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Unemployment Insurance

Web Library Topic - Failing to Follow the Employer's Rules or Instructions

Instructed to Perform an Illegal Act

Refusing to Work Overtime

Insubordination or Disobedience of a Reasonable Instruction

Violation of a Statute or Company Rule

Refusal to Work A Different Shift

Refusal to Transfer to Another Department

 

Instructed to Perform An Illegal Act

Statute

§ 8‑73‑108(4)(l), C.R.S. 2005

(4) An individual separated from a job shall be given a full award of benefits if any of the following reasons and pertinent conditions related thereto are determined by the division to have existed. The determination of whether or not the separation from employment shall result in a full award of benefits shall be the responsibility of the division. The following reasons shall be considered, along with any other factors that may be pertinent to such determination:

(l) Being instructed or requested to perform a service or commit an act which is in violation of an ordinance or statute.

Cases

The ICAO is unaware of any published Colorado court cases that specifically address this statute.

 

Refusing to Work Overtime

Statute

§ 8‑73‑108(4)(k), C.R.S. 2005

(4) An individual separated from a job shall be given a full award of benefits if any of the following reasons and pertinent conditions related thereto are determined by the division to have existed. The determination of whether or not the separation from employment shall result in a full award of benefits shall be the responsibility of the division. The following reasons shall be considered, along with any other factors that may be pertinent to such determination:

(k) Refusing with good cause to work overtime without reasonable advance notice. Good cause as used in this paragraph (k) shall be restricted to reasonable, compelling personal reasons as determined by the division affecting either the worker or the worker's immediate family.

Case

Action Key Punch Service, Inc. v. Industrial Commission, 709 P.2d 970 (Colo. App. 1985)

In order to warrant award of unemployment benefits where claimant refuses to work overtime, circumstances must be so compelling that claimant was deprived of making volitional choice in refusing.  Here, a previously planned birthday party was not a compelling personal reason under § 8-73-108(4)(k) for justifying refusal to work overtime.

 

Insubordination or Disobedience of a Reasonable Instruction

Also includes:

 - Failure to obtain, maintain, or renew required licenses or certifications

- Failure to keep in good standing with the union

Statute

§ 8‑73‑108(5)(e)(VI), C.R.S. 2005

(5)(e) Subject to the maximum reduction consistent with federal law, and insofar as consistent with interstate agreements, if a separation from employment occurs for any of the following reasons, the employer from whom such separation occurred shall not be charged for benefits which are attributable to such employment and, because any payment of benefits which are attributable to such employment out of the fund as defined in section 8-70-103 (13) shall be deemed to have an adverse effect on such employer's account in such fund, no payment of such benefits shall be made from such fund:

(VI) Insubordination such as: Deliberate disobedience of a reasonable instruction of an employer or an employer's duly authorized representative, refusal or failure to obtain, maintain, or renew licenses, certifications, credentials, conditions, or other professional designations which are necessary to permit the claimant to perform a job, failure to keep in good standing with the union because of nonpayment of dues, or repeated acts of agitation against employer working conditions, pay scale, policies, or procedures; except that orderly action on the part of an employee or through union negotiation shall not be so considered if such action does not interfere with work performance.

Cases

Sayers v. American Janitorial Service, 162 Colo. 292, 425 P.2d 693 (1967)

Willful misconduct or deliberate disobedience does not necessarily require actual intent to wrong the employer; it is enough if there is a conscious indifference to the perpetration of a wrong or a reckless disregard of the claimant's duty to his or her employer.

Rose Medical Center Hospital Association v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 757 P.2d 1173 (Colo. App. 1988)

Insubordination, such as deliberate disobedience of a reasonable instruction, is to be reviewed using an objective standard; i.e. whether a reasonable person in the claimant's position would have refused to obey the instruction.

 

Violation of a Statute or Company Rule

Statute

§ 8‑73‑108(5)(e)(VII), C.R.S. 2005

(5)(e) Subject to the maximum reduction consistent with federal law, and insofar as consistent with interstate agreements, if a separation from employment occurs for any of the following reasons, the employer from whom such separation occurred shall not be charged for benefits which are attributable to such employment and, because any payment of benefits which are attributable to such employment out of the fund as defined in section 8-70-103 (13) shall be deemed to have an adverse effect on such employer's account in such fund, no payment of such benefits shall be made from such fund:

(VII) Violation of a statute or of a company rule which resulted or could have resulted in serious damage to the employer's property or interests or could have endangered the life of the worker or other persons, such as: Mistreatment of patients in a hospital or nursing home; serving liquor to minors; selling prescription items without prescriptions from licensed doctors; immoral conduct which has an effect on worker's job status; divulging of confidential information which resulted or could have resulted in damage to the employer's interests; failure to observe conspicuously posted safety rules; intentional falsification of expense accounts, inventories, or other records or reports whether or not substantial harm or injury was incurred; or removal or attempted removal of employer's property from the premises of the employer without proper authority.

Cases

Madrid v. Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Co., 728 P.2d 1299 (Colo. App. 1986)

Even though exact costs of damage to employer could not be determined, the claimant's unauthorized use of equipment in violation of employer's policy was prejudicial to the employer's interests as a public utility, and serious damage could have resulted to the employer's interests.

Nielsen v. AMI Industries, Inc., 759 P.2d 834 (Colo. App. 1988)

The claimant did not act volitionally to cause his separation when he acted contrary to the employer's unwritten policy, because the policy had never been communicated to him.

 

Refusal to Work A Different Shift

Statute

§ 8‑73‑108(5)(e)(XVIII), C.R.S. 2005

(5)(e) Subject to the maximum reduction consistent with federal law, and insofar as consistent with interstate agreements, if a separation from employment occurs for any of the following reasons, the employer from whom such separation occurred shall not be charged for benefits which are attributable to such employment and, because any payment of benefits which are attributable to such employment out of the fund as defined in section 8-70-103 (13) shall be deemed to have an adverse effect on such employer's account in such fund, no payment of such benefits shall be made from such fund:

(XVIII) Refusal without good cause to work a different shift when no violation of seniority rights, as provided in paragraph (d) of subsection (4) of this section, is involved.

Cases

The ICAO is unaware of any published Colorado court cases that specifically address this statute.

 

Refusal to Transfer to Another Department

Statute

§ 8‑73‑108(5)(e)(XIX), C.R.S. 2005

(5)(e) Subject to the maximum reduction consistent with federal law, and insofar as consistent with interstate agreements, if a separation from employment occurs for any of the following reasons, the employer from whom such separation occurred shall not be charged for benefits which are attributable to such employment and, because any payment of benefits which are attributable to such employment out of the fund as defined in section 8-70-103 (13) shall be deemed to have an adverse effect on such employer's account in such fund, no payment of such benefits shall be made from such fund:

(XIX) Refusal without good cause to accept transfer to another department which does not involve a substantial change in working conditions or a substantial loss in wages.

Case

Wargon v. Industrial Claim Appeals Office, 787 P.2d 668 (Colo. App. 1990)

Determination of whether any change in the working conditions was substantially less favorable, or there was "good cause" for refusing the transfer, must be made using an objective standard, and is not based on the claimant’s subjective view or preferences.

 



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