More than 1,300 police patrol officers and detectives (plaintiffs) sued the city of Boston and its police department (city) under G. L. c. 149, § 148, the so-called “weekly
The relevant facts are few and uncontested. The city offers a deferred compensation plan as a benefit to its employees. Employees who choose to participate agree to reduce their pay, and designate the amount of that reduction to be invested in one or more of several tax-deferred funds. The city then transfers those amounts to plan coordinators for investment. Prior to January, 1996, the city’s procedures were cumbersome, involving the mailing of information back and forth between the management information system department, the auditing department, the treasury department, and the plan coordinators. The total time for this process generally exceeded seven days, and sometimes took as long as five weeks. In early 1996, the city began using electronic transfers rather than regular mail, reducing the time from payroll deduction to receipt by plan coordinators to an average of from five to ten days.
Because it is undisputed that the city did not always manage to transfer the plaintiffs’ contributions to their accounts within seven days, the question before us is whether deferred compensation contributions are “wages” under this statute.* **
The plaintiffs argue that the weekly wage law is remedial and should be construed broadly to effect its intended purpose. See Neff v. Commissioner of the Dep’t of Indus. Accs.,
The deferred compensation plan is authorized by G. L. c. 29, § 64B, inserted by St. 1988, c. 319, which provides that the Commonwealth and its subdivisions may offer such a program “in accordance with the U.S. Internal Revenue Code.” The Internal Revenue Code requires that, in order to obtain the tax-deferral benefit, contributions “shall remain (until made available to the participant or other beneficiary) solely the property and rights of the employer . . . subject only to the claims of the employer’s general creditors.” 26 U.S.C. § 457(b)(6). Therefore, all compensation deferred under an authorized plan is solely the property of the employer until the funds are distributed to the participant at a later time. The participating employee agrees to
The plaintiffs propose two objections to the notion that the contributions are the city’s property. First, they maintain that the concept of property is one of a “bundle of rights,” with the city possessing some rights while the employees possess others, each the “owner” of the monies in some sense. The Federal statutory language belies this argument, however, requiring that the contributions remain “solely the property and rights of the employer” (emphasis added). 26 U.S.C. § 457(b)(6). Second, the plaintiffs argue that the Federal provision requiring that contributions be the property of the employer creates a legal fiction that should be ignored. This argument, too, is unpersuasive. “We interpret statutes so as to avoid rendering any part of the legislation meaningless.” Victory Distribs., Inc. v. Ayer Div. of the Dist. Court Dep’t, ante 136, 140 (2001). As the Superior Court judge more pointedly wrote, “Nothing in the federal statute suggests that the statutory pre-requisite for a valid plan is an empty requirement designed to lack all meaning.”
In accordance with the purposes of the relevant statutes, see Champagne v. Champagne, supra, we hold that deferred compensation contributions are not “wages” under the weekly wage law.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
“[Employers] shall pay weekly or bi-weekly each such employee the wages earned by him ... to within seven days of the termination of the pay period during which the wages were earned . . . .” G. L. c. 149, § 148.
We do not address the maximum time allowable for transfer of deferred compensation funds under either Massachusetts or Federal law, but only the question posed by the parties: whether deferred compensation contributions are “wages” under the weekly wage law.
