Opinion Information Sheet
| Docket Number: | 33284-1 |
| Title of Case: | Carl Anderson, Appellant V. Employment Security Department, Respondent |
| File Date: | 11/07/2006 |
| Appeal from Pierce County Superior Court | |
| Docket No: | 04-2-06165-8 |
| Judgment or order under review | |
| Date filed: | 04/29/2005 |
| Judge signing: | Honorable Kitty-ann Van Doorninck |
| Authored by | David H. Armstrong |
| Concurring: | J. Robin Hunt |
| C. C. Bridgewater |
Counsel for Appellant(s) | |
| Stephen Michael Hansen | |
| Attorney at Law | |
| 950 Pacific Ave Ste 450 | |
| Tacoma, WA, 98402-4499 | |
Counsel for Respondent(s) | |
| David Ira Matlick | |
| Attorney Generals Office | |
| Po Box 2317 | |
| Tacoma, WA, 98401-2317 | |
View the Opinion in PDF Format
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION II
CARL A. ANDERSON, No. 33284-1-II
Appellant,
v.
EMPLOYMENT SECURITY PUBLISHED OPINION
DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE OF
WASHINGTON,
Respondent.
ARMSTRONG, J. -- Carl A. Anderson appeals the Employment Security Department's
denial of unemployment compensation benefits to him based on work-related misconduct.
Anderson argues that the Department's findings of fact do not support a conclusion that he
willfully disregarded his employer's interest or that his misconduct harmed his employer. Because
substantial evidence supports the Department's decision that Anderson intentionally and willfully
disregarded his employer's interest, which created a conflict of interest that harmed his employer,
we affirm.
FACTS
King County employed Carl Anderson as a program manager or property analyst from
1996 to 1998, as a temporary employee, and from 1998 to 2003, as a permanent employee. In
No. 33284-1-II
1996, the County appointed Anderson project manager for the sale of a county-owned building
known as the Washington Center Building (WCB).1 Anderson was responsible for gathering
information on the property, preparing and issuing a request for proposals to the public,
negotiating sale terms and completing the sale, and overseeing post-sale compliance with the
sale's contract.
After Anderson issued the request for proposals and the County received bids, Anderson
told his superiors that he knew and had worked with the bidders from Washington Center
Building Properties, LLC (WCB Properties), Ginger Marshall and Vera Taylor. To avoid the
appearance of a conflict of interest, the County made Anderson a non-voting member of the
review board and removed him from direct negotiations with WCB Properties after the County
chose it as the successful bidder.2
In 2000, the County investigated allegations that Anderson had a conflict of interest in the
WCB sale centering on his relationship to WCB Properties and its principals. Anderson was
"minimally cooperative" with the investigation; after supplying some information, he refused to
answer questions about his relationship to Marshall, Taylor, and WCB Properties.
Commissioner's Record (CR) at 852. Because Anderson refused to answer some questions, the
investigating supervisor reached a "qualified" decision that Anderson did not have a conflict of
interest. CR at 852. The supervisor also opined that Anderson's management of the WCB sale
had not harmed the County.
1 The property is also referred to as the Minor Avenue Property.
2 The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found that WCB Properties' bid was $1.8 million higher
than the next lowest bid. Anderson testified that WCB Properties' bid was $800,000 higher than
the next lowest bid. WCB Properties assigned its interest to a successor, Fairmont Properties,
LLC. The purchaser eventually developed the WCB into affordable senior housing.
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No. 33284-1-II
In 2001, WCB Properties, Marshall, and Taylor sued Anderson; Anderson counter-
claimed, alleging that since 1997, he had been a partner in WCB Properties and that he and his
partners intended to jointly finance, develop, and operate the WCB property for profit. He
demanded that Marshall and Taylor recognize him as a partner in WCB Properties, pay him one-
third of the development fee obtained by WCB Properties, reimburse him for expenses he incurred
on behalf of WCB Properties, and admit him as a member in WCB Properties.
In a deposition, Anderson testified that he helped prepare WCB Properties' bid in
response to the request for proposals he had prepared,3 that he was on the review board that
looked at the bid he prepared, although he was a non-voting member, and that he did not disclose
his involvement with WCB Properties to the County. Anderson explained that he and Marshall
agreed that Anderson would be a "secret" partner until it was appropriate for him to "come out of
the closet" and that the reason for this secrecy was the "potential" conflict of interest with his
county job. CR at 853. He asserted that he paid one-third of the costs of buying the WCB from
the County.
The County's ethics code required Anderson to make yearly disclosures of finances and
potential or actual conflicts of interests. It also required him to disclose in writing any conflict of
interest he believed existed, regardless of the yearly filings. Anderson received a summary of the
County's ethics code, including information on how to obtain a complete copy of the code on two
occasions.
3 Anderson also stated that he prepared the bid on his computer at work, thus using a county-
owned computer to prepare a bid on behalf of his private business to buy property from the
County.
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No. 33284-1-II
Anderson did not inform the County of his interest in WCB Properties at any time during
his employment. And when his supervisors asked him about his connection with WCB Properties,
Anderson either denied any interest in WCB Properties or refused to answer his supervisors'
questions. The Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) found that Anderson purposely hid his business
and financial involvement with WCB Properties from the County, a finding Anderson does not
contest.
After learning of Anderson's lawsuit with WCB Properties, the County again investigated
Anderson's conflict of interest and ultimately discharged him in May 2003.
The Department denied Anderson's claim for unemployment compensation benefits,
finding that the County discharged him for work-related misconduct. An ALJ affirmed the
Department's decision. The Department's commissioner affirmed the ALJ's decision, adopting
and expanding on the ALJ's findings of fact and conclusions of law. The commissioner found that
Anderson engaged in misconduct by willfully disregarding the County's interests and that his
misconduct harmed the County. The Pierce County Superior Court affirmed the commissioner's
decision.
The principal issues on appeal are whether the evidence supports the commissioner's
findings that Anderson acted in willful disregard of the County's interests and, if so, whether the
misconduct harmed the County.
ANALYSIS
I. Standard of Review
In reviewing an administrative action, we review the commissioner's decision, applying the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) standards directly to the agency's administrative record.
Superior Asphalt & Concrete Co. v. Dep't of
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No. 33284-1-II
Labor & Indus., 112 Wn. App. 291, 296, 49 P.3d 135 (2002) (citing Tapper v. Employment Sec.
Dep't, 122 Wn.2d 397, 402, 858 P.2d 494 (1993)).
We consider a commissioner's decision to be prima facie correct and the "burden of
demonstrating the invalidity of agency action is on the party asserting invalidity." RCW
34.05.570(1)(a). The APA allows a reviewing court to reverse an agency decision when, among
other things, (1) the administrative decision is based on an error of law, (2) the decision is not
based on substantial evidence, or (3) the decision is arbitrary or capricious. RCW 34.05.570(3);
Tapper, 122 Wn.2d at 402.
We review questions of law de novo, giving substantial weight to the agency's
interpretation of the statutes it administers. Superior Asphalt, 112 Wn. App. at 296 (citing
Everett Concrete Prods., Inc. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 109 Wn.2d 819, 823, 748 P.2d 1112
(1988)). Where, as here, the commissioner's findings of fact are unchallenged,4 we treat the
findings as verities on appeal. Fuller v. Dep't of Employment Sec., 52 Wn. App. 603, 606, 762
P.2d 367 (1988). Whether an employee's behavior constitutes misconduct is a mixed question of
law and fact. Tapper, 122 Wn.2d at 403.
II. Disqualifying Misconduct
For claims arising before January 4, 2004, the Employment Security Act provides that an
employee who was discharged or suspended for misconduct connected with the employee's work
is disqualified from receiving unemployment compensation benefits. RCW 50.20.060. As used in
RCW 50.20.060, "misconduct" exists where an employee acts or fails to act in willful disregard of
4 In this case, the commissioner adopted the ALJ's findings of fact and conclusions of law,
elaborating on the ALJ's conclusions that Anderson acted in willful disregard of the County's
interest and caused harm to the County. Anderson does not challenge the findings of fact on
appeal.
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No. 33284-1-II
the employer's interest, thereby harming the employer's business. RCW 50.04.293.5
A. Willfull Disregard of Employer's Interests
An employee acts in "willful disregard" of the employer's interest when the employee (1)
is aware of the employer's interest, and (2) knows or should know that certain conduct
jeopardizes that interest, but (3) nonetheless intentionally performs the act, willfully disregarding
its probable consequences. Hamel v. Employment Sec. Dep't, 93 Wn. App. 140, 146-47, 966
P.2d 1282 (1999). Misconduct involves more than "mere incompetence, inefficiency, erroneous
judgment, or ordinary negligence." Dermond v. Employment Sec. Dep't, 89 Wn. App. 128, 133,
947 P.2d 1271 (1997) (citing Wilson v. Employment Sec. Dep't, 87 Wn. App. 197, 202, 940 P.2d
269 (1997)). The commissioner found that Anderson's actions met all three elements and thus
constituted willful disregard of the County's interests.
Anderson does not dispute that he was aware of the County's ethical rules concerning
disclosure of actual and potential conflicts of interest. He received a summary of the County's
ethics code in 1996, and again in 1998, and he signed an acknowledgement of receipt each time.
He also filed financial disclosure forms for the years 1997 through 2001. But Anderson contends
that there was no evidence that he knew his conduct jeopardized the County's position in selling
the WCB property or that he intended to jeopardize the County's position in selling the property.
As an initial matter, the commissioner found that Anderson harmed the County's interest
in preventing conflicts of interest, not its interest in selling the WCB property.6 The ALJ's
5 These statutes apply only to claims with an effective date before January 4, 2004. See RCW
50.04.293, 50.20.060. Because the County discharged Anderson in May 2003, these statutes
govern his claim.
6 In fact, the successful bid from WCB Properties was $1.8 million higher than the next lowest
bid.
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No. 33284-1-II
unchallenged findings of fact support the conclusion that Anderson knew or should have known
that acting as project manager for the WCB sale jeopardized the County's interest in eliminating
conflicts of interest from the bidding process. Anderson was aware of the County's ethics rules
and should have been aware that acting on both sides of a transaction with the County was a
violation.7 In fact, he testified that he was a "secret" partner of WCB Properties because of his
concerns about a conflict of interest between his financial interest in WCB Properties and his job
with the County. Anderson also refused to answer his supervisors' questions about his
relationship with WCB Properties, Marshall, and Taylor, especially the financial aspects, and
failed to disclose a financial interest in WCB Properties in his financial disclosure statements to
the County. These facts demonstrate that Anderson knew or should have known his actions
violated the County's ethics code.
Anderson's argument that he did not intend to jeopardize the County's position in selling
7 The ethics code provides that an employee has a conflict of interest where, among other things,
the employee:
2. Is beneficially interested, directly or indirectly, in any contract, sale, lease,
option or purchase that may be made by, through, or under the supervision of the
employee, in whole or in part, or accepts, directly or indirectly, any compensation,
gift or thing of value from any other person beneficially interested therein;
. . . .
5. Participates in, influences or attempts to influence, directly or indirectly, the
selection of, or the conduct of business or a transaction with a person doing or
seeking to do business with the county if the employee has a financial interest in or
with said person;
. . . .
8. Is an employee, agent, officer, partner, director or consultant of any person
doing or seeking to do business with the county, unless such relationship has been
disclosed as provided by this chapter;
. . . .
11. Enters into a business relationship outside [the] county government with any
person with regard to a matter for which the employee has responsibility as a
county employee.
CR at 695-97.
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No. 33284-1-II
the WCB property is unpersuasive. Willful disregard does not require intent to harm the
employer's business. Hamel, 93 Wn. App. at 146. Rather, because "willful" modifies
"disregard," the employee must only have voluntarily disregarded the employer's interest; the
employee's specific motivations for doing so are not relevant. Hamel, 93 Wn. App. at 146.
Thus, it does not matter whether Anderson intended to jeopardize the County's position in selling
the WCB property. He intentionally acted as both a buyer and seller in the WCB sale, hid his
buyer's interest, and either lied to his supervisors about his interest in WCB Properties or refused
to answer questions about his interest. Thus, Anderson intentionally acted in a manner that
jeopardized the County's interest in preventing conflicts of interest. In doing so, he willfully
disregarded the possible consequences of his conflict.
Anderson contends that his actions were, at worst, merely ineffective or negligent. He
claims that he tried to comply with the County's ethics rules by informing his supervisors that he
had "personal" and "professional" relationships with Marshall and Taylor. Br. of Appellant at 22.
He relies on Ciskie v. Employment Security Department, 35 Wn. App. 72, 664 P.2d 1318 (1983),
where the employee tried to notify a supervisor that he was leaving work for a family emergency,
but no supervisor was on the work site. Ciskie, 35 Wn. App. at 74. In Ciskie, we found that
while the employer had good cause to terminate the employee, the employee's action did not rise
to the level of misconduct. Ciskie, 35 Wn. App. at 76.
Ciskie does not help Anderson. Anderson was not acting in good faith in response to an
emergency. He purposely, not negligently, hid his business and financial involvement with WCB
Properties. Anderson never attempted to inform the County of the true nature of his conflict of
interest but instead sought to obfuscate it. While the County was able to take proper measures in
response to the potential conflict of interest
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No. 33284-1-II
Anderson did reveal (social relationships with bidders on the WCB property), it had no
opportunity to respond to Anderson's true conflict of interest (bidding on the project for which he
was the project manager).
Accordingly, the commissioner's findings support his conclusion that Anderson committed
misconduct with intentional disregard for the County's interests.
1. Harm to Employer's Business
To show that an employee's actions harmed the employer's business, an employer must
objectively demonstrate actual detriment to its operations. Dermond, 89 Wn. App. at 135-36.
The harm need not be tangible or economic, but it must be more than imaginary or hypothetical.
Dermond, 89 Wn. App. at 135. The commissioner, applying this standard, found that Anderson's
failure to comply with the County's ethics code harmed the County.
Anderson maintains that the record shows that he did not actually harm the County. He
points to finding of fact 30, which states that there is no evidence that Anderson's access to
information as a county employee harmed the County financially.8 But the finding of fact
continues:
However, had the County known of [Anderson's] true . . . involvement with WCB
Properties LLC, and the two principle [sic] women, it would have removed him
entirely from having any official duties related to the sale of the WCB. Because of
the actual conflict of interest, it would not have been sufficient under the Code of
Ethics to simply remove [Anderson] as a voting member of the review board and
from negotiations for the sale, as was done based on [Anderson's] revelations
about his involvement with the business.
CR at 855. Rather than support Anderson's position, this finding of fact, taken as a whole, shows
that Anderson's failure to disclose the true nature of his conflict of interest actually harmed the
8 The commissioner found that selling the property for the most amount of money was not the
primary consideration in the sale. Instead, the County's primary goal was to ensure the buyer
properly developed the WCB property into affordable housing.
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No. 33284-1-II
County by preventing the County from complying with its own ethics code.
Anderson also relies on finding of fact 29, which finds that "[i]t can never be known what,
if any, effect [Anderson's] insider knowledge of the WCB deal had on any of the other bidders, or
how it might have influenced the review board's final choice of WCB Properties LLC as the
winning bid." CR at 855. Anderson argues that this shows there was no actual harm to the
County, only imaginary or theoretical harm.
Taken out of context, this argument seems plausible. But finding of fact 29, when read
together with finding of fact 28, tells us that Anderson, as project manager for the WCB sale, had
access to information that none of the other bidders had, could give potential bidders information
that would discourage them from bidding, and was in a position to influence the outcome of the
sale. Finding of fact 29, after stating that the effects of Anderson's insider knowledge on the
other bidders and the review board's decision can "never be known," provides that:
[Anderson] was involved to a substantial degree in the gathering and dissemination
of information about the WCB, the sale, the bidding process, and myriad other
processes, both to the public and to potential buyers, as well as to the County.
[Anderson] performed innumerable tasks that were done in preparation for the sale
of the building, and then in the development of the building as affordable housing.
CR at 855. That the County can never know how or even whether Anderson influenced the
bidding outcome does not mean the County came through the sale unscathed. The County
prohibits conflicts of interest to ensure both fairness and the appearance of fairness in the public
bidding process. And even if Anderson did not use his seller's role to help himself in his buyer's
role, the appearance of unfairness remains. Past bidders who learn of the conflict9 will likely
question whether they ever had a fair chance to purchase the property; future bidders may be
9 The public will have access to the story of Anderson's dual roles in the sale because of his
lawsuit against the other principals in WCB Properties.
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No. 33284-1-II
reluctant to bid on county property because of lingering doubts about the County's bid procedure.
Finally, the public has the right to know that its county representatives acted solely for the
County's benefit in selling the property; those members of the public who learn of Anderson's
duplicitous conduct may reasonably question whether that occurred. We agree with the
commissioner that Anderson's conflict of interest and his attempts to hide it have harmed the
County and although the harm may not be measurable, it is, nonetheless, real. See Dermond, 89
Wn. App. at 135-36 (employee's unwillingness to follow employer's policy or correct behavior
harmed employer's operations).
We conclude that the commissioner's findings support the Department's conclusion that
Anderson's misconduct harmed the County.
Affirmed.
Armstrong, J.
We concur:
Bridgewater, P.J.
Hunt, J.
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