance program; he consented to random alcohol 
screenings for a period of one year, which period had expired prior to this incident. The 
agreement stated that it constituted a final warning regarding violation of Employer’s drug and 
alcohol policy and that any future violation would result in his discharge. (Employer Exhibit 
No.3.)