BY GMA
Chicago,
TAG – Sharon Smiley had worked for 10 years as a receptionist and
administrative assistant at a Chicago real estate company until she was fired
for skipping lunch one day. After a two-year battle, an appeals court in Illinois
has found that denial of her unemployment benefits was "clearly
erroneous."
Smiley,
48, punched out of work for lunch Jan. 28, 2010, but remained at her desk to
finish a project assigned by a manager because she did not plan to eat that
day, she said.
Smiley,
who had passed her 10-year anniversary with the company more than a month
before, said another manager told her it was time for her to go to lunch and
step away from her desk, but she refused. That manager observed Smiley working
on a spreadsheet on her computer, answering the phone and responding to
questions by people who approached her desk, according to a filing from the appellate
court of Illinois.
Her
former employer, Equity Lifestyle Properties Inc., did not return a request for
comment.
The
company's human resources director then became involved, explaining that hourly
non-exempt employees were required to take a 30-minute lunch break, a policy
that had been in the company handbook for 10 years, according to the filing.
Not following the policy would be a violation of Illinois' labor laws, the HR
director said.
The
prominent location of Smiley's desk, "which was directly at the front door
of the office, made this particularly important for her," according to the
human resources director in the court filing. She and Smiley had "many
discussions ... over her eating breakfast at her desk," the filing states
"I
knew you couldn't eat lunch at your desk," Smiley told ABC News. "I
was under the impression that because I was punched out and I could do what I
want."
Smiley
said her job had became so stressful that she suffered a stroke and was off
work for almost three months, beginning July 13, 2009, according to the court
filing.
After
being fired, Smiley learned she was ineligible for unemployment benefits
because she had been discharged for misconduct connected with her work.
She
appealed to the Illinois Department of Employment Security's board of review
three times, was denied, then took her case to a circuit court. That court
ruled Smiley, who did not challenge the firing, was eligible for benefits.
Smiley
received a check with a lump sum on Nov. 28 for several months of unemployment,
a percentage of her previous salary. Then she received a check every two weeks
for $528 until she obtained her latest job last month.
The
appellate court of Illinois affirmed the circuit court ruling Jan. 11, saying
the "insubordination arose from [Smiley's] efforts to perform additional
work for [her employer], beyond what was required of her."
"The
insubordination occurred in a meeting with her superiors which lasted only four
minutes," the court ruling stated.
The
court ruling also said there was evidence that managers had been able to work
with her in the past to perform new tasks with which she was uncomfortable.
An
unemployed person in Illinois is qualified for unemployment unless there is
misconduct, which "has been defined as conduct evincing such willful or
wanton disregard of an employer's interests," according to the state's
legal test in a ruling from the board of review.
After
nine months of unemployment, Smiley obtained a similar job at another company
on Dec. 13. She said her new employer has a more liberal lunch policy.
"They told me I could sit at my desk, I could be
at my computer during lunch, or I could look at magazines. And in my area, they
have two flat-screen TVs on the wall," she said with a chuckle.[]
Woman Fired for Doing Work at Lunch Wins Unemployment Claim
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
January 18, 2012
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