Susan Brunette, Complainant
Cardinal Ridge Residential Care LLC, Respondent
The decision of the administrative law judge is
set aside, and the matter is
remanded for a hearing before a
different administrative law judge on the issue of probable cause.
Dated and mailed September 30, 2016
722.1
BY THE COMMISSION:
/s/ Laurie R. McCallum, Chairperson
/s/ C. William Jordahl, Commissioner
/s/ David B. Falstad, Commissioner
Procedural History
On July 31, 2015, an Equal
Rights Officer for the Equal Rights Division (hereinafter “Division”), issued an
initial determination finding no probable cause to believe that the complainant
was discriminated against in retaliation for reporting an incident of abuse or
neglect under the Health Care Worker Protection Act.
A copy of the initial determination was mailed to the complainant at her
address of record with the Division.
The final day to file an appeal was August 30, 2015.
The complainant's appeal was not filed until September 23, 2015 and was,
therefore, untimely.
In her letter of appeal, sent
by certified mail to the attention of Larry Jakubowski, the Civil Rights Bureau
Director, the complainant stated:
“I am writing this in regards to my retaliation case against Cardinal Ridge
Residential Care LLC. Mr. Johnny
Nelson is my case worker for this file.
I spoke with him several times over the ph.
As of early June 2015 he had not yet made a decision and told me it could
take up to 2 years with some cases.
I called him in early Sept. 2015 and he said it would only be a few more weeks.
I then spoke with a Ms. Amy Russell and she looked into my file and told
me that I was sent a dismissed decision on July 31st.
I never received that letter.
There seems to be some confusion.
The letter was sent out July 31st 2015 yet Mr. Nelson stated to me in
Sept. 2015 that he had not yet made a decision.
I am asking you to please re-open
my case so that I may appeal the decision that I never received.
I would like to have the opportunity to read the decision.
Had I received it when Ms. Russell said it was sent out I would have
appealed the decision.”
Based on the complainant's
assertion that she never received the initial determination, a hearing was held
with respect to the timeliness of her appeal.
The hearing took place on February 25, 2016.
On April 29, 2016, the administrative law judge who held the hearing
issued a decision affirming the dismissal of the complainant's complaint.
The complainant has filed a timely petition for commission review of the
administrative law judge's decision and order of dismissal.
Memorandum
Opinion
The mailing of a letter
creates a rebuttable presumption that the letter was delivered and received,
which shifts to the challenging party the burden of presenting credible evidence
of non-receipt.
Deering
v. Beverly Enterprises-Wisconsin Inc.,
ERD Case No. CR200504591 (LIRC June 20,
2008), citing
State ex rel.
Flores v. State, 183 Wis. 2d 587, 612-613, 516 N.W.2d 362 (1994).
As the complainant observes in her petition, however, it is difficult to
prove that a letter was not received.
In the absence of evidence showing that the document was returned to the
Division as undeliverable, the only way in which the complainant can rebut the
presumption of receipt is by offering credible testimony that she never got it.
In this case, the complainant
testified that she resided at the address to which the initial determination was
mailed, was at the residence every day, and was not away on vacation at the time
when the determination should have been received.
The complainant stated that she has had problems with the receipt of her
mail in the past, but did not complain to the post office because it was never
anything of any magnitude and did not happen frequently.
When pressed, the complainant testified that during the first six months
of 2015 there was only one piece of mail she knew of that did not arrive.
She indicated that she had received other mail from the Division without
any difficulty.
The commission sees no reason
to question the credibility of the complainant's testimony on this point.
While the administrative law judge noted
that the complainant received all other mail from the Division, as well as
documents relating to her unemployment insurance claim, the fact that other mail
was received does not call into question the complainant's testimony that she
did not receive the initial determination.
If anything, an assertion that a single piece of mail was not delivered
would tend to be more credible than an
assertion that none of the mail sent
by the Division was received by the complainant.
The commission has issued decisions in the unemployment insurance context
that are consistent with this reasoning.
See, for example,
Allen v. Will Enterprises Inc., UI
Dec. Hearing No. 07602429MW (LIRC June 29, 2007) and
Warne v. Reynolds Wheels Intl., UI Dec.
Hearing No. 06003479 (LIRC
Dec. 7, 2006)(the fact that the employee received other documents mailed to him
by the department does not render his assertion that he did not receive the
initial determination incredible).
On the other hand, where an employee asserted that she received virtually none
of the correspondence from the department (10 pieces total), the commission
found that version of events to be “simply not plausible.”
Dabney v. Roettgers Company Inc.,
UI Dec. Hearing No. 02605248MW (LIRC June 9, 2006).
The other reasons cited by
the administrative law judge for disbelieving the complainant relate to
extraneous matters that do not have any direct bearing on her testimony of non-receipt.
Although it is unclear from the record exactly when the complainant is
contending she spoke with the investigator and was told that the decision had
not yet been issued,[1]
this does not call into question her testimony that she never received the
initial determination and only became aware of it when she spoke with a
different Division employee in September.
Nor is the commission troubled by the fact that the complainant did not
ask that employee to send her a copy of the determination.
The complainant clearly had enough information to understand that the
determination was adverse to her, and credibly testified that she assumed the
employee would be mailing her a copy of the determination.
The commission sees nothing
in the record to contradict the complainant's testimony that she did not
receive the initial determination, nor is there any reason to believe that her
failure to receive that document was due to her own actions, such as by moving
without providing a forwarding address for her mail or going on vacation without
arranging for someone to monitor the mail in her absence.
Further, it appears that the complainant acted diligently to file an
appeal once she became aware of the adverse determination, and followed the
instructions she was given by Division staff.
Under the circumstances, the commission considers it appropriate to set
aside the decision dismissing the complainant's appeal and to grant the
complainant an opportunity for a hearing on her complaint.
[1]
The administrative law judge found that the
complainant accused the investigator of lying to
her about whether the decision had been issued.
However, the complainant's testimony was
that she received inconsistent information from
different Division employees.
The complainant did not suggest that the
investigator lied to her.
Rather, as she stated in her letter of
appeal, there was “some confusion.”
uploaded 2017/01/12