Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Law Skool Advantage

130 members โ€ข $14/month

1 contribution to Law Skool Advantage
Mar 13 โ€ขย 
Electives
Employment Law: CA EDD Definition of Misconduct
Did you know that in California, even if an employee is fired, they can potentially still receive unemployment compensation from the employer that fired them!? Can you imagine having to pay someone AFTER your fired them! They key to overcoming this is proper documentation and understanding the LEGAL definition of misconduct. Under California Unemployment Insurance Code ยง1256, an individual is disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits if they were discharged for misconduct connected with their most recent work. "Misconduct" is an intangible concept which has never been defined by the legislature forcing us to rely on case law for guidance. For a claimant's act to be misconduct, the following four elements must be present, according to Title 22, Section 1256-30(b). - The claimant owes a material duty to the employer under the contract of employment. - There is a substantial breach of that duty. - The breach is a willful or wanton disregard of that duty. - The breach disregards the employer's interests and injures or tends to injure the employer's interests. I just learned this information this week so thought I would share it with you all! Cheers
1 like โ€ข Mar 16
As someone who works in HR and specifically in the staffing industry the language we use for terminations/end of assignments/suspensions, or any disciplinary actions are vital when trying to save the company some money.
1-1 of 1
Leonardo Hurtado-Morales
1
4points to level up
@leonardo-hurtado-morales-7337
ULV JD Candidate

Active 6d ago
Joined Feb 11, 2026
Powered by