Opinion
December 14, 1961.
January 16, 1962.
Unemployment Compensation — Willful misconduct — Taking employer's merchandise without payment — Company rule — Evidence — Findings of fact — Appellate review — Unemployment Compensation Law.
1. In an unemployment compensation case, in which it appeared that claimant, employed in a food store, appropriated his employer's property to his own use, and that he had known of a published rule that any employe who took merchandise without paying for it would be discharged, it was Held that the evidence established that claimant's unemployment was due to his discharge for willful misconduct and that he was properly denied benefits under § 402(e) of the Unemployment Compensation Law.
2. In unemployment compensation cases, findings of fact by the board, supported by competent evidence, are binding on appeal.
Before ERVIN, WRIGHT, WOODSIDE, WATKINS, MONTGOMERY, and FLOOD, JJ. (RHODES, P.J., absent).
Appeal, No. 364, Oct. T., 1961, by claimant, from decision of Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, No. B-65197, in re claim of Napoleon Montier. Decision affirmed.
Napoleon Montier, appellant, in propria persona.
Sydney Reuben, Assistant Attorney General, with him David Stahl, Attorney General, for Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, appellee.
Argued December 14, 1961.
In this unemployment compensation appeal the Bureau of Employment Security, the Referee and the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review all decided that the claimant was discharged as a result of willful misconduct and so denied benefits under § 402(e) of the Unemployment Compensation Law, 43 P. S. § 802(e).
The claimant, Napoleon Montier, was last employed by Penn Fruit Company, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on January 17, 1961 as a produce back room porter at $2.36 1/4 per hour. He had been so employed for eighteen years.
The record shows, and the board so found, that a regular inspection of lockers disclosed the unexplained presence of certain items of the employer's merchandise, still bearing price tags, in the claimant's locker; that on his last day of work he was observed taking a soft drink from the icebox and admitted he did not pay for it; that he signed a statement that he did this on other occasions; and that he had known of the published rule that any employee who took merchandise without paying for it would be discharged. We are bound by these findings as they are supported by competent evidence. Ristis Unemployment Compensation Case, 178 Pa. Super. 400, 116 A.2d 271 (1955).
His conduct, even without the company rule, in appropriating company property to his own use, was a willful disregard of the standards of behavior which the employer has a right to expect from his employee; and was such reprehensible conduct as to evidence a "conscious indifference to the perpetration of a wrong"; such conduct clearly constitutes willful misconduct under the law. Gagliardi Unemployment Compensation Case, 186 Pa. Super. 142, 141 A.2d 410 (1958).
Decision affirmed.