JANIS S. MCLEAN, Plаintiff and Appellant, v. THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA et al., Defendants and Respondents.
No. S221554
Supreme Court of California
Aug. 18, 2016.
1 Cal.5th 615
COUNSEL
Kershaw, Cutter & Ratinoff, William A. Kershaw, Lyle W. Cook, Stuart C. Talley and Ian J. Barlow for Plaintiff and Appellant.
Barbara A. Jones and Laurie McCann for AARP as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Appellant.
The Law Offices of Brooks Ellison and Patrick J. Whalen for California Attorneys, Administrative Law Judges and Hearing Officers in State Employment as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Appellant.
David A. Sanders; Messing Adam & Jasmine, Gregg McLean Adam and Jonathan Yank for California Correctional Peace Officers’ Association as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Susan Slager, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Alicia Fowler and Chris Knudsen, Assistant Attorneys General, Fiel D. Tigno, William T. Darden and Aimee Feinberg, Deputy Attorneys General, for Defendants and Respondents.
OPINION
KRUGER, J.—Under Labor Code sections 202 and 203, an employer must make prompt payment of the final wages owed to an employee who “quits” his or her employment, or else pay statutory penalties. In this case, plaintiff Janis S. McLean, a retired deputy attorney general, filed suit against the State of California on behalf of herself and a class of former state employees who, having resigned or retired, did not receive their final wages within the time periods set out in the statute. We consider two questions arising from McLean‘s suit. First, do sections 202 and 203 apply when employees retire?
We conclude, as the Court of Appeal held, that Labor Codе sections 202 and 203 (section 202 and section 203) apply when employees retire from their employment. We also conclude that McLean‘s decision to name the State of California as a defendant rather than the Department of Justice is not a basis for dismissing her suit. We accordingly affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
I.
The prompt payment provisions of the Labor Code impose certain timing requirements on the payment of final wages to employees who are discharged (
As originally enacted, the prompt payment provisions applied only to private employers. (See
In 2002, the Legislature again amended the statute to add special rules governing the prompt payment of accrued leave to state employees upon
McLean retired from her employment in the state Department of Justice on November 16, 2010, and separated from state service on the same date.2 Following her retirement, she filed suit under section 203 against the State of California, which she identified as her “employer,” and the State Controller‘s Office, as “the State agency with responsibility for timely paying wages to California State employees.” Her complaint alleged, on information and belief, that “when an employee resigns or retires from their employment with the State of California, a common payroll system governed by the State Controller is responsible for disbursing any and all wages owed to that employee.”
McLean raised both individual and class claims. In support of her individual claim, McLean alleged that defendants violated section 202 by failing to pay her final wages on her last day of employment or within 72 hours after her last day; failing to deposit wages for her unused leave and vacation time to her supplemental retirement plans within 45 days of the last day of her employment, despite her request that they do sо; and failing to transfer to her before February 1, 2011, wages that she had elected to defer to the 2011 tax year. In support of her class claim, McLean alleged that defendants systematically failed to make “full and prompt payment of wages as required by California Labor Code § 202” to the other members of a proposed class consisting of “employees employed by Defendant in the State of California who resigned or retired from their employment in November or December of 2010 or January, February or March of 2011.”
The Court of Appeal reversed in relevant part, holding that sections 202 and 203 apply when an employee “quits to retire.” The Court of Appeal also rejected the state‘s alternative argument that the trial court had properly sustained the demurrer because McLean had erroneously sued the State of California, rather than the Department of Justice.3 The Court of Appeal concluded that the “State of California clearly was McLean‘s employer” for purposes of the Labor Code‘s prompt payment obligations, reasoning that McLean was a civil service employee, and ” ‘[t]he civil service includes every officer and employee of the State except as otherwise provided in th[e] Constitution.’ ” (
We granted review.
II.
As noted, Labor Code section 202 requires prompt payment of wages to “an employee not having a written contract for a definite period [who] quits his or her employment.” (
“We apply the usual rules of statutory interpretation to the Labor Code, beginning with and focusing on the text as the best indicator of legislative purpose. [Citation.] ‘[I]n light of the remedial nature of the legislative enactments authorizing the regulation of wages, hours and working conditions for the protection and benefit of employees, the statutory provisions are to be liberally construed with an eye to promoting such protection.’ ” (Brinker Restaurant Corp. v. Superior Court (2012) 53 Cal.4th 1004, 1026-1027 [139 Cal.Rptr.3d 315, 273 P.3d 513] (Brinker).)
The Labor Code does not define the term “quit,” and the regulations of the Department of Industrial Relations, Division of Labor Standards Enforcement—the state agency charged with interpreting and enforcing wage and hour laws (see
This understanding of the meaning of the word “quit” accords with the role section 202 plays in the statutory scheme. The Legislature‘s apparent purpose in enacting the prompt payment provisions was to ensure that employers make prompt payment of final wages upon the termination of the employment of a person who does not have a contract for a definite period—whether the employment is terminated involuntarily, by discharge (
The state‘s contrary argument relies heavily on the 2002 amendments to the prompt payment provisions, which added special rules concerning paying out accrued leave wages to employees separating from state service.4 As amended, section 202, subdivision (a) (section 202(a)) sets out a default prompt payment rule that requires prompt payment of all wages due to an employee “at the time of quitting,” while each of the new provisions, subdivisions (b) and (c), sets out an exception governing the payment of accrued leave wages to state employees. Subdivision (b) provides, as relevant here, that, “[n]otwithstanding any оther provision of law, the state employer shall be deemed to have made an immediate payment of wages under this section” for, among other things, accrued leave wages “to which the employee is otherwise entitled due to a disability retirement” if the employee chooses to have the funds deposited into a retirement account in accordance with specified procedures. Similarly, subdivision (c) provides that, “[n]otwithstanding any other provision of law, . . . a state employee [who] quits, retires, or disability retires from his or her employment with the state” may authorize her employer to defer paying out her accrued leave wages until the following calendar year.
The state argues that section 202, subdivision (c)‘s specification that its special deferred-payment rule applies “when a state employee quits, retires, or disability retires” demonstrates that the Legislature understood that a “retirement” is not the same thing as a “quit“; otherwise the references to retirements in section 202, subdivision (c) would be superfluous. The separate references to quitting and retiring, the state contends, reflect the Legislature‘s recognition that in the context of public employment, resignation, retirement, and disability retirement are different types of separation, each governed by a
Ultimately, the inclusion of the separate reference to retirement in section 202, subdivision (c) tends to support, rather than undermine, the conclusion that retirees fall into the broader category of employees who have “quit” their employment within the meaning of the general prompt payment rule of section 202(a) and section 203. The legislative history of section 202, subdivisions (b) and (c) confirms this conclusion. The history shows that the Legislature enacted those provisions not to cabin the reach of sections 202(a) and 203, but rather to rectify certain unintended consequences of the 2000 legislation that had extended section 202(a)‘s prompt payment requirement to state employees. An enrolled bill report for the 2002 legislation amending section 202 indicates that subdivisions (b) and (c) were added to address two problems. (Dept. of Personnel Admin., Enrolled Bill Rep. on Assem. Bill No. 1684 (2001-2002 Reg. Sess.) May 15, 2002, p. 3 (Assembly Bill No. 1684).) First, before the 2000 amendment extending prompt payment protections to state employees, the state had allowed employees to “rollover into a subsequent tax year lump sum payments for accrued leave due the employee upon separation.” (Ibid.) This policy was helpful to those state employees whose income tax rate was likely to be lower in the year following their departure, as is typically the case when an employeе retires. By expanding the Labor Code‘s prompt payment protections to cover state employees thereby requiring the state employer to tender payment to state employees at or near the time they “quit” or were “discharged“—the 2000 amendments had effectively precluded this
The state also notes that the statute presently in force includes various provisions setting out modified prompt payment obligations for persons holding specific types of employment, including temporary workers, motion picture industry employees, oil industry workers, and agricultural employees, in which short-term employment is common or logistical concerns otherwise render infeasible immediate payment upon termination of employment. (
Practical considerations reinforce our conclusion that the application of the prompt payment provisions do not turn on the nature of the employee‘s post-employment plans. Although an employer may often know in advance that an employee plans to retire from employment altogether, that will not always be the case. Indeed, an employee‘s intentions at the time of quitting may be unclear even to the employee herself. It is unlikely that the Legislature would have intended the obligation to makе prompt payment of final wages turn on matters that may be unknown, and perhaps unknowable, to the employer at the time payment is due.
Finally, interpreting sections 202 and 203 to cover retiring employees is consistent with the purposes of the prompt payment provisions. (See Brinker, supra, 53 Cal.4th at pp. 1026-1027 [wage and hour laws enacted for the protection of workers ” ‘are to be liberally construed with an eye to promoting such protection’ “].) As we explained in Smith, “California has long regarded the timely payment of employee wage claims as indispensable to the public welfare: ‘It has long been recognized that wages are not ordinary debts, that they may be preferred over other claims, and that, because of the economic position of the average worker and, in particular, his dependence on wages for the necessities of life for himself and his family, it is essential to the public welfare that he receive his pay when it is due.’ ” (Smith, supra, 39 Cal.4th at p. 82, quoting In re Trombley (1948) 31 Cal.2d 801, 809-810 [193 P.2d 734]; see also Kerr‘s Catering Service v. Department of Industrial Relations (1962) 57 Cal.2d 319, 326 [19 Cal.Rptr. 492, 369 P.2d 20] [“California courts have recognized the public policy in favor of full and prompt payment of wages due an employee.“].) Section 203 implements “this fundamental public policy regarding prompt wage payment.” (Smith, at p. 82, citing Smith v. Rae-Venter Law Group (2002) 29 Cal.4th 345, 360 [127 Cal.Rptr.2d 516, 58 P.3d 367].)
The statutory policy favoring prompt payment of wages applies to employees who retire, as well as those who quit for other reasons. It may be, as the
III.
The state argues in the alternative that the trial court properly sustained the demurrer without leave to amend because McLean did not sue the proper defendant. Under section 203, the proper defendant in a suit alleging the willful failure to make prompt payment of wages is the plaintiff‘s “employer.” The state argues that in the context of state employment, the term “employer” refers solely to the specific department or agency for which the employee worked—in McLean‘s case, the Department of Justice—and not the State of California as a whole.
We begin, as we must, by considering the text of the statute. (See, e.g., Martinez v. Combs (2010) 49 Cal.4th 35, 51 [109 Cal.Rptr.3d 514, 231 P.3d 259].) As the state acknowledges, its proposed interpretаtion of the term “employer” does not depend on any explicit statutory instruction. The Labor Code provides no generally applicable definition of the term and the prompt payment provisions contain none, whether in the context of state employment or otherwise. And it appears that no previous state or federal case has addressed the meaning of “employer” for the purposes of section 203.7
The state‘s argument rests primarily on inferences drawn from section 202, subdivisions (b) and (c), which refer to situations in which “the state
McLean, by contrast, interprets the term “state employer” in section 202 to mean “the State as an employer.” Her proposed interpretation rests primarily on Labor Code section 220 (section 220), which provides that, while certain provisions of the code (not including §§ 202 and 203) “do not apply to the payment of wages of employees directly employed by the State of California,” “all other employment“—with the exception of “the payment of wages of employees directly employed by any county, incorporated city, or town or other municipal corporation“—is “subject to these provisions.” McLean contends that by making sections 202 and 203 applicable to “all other employment“—including the payment of wages of “employees directly employed by the State of California“—section 220 effectively defines “employer,” in the context of state employment, to mean the State of California, thus making the state as a whole liable for prompt payment violations under section 203. The Court of Appeal apparently agreed with this argument, concluding that to accept the state‘s contrary interpretation would be “to find the words do not mean what they say.”
We agree with the Court of Appeal that the combined references to “state employer” and the employee‘s “appointing power” cannot bear the
In the absence of explicit statutory direction, we begin from the premise that in the context of public employment, as in other contexts, an individual may have multiple employers, both direct and indirect. In this case, one might say that McLean‘s employer was the Department of Justice and also that her employer was the State of California; the Department of Justice is, after all, a department of the state government. (
The authorities on which the state relies indicate that responsibility for ensuring compliance with sections 201 and 202 will generally rest with an individual‘s employing agency. But it is not inconceivable that other state entities may bear responsibility for an alleged prompt payment violation. As the state acknowledges, “the Legislature, the Governor, the Department of Finanсe, the California Department of Human Resources, and the Controller all play a role in the overall administration of certain aspects of the state civil service.” (Cf. Professional Engineers in California Government v. Schwarzenegger (2010) 50 Cal.4th 989, 1010–1041 [116 Cal.Rptr.3d 480, 239 P.3d 1186] [discussing roles of various government entities in imposing furloughs for state employees]; Tirapelle v. Davis (1993) 20 Cal.App.4th 1317, 1320-1341 [26 Cal.Rptr.2d 666] [discussing roles of various government entities in implementing salary reductions for state employees].) As particularly relevant here, the State Controller‘s Office is charged by statute with operating a “uniform state payroll system” for state employees, which it administers based on information supplied to it by individual departments and agencies. (
At this stage we cannot, as the state asks, categorically conclude that a state employee who alleges wrongdoing on the part of the State Controller‘s Office, rather than focusing solely on the conduct of the department or agency
IV.
The judgment of the Court of Appeal is affirmed.
Cantil-Sakauye, C. J., Werdegar, J., Chin, J., Corrigan, J., Liu, J., and Cuéllar, J., concurred.
