
    STATE OF NEVADA, EMPLOYMENT SECURITY DEPARTMENT, STANLEY P. JONES, in His Capacity as Executive Director of the Nevada Employment Security Department, HAROLD KNUDSON, in His Capacity as Chairman of the Nevada Employment Security Department Board of Review, Appellants, v. MARILYN R. EVANS, Respondent.
    No. 23317
    August 24, 1995
    901 P.2d 156
    
      Crowell, Susich, Owen & Tackes, Carson City, for Appellants.
    
      Raymond Rodriguez, Nevada Legal Services, Carson City, for Respondent.
   OPINION

By the Court,

Springer, J.:

The district court reversed a decision qf the Employment Security Department which denied Marilyn Evans’ unemployment benefits. Evans lost her job because she had been arrested and was forced to remain in jail pending trial because she could not afford bail. She was terminated during the time that she was in jail awaiting trial. The district court correctly held that Evans’ missing work because she could not afford to post bail was not sufficient ground to deny benefits.

There are three possible statutory grounds for denial of unemployment benefits: (1) NRS 612.380 — voluntarily leaving employment without good cause; (2) NRS 612.383 — discharge for crimes committed in connection with employment; and (3) NRS 612.385 — misconduct connected with work. None of these three statutory grounds are implicated in this case. See also Clevenger v. Employment Security Dep’t, 105 Nev. 145, 149, 770 P.2d 866, 868 (1989) (“Nevada law requires that an employee’s misconduct be connected with his or her work before that person can be deemed ineligible for unemployment benefits”).

The facts of this case are not in dispute. Neither Evans’ pretrial incarceration nor her criminal acts were connected with her employment. Further, Evans failure to be available for work was due to her pretrial incarceration which was predicated on her inability to obtain bail, not her criminal conduct.

Evans is guilty of no “misconduct” and no “deliberate violation or disregard on [her part] of standards of behavior which [her] employer has the right to expect.” Barnum v. Williams, 84 Nev. 37, 41, 436 P.2d 219, 222 (1968). It was impossible for Evans to appear for work, and she dutifully notified her employer of this fact. Her absence from work was neither deliberate nor voluntary. There being no statutory or other legal basis for denying unemployment insurance benefits to Evans, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.

Rose and Shearing, JJ., concur.

Steffen, C. J.,

with whom Young, J., joins,

dissenting:

Respectfully, I dissent.

I intend no disrespect for respondent Marilyn R. Evans, but the majority’s reasoning would be just as applicable if respondent had been apprehended committing a residential burglary — an activity that would not be connected to her employment. I cannot accept the proposition that such a result was ever intended or countenanced by Nevada’s statutory scheme.

Three tiers of administrative review all resulted in the determination that Evans was not entitled to unemployment compensation. In my opinion, they were correct in their rulings.

Evans was arrested and incarcerated on a charge of cruelty to animals. Ultimately she was convicted of the charge. Her employer, Cactus Pete’s, granted her three separate thirty-day leaves of absence before terminating her.

When Evans filed her request for unemployment benefits after her release from jail, she had been off work for almost seven months and had been discharged for nearly three months. Her patient employer was forced to incur an increase in its employment contributions wrought by the change in its experience rating resulting from the district court’s ruling in favor of Evans.

The district court reversed the affirmation of denial of benefits by the Employment Security Board of Review on grounds that Evans’ off-duty criminal conduct and consequent unavailability for work did not constitute an adequate factual and legal nexus to her employment to warrant denial of benefits.

As noted above, under this rationale, it would have made no difference whether Evans’ incarceration was attributable to cruelty to animals or burglary. Certainly burglary, no less than cruelty to animals, would have had no connection to Evans’ employment.

I have difficulty reconciling with our ruling in the instant case our affirmation of the Board of Review’s denial of benefits in Kraft v. Nev. Emp. Sec. Dep’t, 102 Nev. 191, 717 P.2d 583 (1986), where Kraft’s car stalled on a busy highway and he was terminated for waiting next to his car for over three hours without contacting his supervisor. We viewed the employee’s three-hour period of inaction in Kraft as misconduct deserving of discharge because “there must be a point when inaction can only be viewed as the product of indifference.” Id. at 194, 717 P.2d at 585. Accordingly, we accepted the Board of Review’s conclusion that Kraft had been properly terminated for misconduct within the meaning of NRS 612.385 (misconduct connected with his work).

Today’s ruling reaches the opposite conclusion from Kraft on grounds that none of the statutory criteria for a denial of benefits upon termination was satisfied. Although I cannot characterize the majority’s interpretation of the language of the statute as unreasonable, I nevertheless disagree. We have previously construed NRS 612.385 as including misconduct that is connected with the employee’s work where the nature of the misconduct manifests “‘a willful disregard of those [employer’s legitimate business] interests and the duties and obligations he owes his employer.’ ” Clevenger v. Employment Security Dep’t, 105 Nev. 145, 150, 770 P.2d 866, 869 (1989) (quoting Branch v. Virginia Employment Comm’n, 249 S.E.2d 180, 182 (Va. 1978)).

It appears to me that an employer has an abiding legitimate business interest in having its work force present and available to do the work of the business. I also suggest that employees who voluntarily and willfully engage in criminal behavior that could result in their incarceration and consequent absence from work are willfully disregarding their duty and obligation to be on the job and doing their work in accordance with the terms and expectations of their employment. The effect is identical whether the absent employee voluntarily remains next to a disabled vehicle for three hours waiting for a good Samaritan (without notifying the employer), or takes an unreported, unapproved vacation from work, or voluntarily commits a criminal act that results in absence due to incarceration. In each instance, the employee fails to consider the legitimate business interests of the employer and embarks upon a personal course of conduct that reflects a willful disregard for the duties and obligations owed to the employer. Of the three examples of misbehavior, I am of the opinion that the employee who engages in criminal conduct is less considerate of his employment obligations than the other two. See Dep’t of Labor and Indus. v. Unemployment Comp. Board, 24 A.2d 667 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1942) (employee terminated because of incarceration for theft unrelated to employment not entitled to unemployment compensation).

For the reasons noted above, I respectfully dissent.  