Lionel Beasley v. Department of Labor (Champlain College, Inc., Employer) , 199 A.3d 553 ( 2018 )


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  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
    revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
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    2018 VT 104
    No. 2017-378
    Lionel Beasley                                                  Supreme Court
    On Appeal from
    v.                                                           Employment Security Board
    Department of Labor                                             May Term, 2018
    (Champlain College, Inc., Employer)
    Michael Harrington, Chair
    Kelli Kazmarski, Vermont Legal Aid, Inc., St. Johnsbury, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    Dirk Anderson, Montpelier, for Defendant-Appellee.
    PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
    ¶ 1.   SKOGLUND, J. Claimant Lionel Beasley appeals a decision of the Employment
    Security Board, which denied him unemployment compensation benefits because it found that he
    performed services for an educational institution and was considered to have a reasonable
    assurance to perform services in a similar capacity for the next regularly scheduled academic term
    under 21 V.S.A. § 1343(c)(1). We affirm.
    ¶ 2.   The relevant factual background is as follows. Claimant was first employed by
    Champlain College as an adjunct professor during the 2015-2016 academic year—he taught three
    classes during both the fall and spring terms. At the end of the spring 2016 term, claimant applied
    for unemployment compensation benefits. Although his claim was initially denied by a claims
    adjudicator, on appeal, an administrative judge reversed and granted benefits. In granting benefits,
    the administrative judge noted that because claimant had not received an employment offer letter
    for the upcoming academic term and had been notified that at least one of his classes may not be
    offered due to low enrollment, “the uncertainties for the upcoming term are sufficiently great that
    [claimant] cannot be said to have a reasonable assurance of returning to the same or similar work
    that he performed in the previous academic term.”
    ¶ 3.    Claimant was then contracted for the 2016-2017 academic year. During both the
    fall and spring terms, he taught the same three classes as he did the previous academic year. The
    employment offer letter he received for the spring 2017 term contained the following relevant
    information: “This appointment is contingent on class size. Classes may be cancelled due to low
    enrollment. If this class is cancelled, or re-assigned to a full time faculty member, you shall be
    paid $1,000 provided you signed and returned this letter within 15 days of the date of the letter.”
    ¶ 4.    At the end of the spring 2017 term, he again applied for unemployment
    compensation benefits. Claimant’s claim was denied by a claims adjudicator, who found that he
    had a reasonable assurance of employment during the following term. Claimant appealed the
    denial, an evidentiary telephone hearing was held, and an administrative judge upheld the denial
    of benefits. The administrative judge agreed with the claims adjudicator that claimant had
    reasonable assurance to perform the same services during the next academic term and noted that
    claimant “and his attorney want[ed] to interpret the term ‘reasonable assurance’ as an absolute
    guarantee of employment, and that simply is not the correct interpretation.” The administrative
    judge went on to comment that “the Department [of Labor] must only find that it is highly probable
    that the same job is available, and the credible facts in the record show[ed] that to be the case in
    this instance.” Claimant appealed the administrative judge’s decision to the Employment Security
    Board. After hearing and review, the Board issued a decision upholding the denial because it
    found the administrative judge’s conclusions “factually supported and legally correct.” Claimant
    appeals the Board’s decision.
    2
    ¶ 5.    In order to be eligible to receive unemployment compensation benefits in Vermont,
    an individual must meet certain conditions set forth in 21 V.S.A. § 1343(a).1 However, an
    individual who satisfies § 1343(a)’s requirements may still be precluded from receiving
    unemployment compensation benefits. Under § 1343(c)(1), if an individual performs services “in
    an instructional . . . capacity for an educational institution,” benefits are unavailable “during the
    period between two successive academic years or terms . . . if there is a contract or reasonable
    assurance that such individual will perform services in any such capacity for any educational
    institution in the second of such academic years or terms.”
    ¶ 6.    In December 2016, the U.S. Department of Labor issued an Unemployment
    Insurance Program Letter (Program Letter) outlining a multi-step process for states to use when
    determining whether a claimant has a “contract” or “reasonable assurance of employment” in the
    relevant part of the Federal Unemployment Tax Act, 26 U.S.C. § 3304(a)(6)(A), to which the
    Vermont statute directly correlates.2     The Program Letter explains that “[b]efore making a
    determination about whether there is a contract or reasonable assurance, the state must determine
    whether the employment offered the following academic year or term . . . meets three
    prerequisites.” First, “[t]he offer of employment may be written, oral, or implied, and must be a
    genuine offer, that is, an offer made by an individual with actual authority to offer employment.”
    Second, “[t]he employment offered in the following academic year or term . . . must be in the same
    capacity . . . as the previous academic year’s or term’s employment.” And third, “[t]he economic
    conditions of the job offered may not be considerably less in the following academic year or
    term . . . than in the first academic year or term.” If any of the prerequisites are not met, the state
    1
    Whether or not Beasley satisfied § 1343(a)’s requirements is not at issue, and thus we
    need not outline such requirements here.
    2
    The Vermont Department of Labor concedes that, given the requirements of the Federal
    Unemployment Tax Act that mandate state unemployment laws to conform with its provisions,
    the Program Letter is binding on the Department absent any express statutory provision to the
    contrary.
    3
    “cannot deny the claimant [unemployment compensation benefits] based on the between and
    within term denial provisions.”
    ¶ 7.    If all three prerequisites are met, “the state agency must next determine whether the
    offer is a contract,” which the Program Letter defines as “an enforceable, non-contingent
    agreement that provides for compensation: (1) for an entire academic year; or (2) on an annual
    basis.” If the state agency finds that no contract exists, it must then “determine whether the
    claimant has a reasonable assurance to perform professional services in the following academic
    term or year.” The Program Letter outlines findings a state agency must make “in determining if
    the claimant has a reasonable assurance.” First, the state agency must determine “[i]f any
    contingencies in the offer are within the employer’s . . . control,” meaning “contingencies where
    the employer has the ability to satisfy the contingency.” If contingencies are within an employer’s
    control, the claimant does not have a reasonable assurance and thus is entitled to unemployment
    compensation benefits if otherwise eligible. Next, “[t]he state agency must analyze the totality of
    [the] circumstances to find whether it is highly probable that there is a job available for the claimant
    the following academic year or term.” The Program Letter outlines some factors to consider,
    including funding, “enrollment, the nature of the course . . . , the claimant’s seniority, budgeting
    and assignment practices of the school, the number of offers made in relation to the number of
    potential teaching assignments, the period of student registration, and any other contingencies.”
    And, finally, “[i]f the offer contains a contingency, the state agency must give primary weight to
    the contingent nature of the offer,” which requires “the state agency to find whether it is highly
    probable that the contingency will be met.” The Program Letter clarifies that “[t]he term ‘highly
    probable’ is intended to mean it is very likely that the contingency will be met.” “If it is not highly
    probable the contingency will be met, there is no reasonable assurance because the contingent
    nature of the offer outweighs any other facts indicating that the claimant has a ‘reasonable
    assurance.’ ”
    4
    ¶ 8.    On appeal, claimant argues that he is entitled to unemployment compensation
    benefits because he had no contract or reasonable assurance of employment and that the Board did
    not properly analyze his claim in accordance with the Program Letter’s guidance. Claimant asserts
    that the Board made incomplete findings of fact, which did not identify all of the contingencies
    contained in the plain language of claimant’s past employment offer letters, and that a complete
    and accurate list of findings based on the plain language of the employment offer letter cannot
    support the Board’s legal conclusion that claimant had reasonable assurance of employment. And,
    finally, claimant posits that public policy and the purposes underlying Vermont’s unemployment
    compensation statutes dictate that claimant and other adjunct faculty should be entitled to benefits
    because they are unemployed and have no reasonable assurance of future employment.
    ¶ 9.    “Our review of decisions by the Employment Security Board is highly deferential.”
    863 To Go, Inc. v. Dep’t of Labor, 
    2014 VT 61
    , ¶ 8, 
    196 Vt. 551
    , 
    99 A.3d 629
    . “When reviewing
    a Board decision, this Court must determine whether the evidence before the Board reasonably
    tends to support its findings and whether the findings in turn support the Board’s conclusions and
    decisions.” Harrington v. Dep’t of Emp’t Sec., 
    142 Vt. 340
    , 344, 
    455 A.2d 333
    , 336 (1982)
    (quotations and alterations omitted). We “generally defer to [the Board’s] interpretations of the
    statutes it is charged with administering,” and we “will uphold its factual findings unless clearly
    erroneous, and its [legal] conclusions if reasonably supported by the findings.” Blue v. Dep’t of
    Labor, 
    2011 VT 84
    , ¶ 6, 
    190 Vt. 228
    , 
    27 A.3d 1096
    . In Vermont, “[t]he claimant has the burden
    of showing his initial eligibility for benefits.” 
    Id. ¶ 7
    (quotation omitted). The Program Letter
    explains that “the state agency is responsible for determining whether a claimant has a ‘reasonable
    assurance’ of performing services the following academic year” and that “states must follow
    regular fact-finding procedures for determining a claimant’s eligibility.” It goes on to clarify that
    “[t]his does not, however, relieve claimants or employers of the responsibility to provide sufficient
    information to the state agency to make a determination when requested to do so.”
    5
    ¶ 10.   First, claimant appears to argue in his brief that his claim does not satisfy the three
    prerequisites required to advance to the consideration of whether a contract or reasonable
    assurance of employment existed. However, in his written argument to the Board below, claimant
    conceded that “there is no dispute that the offer made by the employer did meet the three
    prerequisites necessary to advance to the ‘contract’ and ‘reasonable assurance’ analysis.”
    Therefore, we conclude that the Board properly proceeded to the contract analysis. And, because
    it was not disputed that claimant had not received a written offer or contract from the college for
    the following term at the time he filed his claim, the Board correctly proceeded to the reasonable
    assurance analysis.
    ¶ 11.   Next, claimant asserts that the Board erred in its reasonable assurance analysis by
    making incomplete findings of fact. The relevant part of the employment offer letter from the
    college to claimant states: “This appointment is contingent on class size. Classes may be cancelled
    due to low enrollment. If this class is cancelled, or re-assigned to a full time faculty member, you
    shall be paid $1,000 provided you signed and returned this letter within 15 days of the date of the
    letter.”3 In its findings, the Board determined that claimant’s employment “was contingent on
    class size, and could be cancelled due to low enrollment.” Claimant argues that this finding of fact
    was incomplete because it failed to identify (1) the distinction between a contingency based on
    class size and one based on low enrollment and (2) another alleged contingency that a class could
    be reassigned to a full-time faculty member by the college for any reason.
    ¶ 12.   Claimant asks this Court to draw a distinction between class size and low
    enrollment in order to read two contingencies into the employment offer letter, arguing that class
    size is within the control of the college while low enrollment is not. He properly posits, as the
    3
    As explained above, it is not disputed that Beasley had not yet received a written offer
    letter for the 2017-2018 academic year at the time of the July 6, 2017 hearing before the
    administrative judge. However, neither party seems to dispute that, if and when Beasley received
    the written offer, it would contain language that was similar or identical to the previous
    employment offer letter.
    6
    Program Letter explains, that a contingency based on enrollment is not within an employer’s
    control. The college has little control over low enrollment—it cannot control which classes
    students choose to take. He continues that class size, on the other hand, is under the college’s
    control because it can use class size as a point of marketing and pride—it could determine it should
    break up a large class into smaller classes to decrease its student-to-teacher ratio. He also asks this
    Court to read the reassignment clause as a third, separate contingency. Claimant posits that the
    college has unbridled discretion to reassign a class to a full-time faculty member for any purpose.
    Because he asserts that the class-size and faculty-reassignment contingencies are within the
    employer’s control, claimant argues that he does not have reasonable assurance of employment
    and is entitled to unemployment compensation benefits.
    ¶ 13.   We disagree, and upon a review of the record below and the plain language of the
    employment offer letter as a whole, we conclude that the Board’s findings are complete and
    supported by the record and thus are not in error. The Board found that claimant’s employment
    “was contingent on class size, and could be cancelled due to low enrollment.” It then went on to
    conclude that it was highly probable that the contingency would be met—that all three of
    claimant’s courses would fill in the next term—and therefore he had a reasonable assurance of
    employment. Although the Board did not strictly outline the three-step analysis of the Program
    Letter, its findings make it clear that it properly conducted its analysis.
    ¶ 14.   First, the Board found that claimant’s employment was subject to one
    contingency—class size or low enrollment—and that contingency was not within the college’s
    discretion. When read in the context of the record, the administrative judge’s decision, the Board’s
    decision, and claimant’s past employment offer letters, it can be concluded that the Board
    interpreted “low enrollment” as essentially synonymous with “class size.” Students’ choices not
    to take a course taught by claimant—“low enrollment”—could result in a class that does not meet
    minimum enrollment requirements—“class size.” This could lead to two outcomes—cancellation
    or reassignment. Following the Board’s reading, the only contingency is whether or not students
    7
    choose to enroll in claimant’s courses—something that is entirely outside the control of the college
    and can lead to class size issues resulting in either cancellation or reassignment. We see no basis
    in the record to support a finding that the contract allows the college to do what claimant
    suggests—break up classes to improve ratios or reassign classes to full-time faculty for reasons
    other than low enrollment.
    ¶ 15.   The Board, when determining whether a claimant has a reasonable assurance of
    employment, is required to conduct a reasoned analysis based on the record before it. It is not
    required to make express findings tracking the Program Letter if its findings otherwise indicate
    that it considered the required factors. Therefore, the Board’s reasoning is not per se erroneous
    simply because it did not explicitly announce that a contingency was or was not within the control
    of an employer or that something was simply an outcome of a contingency instead of a contingency
    itself.
    ¶ 16.   After finding that no contingencies were within the college’s control, the Board
    looked at the totality of the circumstances and considered whether it was highly probable that the
    identified contingency would be satisfied. The Board exercised its discretion, reviewed the record
    before it, and decided that the administrative judge’s conclusions were factually supported and
    legally correct. It reiterated that claimant had “testified that he had taught three courses a semester
    for four consecutive semesters, and that the three courses had been filled all four times, although
    one course came close to not filling.” From these factual findings, it determined that claimant’s
    “employment history was sufficient to conclude that it was highly probable that all three courses
    would fill [the following term], and that therefore [claimant] had a reasonable assurance of
    continued employment.” The Board’s findings are complete and supported by the record and fully
    support its legal conclusions. Therefore, we conclude that the Board did not err in its reasonable
    assurance analysis.
    ¶ 17.   Finally, claimant argues that public policy and the underlying purposes and goals
    of Vermont’s unemployment compensation statutes dictate that adjunct instructors should be
    8
    entitled to unemployment compensation benefits. Institutions of higher education may be driven
    by the economic benefits they receive to increasingly utilize adjunct professors; however, this
    Court’s review of the Board’s decision is limited to enacted statutes. If the Legislature determines
    that the plight of adjunct professors like claimant is deserving of additional or more specific
    protections, they must amend the current unemployment compensation statutes. It is not the role
    of this Court to do so. See, e.g., Fleece on Earth v. Dep’t of Emp’t & Training, 
    2007 VT 29
    , ¶ 28,
    
    181 Vt. 458
    , 
    923 A.2d 594
    (“[I]t is up to the Legislature to decide whether the statute should be
    adjusted to accommodate current employment trends.”); Sirloin Saloon of Shelburne, Rutland, &
    Manchester, Inc. v. Dep’t of Emp’t & Training, 
    151 Vt. 123
    , 129, 
    558 A.2d 226
    , 229-30 (1989)
    (“[T]he policy issue is for the Legislature, not this Court, where as here the statute is plain on its
    face.”); Littlefield v. Dep’t of Emp’t & Training, 
    145 Vt. 247
    , 257, 
    487 A.2d 507
    , 512 (1984)
    (“[T]he Court is not free to enlarge the statute’s scope by an unwarranted interpretation of statutory
    language.” (quotation omitted)).
    Affirmed.
    FOR THE COURT:
    Associate Justice
    9