OPINION
This сase requires us to decide whether an employer and an employee may privately settle claims for liquidated damages arising under the Alaska Wage and Hour Act. We conclude that they may not.
I
Four individual plaintiffs brought class action wage and hour claims against Kinney Shoe Corporation. The claims were brought on behalf of six classes of past and present Kinney employees. All of the claims alleged violations of the Alaska Wage and Hour Act (AWHA), AS 23.10.-050-.150; four of the classes represented were past and present employees to whom Kinney allegedly had not рaid overtime wages required by the AWHA.
On March 1, 1990, the superior court set oral argument on class certification for April 25, 1990. On April 4, 1990, Kinney sent individual settlement offers to putative class members. The offers рroposed monetary settlements tailored to compensate each recipient for his or her specific unpaid wages. In return, Kinney demanded waiver of “any rights [the recipient] might have against Kinney ... for all of the claims which were or could have been asserted in the class action lawsuit.” Kinney made clear in its settlement offers that the class action lawsuit sought “recоvery of, among other things, unpaid overtime, bonuses and certain deductions from paychecks.” Some of the solicited employees or ex-employees chose to accept Kinney’s offer.
One day before oral argument on certification, petitioners moved to have the superior court declare void the private settlements that some putative сlass members had entered into with Kinney. The superi- or court decided to review the private settlement issue in detail before ruling on class certification. Further briefing and oral argument followed. Finally, on June 18, 1990, the superior court both certified the classes and denied petitioners’ motion to declare void Kinney’s private settlement agreements with putative class members. This court subsequеntly granted plaintiffs’ petition for review on the question whether the superior court erred by not declaring the settlement agreements void.
II
The class action lawsuit underlying the present appеllate review involves a va *1070 riety of statutory claims. Kinney’s settlement offers attempted to encompass all of those asserted claims. Consequently, petitioners initially asserted multiple сhallenges to the validity of the settlements. Both parties, however, focus here upon a single question. We likewise limit the scope of our review to the same narrow issue: whether an employer’s private settlement of a claim for unpaid overtime and liquidated damages under the AWHA is injurious to interests of the public and, therefore, void on the grounds of public policy. 14 S. Williston, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 1629, at 8 (W. Jeager, 3d ed. 1972).
The stated рolicy behind the AWHA is to protect “the health, efficiency, and general well-being of workers.” AS 23.10.050(2). To that end, an employer who fails to pay overtime as required by AS 23.10.060 faces several possible civil and criminal penalties.
1
The civil penalty most pertinent to this case is the provision in the AWHA for liquidated damages in the amount of actual unpaid overtime and “an additional equal amоunt.” AS 23.10.110(a). “Such damages in the act are a type of punitive damages, not, as in other contexts, a substitute for compensatory damages.”
Gore v. Schlumberger Ltd.,
As our opinion in
Gore
indicated, the liquidated damages provision of AWHA is intendеd to further the policy behind the AWHA by punishing the violating employer.
See id.
Accordingly, when an employer violation is established, “liquidated damages ... must be granted as a matter of law.”
Alaska Int’l Indus., Inc. v. Musarra,
We note that further support for prohibiting employee settlement of AWHA claims without judicial approval appears in the federal courts’ interpretation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).
2
The
*1071
traditional federal rule prohibits compromise or release of liquidated damages liability under the FLSA on the theory that such agreements “will tend to nullify the deterrent effect which Congress plainly intended [thе liquidated damages provision] should have.”
Brooklyn Sav. Bank v. O’Neil,
In sum, permitting private settlement of liquidated damages claims under the AWHA is contrary to the strong policy behind the AWHA and its liquidated damages provisions. We thus conclude that the superior court erred by not declaring void the settlements in this case, insofar as the settlements purported to compromise AWHA claims for unpaid overtime.
Ill
Finally, Kinney argues that if the settlements in this case are found to be void, then the employees who have received settlement payments from Kinney must tender back those payments before they may join the class action lawsuit here. Kinney’s argument principally relies upon our decision in
Thorstenson v. Arco Alaska, Inc.,
Petitioners’ argue in response that Thor-stenson does not control here. Petitioners’ note that they moved the superior court nоt for rescission of the settlement agreements, but for an order declaring the agreements void ab initio as violative of public policy. Thus, according to petitioners, the tender-back requiremеnt recognized in Thorstenson has no application on these facts. We agree with petitioners.
An action to have an agreement declared void as violative of a statute or of publiс policy is an entirely different action than one for rescission. Rescission is an equitable remedy that abrogates, annuls, or unmakes a contract entered into through mistake, fraud, or duress.
Dreiling v. Home State Life Ins. Co.,
The superior court order denying petitioners’ motion to declare void Kinney’s settlement аgreements with potential class members is VACATED. The superior court is instructed to enter an order declaring all settlements in this case void, insofar as they purport to compromise claims for unpaid overtime under the Alaska Wage and Hour Act.
Notes
. As we previously have explained:
The [AWHA] prescribes with comprehensive specificity the remedies available for its violation. An employee may recover his unpaid minimum wages or unpaid overtime compensation, and an identical sum as liquidated damages. Reasonable attorney’s fees are afforded. The Commissioner of Labor may obtain injunctive relief and criminal penalties may be imposed of not less than $100 nor more than $2,000, or imprisonment for not less than ten nor more than ninety days, or both. The comprehensiveness of this remedial system implies thаt the legislature did not intend to allow further unenumerated remedies.
Gore v. Schlumberger Ltd.,
. We have recognized that the AWHA is based on the Federal Labor Standards Act of 1938 (codified as amended at 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-219 (1988)).
E.g., Webster v. Bechtel, Inc.,
. We recognize that the FLSA permits nonpri-vate settlements, supеrvised by the Secretary of Labor or the district court.
See
29 U.S.C. § 216 (1988);
see also Lynn’s Food Stores,
. Of course, Kinney may offset damages ultimately awarded to particular employees by any amount that it has already paid to those employees in its attempt to settle their claims.
