Chamberlain v. Unemployment Compensation Review Bd. (majority)
Annotate this CaseIn July 2012, claimant Charles Chamberlain was unemployed and was receiving unemployment compensation benefits. In October, he pled guilty to the summary offenses of operating a vehicle without a valid inspection, and driving with a suspended license. Relating to the latter conviction, Claimant was sentenced to sixty days in the Keystone House Arrest Program (from November 1, 2012 to December 31, 2012) with the condition that if he failed to comply, he would serve sixty days in the York County Prison. Claimant was also required to attend reemployment eligibility assessment classes. The terms of Claimant’s house arrest restricted him to the home of his sister, but permitted him to work, run errands, and do his Christmas shopping. On November 28, 2012, the local service center of the Office of Unemployment Compensation Benefits issued a notice of determination that Claimant’s sentence of house arrest disqualified him from receipt of benefits because he was “incarcerated after a conviction” under Section 402.6. Claimant appealed the finding of disqualification and, in 2013, a hearing was held before a referee for the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review (UCBR). The referee concluded Claimant was disqualified from receiving benefits, and Claimant appealed. Mindful of the remedial purpose of the Unemployment Compensation (UC) Law, the Commonwealth Court held that a claimant sentenced to house arrest is not “incarcerated” under Section 402.6. Because the terms and conditions of the claimant’s house arrest did not otherwise prevent him from satisfying the statutory requirements for obtaining unemployment compensation benefits, the Commonwealth Court reversed the denial of benefits. Agreeing with the Commonwealth Court's conclusion, the Supreme Court affirmed.
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