Paula M. Munoz-Navarette, Petitioner,
v.
The Industrial Claim
Appeals Office of the State of
Colorado,
and Colorado Division of Employment and
Training, Respondents.
No. 90CA2024.
833 P.2d 827
Colorado
Court of Appeals,
Div. III.
Jan. 30, 1992.
As
Modified Jan. 30, 1992.
Rehearing
Denied March 12, 1992.
Certiorari Denied Aug. 3,
1992.
Colorado Rural Legal Services, Ann M. la Plante, Teresa Vaughn,
Greeley, for petitioner.
Gale Norton, Atty. Gen., Raymond T. Slaughter, Chief Deputy Atty.
Gen., Timothy M. Tymkovich, Sol. Gen., Tony Arguello, Asst. Atty.
Gen., Denver, for respondents.
DUBOFSKY, Judge.
Paula M. Munoz-Navarette, claimant, seeks review of a final order
of the Industrial Claim Appeals Panel which denied her request for
waiver of the recovery of an overpayment of unemployment
compensation benefits. We set aside the order.
Claimant lost her job in December 1988. She filed a claim for
unemployment compensation that month and received benefits from
December 1988 through March 1989.
The initial decision of the Labor Department granted claimant a
full award of benefits from which the employer appealed. On that
appeal, in March 1989, the referee reversed the Department's earlier
award of full benefits after determining that claimant was
disqualified and owed $2,586 for overpayment of benefits.
Claimant then requested from the Labor Department a waiver as to
the overpayment amount on the basis that she was presently
financially unable to repay it and that her situation was not likely
to improve in the foreseeable future. Claimant also requested a
waiver of repayment because, on the basis of the receipt of the
unemployment benefits, she had foregone applying for certain other
governmental benefits.
Claimant submitted a certified document which demonstrated her
economic situation at the time she requested waiver. The document
indicated that claimant's living expenses were significantly greater
than her monthly income.
In initially denying claimant's waiver request, the Labor
Department told claimant that she had been informed on several
occasions that if she received an overpayment, she would have to
repay the money. Thus, the initial denial did not address the merits
of claimant's request for waiver.
Claimant appealed, and at a hearing, a Labor Department employee
testified as to its reasons for denying claimant's waiver request.
She indicated that claimant had not met the Labor Department
requirements for waiver because claimant had not demonstrated
detrimental reliance or relinquishment of a valuable right because
of her receipt of the unemployment benefits. The witness also
testified that claimant was denied waiver because she was not
retired and was otherwise able to work. She also noted that claimant
had not applied for public assistance.
The witness indicated that the Labor Department denied waiver
requests unless the claimant had actually applied for and had been
denied public assistance, i.e., welfare benefits, food stamps, and
rent subsidy. Absent such an application, the Department did not
consider that there had been detrimental reliance on the
unemployment compensation benefits.
The witness further indicated that, irrespective of the ratio of
a claimant's income compared to the expenses for her and her family,
if, as here, a claimant is young and capable of working and earning
money, then the Labor Department will not waive repayment of any
overpaid unemployment compensation. The witness testified that, if a
claimant is not on a fixed government income, she has control over
how much money she can make and that, therefore, waiver is
inappropriate.
Claimant testified she would have applied for food stamps and
investigated rent assistance and utility assistance if she had not
received unemployment benefits. She did not, however, formally apply
for such benefits; nor did claimant present evidence which
demonstrated she would have been eligible for these benefits without
the unemployment compensation.
Claimant also submitted information concerning her economic
situation as of the time of the hearing. This evidence indicated
that during the school year, claimant made approximately $420 per
month as a school bus driver, and in the summer, she earned
approximately $225 per month working as a scorekeeper for baseball
games. The documents indicated that her normal expenses would be in
excess of $1,000 per month. Claimant also testified that she was in
the process of obtaining a divorce and that a child
support/maintenance award had not yet been entered.
Claimant testified that the unemployment compensation benefits
she received were used to help pay the rent for December and
January. She further testified that at that time, she had two small
children and that some of the money was used for food and milk for
her oldest child, whereas some was used for various bills, baby food
and formula, diapers, powder, and baby clothing. She also testified
that part of the money was used to help pay for utilities and rent
as well as gas for her car. Furthermore, while she was looking for
employment, she paid some of the money to a babysitter. She also
used the money for medical expenses for her children. Claimant also
testified that her husband was out of work during much of the time
she was receiving the unemployment benefits. There was, however,
record evidence indicating that husband was out of work only for a
brief part of this period.
The Labor Department does not contend that the expenses listed by
claimant were excessive or unreasonable. Therefore, it is
uncontested that claimant spent her unemployment benefits for the
necessaries of living for her and her children, i.e., food, rent,
utilities, and medical expenses. The Labor Department employee
testified, however, that in her view the expenditure of unemployment
benefits by the claimant for necessary living expenses was not
sufficient to justify a waiver.
I.
Claimant argues that because of her financial situation at the
time of the repayment hearing and because she had spent all the
unemployment money on necessary living expenses, it was inequitable,
as a matter of law, for the referee and Panel not to waive the
repayment of her unemployment compensation benefits. While we
disagree with claimant that she was entitled to have her repayment
obligation waived as a matter of law, we do conclude that proper
consideration was not given to these factors by the referee and the
Panel.
The referee and Panel denied claimant's waiver request primarily
on the basis that she had not applied for other governmental
benefits and because she did not otherwise prove her eligibility for
such benefits had she applied. Neither the referee nor the Panel
addressed claimant's argument that use of unemployment benefits for
necessary living expenses, coupled with her poor economic state at
the time of the hearing, was also a basis for waiving the repayment
of unemployment benefits. This was error.
In Hesson v. Industrial Commission, 740 P.2d 526
(Colo.App.1987), this court held that if a claimant's financial
condition required unemployment benefits to be spent on essential
living expenses, this factor must be considered in determining if it
would be inequitable to require repayment of those benefits by the
claimant. Similarly, in Kalkbrenner v. Industrial Claim Appeals
Office, 801 P.2d 545 (Colo.App.1990), this court stated:
[T]he referee here improperly focused
upon Kalkbrenner's failure to give up any rights or to
change her position as a result of her receipt of benefits.
He also failed to consider other relevant factors including
Kalkbrenner's financial problems and dire financial
condition.
Hence, this issue should have been addressed here.
Furthermore, although the exact amount necessary for the support
of claimant and her family is not clear from this record, it does
appear that her monthly income at the time of the hearing placed her
below the United States Department of Health and Human Services
poverty income guidelines for a family of three for 1989. See
54 Fed.Reg. 7097 (1989). Moreover, since her husband's contribution
to the family income was not ascertainable at the time of the
hearing, on remand his contribution should be added.
Thus, Duenas-Rodriguez v. Industrial Commission, 199 Colo.
95, 606 P.2d 437 (1980), Hesson, and Kalkbrenner have
all rejected the view implicitly espoused by the Labor Department
that only people on subsidized fixed incomes, i.e., elderly people
on social security, may be considered for a waiver on the basis of
their economic situation. Furthermore, the Labor Department's
assumption that poor working people are able to earn more money than
they are presently earning is without support in the record.
Here, for example, claimant testified that she was unable to
secure other higher paying employment, and there is no evidence to
rebut this testimony. In our view, the claimant's evidence, if true,
indicates that at the time of the hearing, claimant's reasonable
expenses to meet her family's basic needs were more than her income.
Furthermore, since it appears the family is below the federal
poverty guidelines, the result of collecting the previously paid
unemployment benefits may well deprive claimant and her children of
food, clothing, utilities, and a place to live. These are important
factors in determining if it would be inequitable to require
repayment.
Since the referee and Panel did not address either the issue of
claimant's having spent the overpaid funds on basic necessities or
her impoverished status at the time of the repayment hearing, the
order cannot stand and the matter must be remanded for further
proceedings.
II.
Claimant next argues that, since she testified that she did not
apply for food stamps and rent subsidies, she has demonstrated
detrimental reliance as a matter of law. We disagree with claimant
on this issue, but since the case is being remanded for
determination on other aspects of the case, we also remand for
clarification on the question of detrimental reliance/estoppel.
In this regard, we reject the Labor Department's contention that
a person must first apply for and then be rejected for other
governmental benefits before they can prove detrimental reliance/estoppel
as a basis for waiver. We agree with claimant that a requirement
that she apply for and be denied other benefits is an unnecessary
waste of time and not required by case law. See Mugrauer v.
Industrial Commission, 709 P.2d 47 (Colo.App.1985).
However, we do agree that a claimant relying on detrimental
reliance/estoppel theory as the basis for a claim of waiver must
prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he or she was eligible
for such benefits. See Hesson, supra. We, therefore, agree
that to the extent claimant relies on detrimental reliance/estoppel,
on remand she must prove her eligibility for such benefits by
establishing her economic situation at the time she was receiving
the unemployment benefits as well as what the requirements were for
receiving such benefits.
We note that one reason why claimant may not have been clear as
to what she must prove at the hearing to establish her waiver right
was the initial denial from the Labor Department. The Labor
Department's initial denial of her request for waiver did not
address the merits of claimant's claim and did not point out to her
why she was ineligible for a waiver. The Department's denial merely
stated that claimant had been previously informed she would have to
repay any overpayment.
The order is set aside, and the cause is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Tursi and Ruland, JJ., concur.