¶ 1. Aurora Medical Center of Oshkosh, Inc., fired Mary K. Farady-Sultze from her job
after discovering that it had mistakenly overpaid her for a period between June 13, 2008, and October 13, 2008, and concluding that Farady-Sultze kept those overpayments to herself. Farady-Sultze sued Aurora, noting that an exception to Wisconsin's employee-at-will doctrine occurs when the termination violates public policy. She claimed that the firing was contrаry to Wis. Stat. § 103.455 (2007-08)
1
(outlining the process due before an employer may deduct wages for faulty workmanship, loss, theft or damage). But we hold that Aurora did not run afoul of this statute, which is designed to offer certain protectiоns for an employee who has
earned
wages taken away. Here, Farady-Sultze never earned the extra payments; the statute does not protect her. We also reject her intentional infliction of mental distrеss and defamation claims and affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2. This appeal is, technically speaking, a review of the circuit court's grant of a motion to dismiss the complaint. In such circumstances, this court's examination would be limited to the allegations in the complaint.
Noonan v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
¶ 3. Farady-Sultze was employed as a social worker for Aurora. She was paid every two weeks via automatic deposit. She worked at both Aurora's Wautoma and Oshkosh locations for a period of time. She worked sixteen hours per pay period at the Wautoma location. As of May 24, 2008, she stopped working at the Wautoma location. But her supervisor in Wautoma failed to remove her from thе payroll for that location. So, on her paychecks from June 13, 2008, through October 31, 2008, she was paid for sixteen hours of work every pay period at the hourly rate of $19.75 that she did not perform. This pay was in addition to the pay that she received for the hours that she actually worked at the Oshkosh location.
¶ 4. On or about November 11, 2008, Aurora discovered its error. It suspended Farady-Sultze pending an investigation. On November 18, Aurora terminated her. At the unemployment compensation hearing, Aurora's contention was that she knew she was being paid more than she should and yet did not bring the error to Aurora's attention. Farady-Sultze countered that she did nоt know she was being paid incorrectly; she was not required to enter her work hours for a pay period as those were entered by the employer's staff. And she claimed that, even though she did have access tо an electronic copy of her paycheck stubs, she did not receive a paper copy every two weeks. Those are the pertinent facts.
¶ 5. Independent of her unemployment comрensation claim, she brought this action. She claimed that she was wrongfully terminated and that, although Wisconsin is a termination-at-will state, our courts will allow wrongful termination actions to proceed if the employer hаs terminated an employee in violation of some recognized state policy. She also claimed, inter alia, intentional infliction of emotional distress and defamation. The circuit court granted Aurora's motion to dismiss which we are reviewing as though it was a summary judgment. We will conduct a de novo review because the issues are issues of law and the facts are undisputed.
See Gielow v. Napiorkowski,
DISCUSSION
¶ 6. It has long been the law in Wisconsin that employees are terminable at will, for any reason, without cause and with no judicial remedy.
See Mackenzie v. Miller Brewing Co.,
¶ 7. Knowing that this is the law in Wisconsin, she tried to convince the circuit court, аs she tries to convince this court, that she falls under the very narrow exception to the employee-at-will doctrine. That doctrine was explained as follows by our supreme court: "an employee has a cause of action for wrongful discharge when the discharge is contrary to a funda
mental and well-defined public policy."
Brockmeyer v. Dun & Bradstreet,
¶ 8.
Wandry
involved а woman who was employed as a cashier for a credit union.
Id.
at 39. She cashed a stolen check and the credit union demanded that she reimburse the credit union for its loss.
Id.
When she refused, the credit union fired her.
Id.
at 40. She brought a wrongful termination suit and argued that she satisfied the narrow exception to the employee-at-will doctrine because the credit union had violated Wis. Stat. § 103.455, which she asserted was an expression of Wisconsin public policy.
Wandry,
No employer may make any dеduction from the wages due or earned by any employee... for defective or faulty workmanship, lost or stolen property or damage to property, unless the employee authorizes the emplоyer in writing to make that deduction or unless the employer and a representative designated by the employee determine that the... theft... is due to the employee's negligence, carelessness, or willful and intеntional conduct, or unless the employee is found guilty or held liable in a court of competent jurisdiction ....
¶ 9. The intent of the statute is quite clear. Once the employee earns wages, that employee is protеcted from having the employer deduct those earned wages on charges that the employee was responsible for defective or faulty workmanship, or lost or stolen property or damaged property unless one of three things occur: (1) the employee agrees in writing to the deduction, (2) the employer and a representative designated by an employee determines that the employee is responsible, or (3) that the employee's responsibility is found after court proceedings. The public policy goal of the statute is to prevent the employer from arbitrarily deducting hard earned wages аt its prerogative. The statute accords a method of due process.
¶ 10. Farady-Sultze does not begin to come under the statute. She never earned that sixteen hours of wages in Wautoma every pay period after she was reassigned. So, the goal of the statute, to protect earned wages, never came into play. Moreover, the purpose of the statute is to prevent unauthorized deduction from earnеd wages. There was no deduction of earned wages here. Therefore, despite her claim that she simply did not know that she was getting more wages than she was supposed to, the fact remains that her claim is nоt protected by public policy.
¶ 11. One issue remains — or should we say, one issue with two parts remains. In addition to her wrongful termination claim,
¶ 12. We have a few responses to that. First, the obvious one. We are not bound by federal court decisions in civil cases which attempt to construe state law.
Johnson v. Crawford County,
¶ 13. Her defamation claim also fails. She contends that Aurora expressly informed her that, pursuant to Aurora policy, it would affirmatively disclose to potentiаl employers the reason for termination (theft). But, we held, in
Becker v. Automatic Garage Door Co.,
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
Notes
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2007-08 version unless otherwise noted.
