Linda S. Musgrave, Petitioner,
v.
The Industrial Claim
Appeals Office of the State of
Colorado
and Eben Ezer Lutheran Institute,
Respondents.
No. 87CA0346.
762 P.2d 686
Colorado
Court of Appeals,
Div. VI.
March 24, 1988.
As
Modified on Denial of Rehearing May 19, 1988.
Certiorari Denied Oct. 11,
1988.
Duane Woodard, Atty. Gen., Charles B. Howe, Chief Deputy Atty.
Gen., Richard H. Forman, Sol. Gen., Aurora Ruiz-Hernandez, Asst.
Atty. Gen., Denver, for respondent The Industrial Claim Appeals
Office.
Brandenberg and Schultz, Helena Schultz, Brush, for respondent
Eben Ezer Lutheran Institute.
Ann M. la Plante, Greeley, for petitioner.
BINDER, Judge.*
Claimant, Linda S. Musgrave, seeks review of the denial of her
claim for unemployment benefits by the Industrial Claim Appeals
Office (Panel) following a remand from this court. We affirm.
After claimant terminated her employment with Eben Ezer Lutheran
Institute (employer) in March 1985, she applied for unemployment
compensation benefits but was disqualified pursuant to Sec.
8-73-108(5)(e)(I), C.R.S. (1986 Repl.Vol. 3B). She sought review in
this court, and in Musgrave v. Eben Ezer Institute, 731 P.2d
142 (Colo.App.1986) (Musgrave I), we held that the Industrial
Commission (now Panel) had made insufficient findings to support its
order of denial. We set aside that order and remanded the matter for
further findings consistent with our opinion.
After remand, the Panel reviewed the record once more and again
entered an order denying benefits to claimant. This petition for
review followed.
The Panel found that claimant had experienced a change in working
conditions in December 1984, when employer reduced her salary and
changed her position from department head to co-department head. It
further found and concluded that claimant acquiesced in the changed
conditions when she continued to work after the changes were
effected.
The Panel then determined that claimant terminated her employment
because of dissatisfaction with a letter she had been given on
February 18, 1985, expressing employer's concerns with her work
performance. It concluded that delivery of that letter constituted
reasonable supervision, notwithstanding the fact that employer's
agent had not been available on one occasion when claimant wanted to
discuss the letter's contents.
Based upon these findings, the Panel ruled that claimant was
disqualified from the receipt of benefits under Sec. 8-73-108(5)(e)(II),
C.R.S. (1986 Repl.Vol. 3B) in that she had resigned because of
dissatisfaction with reasonable supervision.
Claimant contends that the Panel went beyond this court's mandate
by considering issues in addition to those mentioned in the decision
in Musgrave I. She asserts further that she was denied due
process because she was not afforded an opportunity to present her
position on such additional issues. Finally, claimant argues that
there was insufficient evidence to support the Panel's findings.
We do not agree that the order of remand limited the Panel to
making findings solely on the issue of claimant's acquiescence to
changed working conditions. In Musgrave I, we ruled that
claimant had suffered a substantial change in her working conditions
in December 1984. Thus, it was error to deny her benefits under Sec.
8-73-108(5)(e)(I) absent a finding that claimant had acquiesced in
the changed conditions. We remanded for further findings consistent
with our opinion.
When an appellate court remands a case with specific directions
to enter a particular judgment or to pursue a prescribed course, a
trial court has no discretion except to comply with such directions.
Galbreath v. Wallrich, 48 Colo. 127, 109 P. 417 (1910).
However, when a case is remanded for further proceedings consistent
with the appellate court's opinion, it is a general remand. A
general remand authorizes the trial court to make new findings and
conclusions so long as there is no conflict with the ruling of the
appellate court. See In re Medway, 23 Wall. 504, 90 U.S. 160,
23 L.Ed. 160 (1875). Cf. In re Estate of Painter, 671 P.2d
1331 (Colo.App.1983).
The order in Musgrave I was a general remand and
authorized the Panel to reexamine the record and to make new
findings and conclusions. We find no error in the procedure employed
by the Panel in this regard.
Claimant next asserts that she should have been given an
opportunity to present additional evidence and argument before the
Panel considered the issue of reasonable supervision following
remand. We do not agree.
The record discloses that claimant argued the issue of the
reasonableness of employer's supervision on a number of occasions.
Indeed, resolution of that issue was the determining factor in the
initial order awarding claimant full benefits. In that order, dated
October 17, 1985, the deputy ruled that claimant was entitled to
benefits on the ground that she had resigned because of
dissatisfaction with actions of her supervisor which were
"unreasonable and need not be tolerated."
When this order was set aside following a de novo hearing before
a referee, claimant included the unreasonable supervision issue in
her appeal to the Industrial Commission. She raised this point again
when she requested the Industrial Commission to reconsider its
affirmance of the referee's order. Additionally, claimant's notice
of appeal to this court in Musgrave I cited employer's
unreasonable supervision as one of the reasons why the Industrial
Commission's decision should be overturned.
Our review of the record leads us to conclude that claimant had
ample opportunity to advance her claim that she resigned her
position because of unreasonable supervision by employer. There was
no denial of due process.
Contrary to claimant's contention, there was ample evidence to
support the finding that claimant acquiesced in her changed working
conditions. She continued to work after she was, in effect, demoted.
Although she contacted the Labor Board with respect to her salary
reduction, she made no further protest.
We do not find it significant under the circumstances that
claimant worked less than two months after her position and salary
were changed. Acquiescence is a matter of intent and does not
necessarily depend upon the lapse of time. Claimant testified at the
de novo hearing that she would not have quit her job had it not been
for the written reprimand. The Panel did not err in finding that the
record established claimant's acquiescence to her changed working
conditions.
The reasonableness of employer's supervision as it affects
claimant's eligibility for benefits is a separate issue. Claimant's
contention that she was subject to unreasonable supervision is based
solely upon the letter which she was given on February 18, 1985. She
complains that she was refused a copy of the letter, that her
immediate supervisor was unavailable to discuss the contents, and
that she was given insufficient information and inadequate time to
correct the alleged deficiencies.
We agree that it would have been a better practice to have given
claimant her own copy of the letter of reprimand, particularly since
it requested correction of specified matters. However, that fact, in
and of itself, would not justify claimant's resignation. There was
evidence that she had the letter in her possession in her own office
at least overnight, so she could have copied all or any part of it
had she desired.
The evidence showed that claimant made only one attempt to
discuss the matter with employer's administrator. The administrator
did not have time to discuss fully claimant's concerns at that
point, and claimant did not follow through on his invitation to
return at a later date. Instead, claimant consulted with a lawyer
within a few days, took an unscheduled vacation, and quit her job by
a telephone call to a fellow employee on the day before she was
scheduled to return to work.
With reference to claimant's assertion that she was not given
sufficient time to correct numerous alleged deficiencies, the
evidence discloses that the letter of February 18, 1985, demanded
only improvement in claimant's performance, not total correction of
all the problem areas within thirty days as claimant implies.
There was sufficient evidence to support the Panel's findings and
conclusion that claimant terminated her employment because of
dissatisfaction with reasonable supervision. Accordingly, those
findings are binding on review. See Baca v. Marriott Hotels, Inc.,
732 P.2d 1252 (Colo.App.1986).
Order affirmed.
Silverstein and Wilson*, JJ., concur.
* Sitting by assignment of the Chief Justice under provisions
of the Colo. Const., art. VI, Sec. 5(3), and Sec. 24-51-607(5), C.R.S. (1982 Repl.Vol. 10).