Lead Opinion
This appeal arises out of a suit initiated by Timothy J. McCabe, against his former employer, Medex, to recover unpaid wages under the Maryland Wage Payment Collection Law (the Act), Maryland Code (1991, 1999 Repl.Vol.) § 3-501 et seq. of the Labor and Employment Article.
We agree with the holding of the Court of Special Appeals that the incentive payments were wages earned by the employee and, thus, McCabe was entitled to recover as wages the incentive fees under the Act. We agree with McCabe, however, that he was entitled to have a jury determine whether there existed a bona fide dispute entitling him to treble damages.
I. Background
McCabe was employed as a sales representative for Medex, a medical supplies manufacturer, from November 18, 1998 through February 4, 2000. He earned a salary of $49,000.00 plus incentive fees that were paid out under a series of incentive compensation plans. McCabe received an employee manual that included the following provision with regard to the incentive plans: “Payment from all Company incentive compensation plans is conditional upon meeting targets and the participant being an employee at the end of the incentive plan (generally the fiscal year) and being employed at the time of actual payment.” (Emphasis added).
For Fiscal Year 2000, Medex adopted an Account Manager Sales Incentive Plan. Consistent with the employee handbook, the terms of the plan made payment of incentive fees conditional upon continued employment at the time of payment. The Fiscal Year ended on January 31, 2000. Four days later McCabe resigned from his employment with Medex.
McCabe filed suit in the District Court of Maryland, sitting in Baltimore County, demanding fees owed, determined by agreement between the parties to be $82,850.73, as well as treble damages, pre-judgment interest, costs, and attorneys’ fees. Medex prayed a jury trial and the case was transferred to the Circuit Court for Baltimore County. After denial of the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, they filed a Joint Motion to Bifurcate, requesting an initial ruling on the applicability of the Act. According to the motion, the case would proceed to trial only in the event the court found Medex in violation of the Act, and in the following jury trial, McCabe would seek additional recovery for attorneys’ fees and treble damages under § 3-507.1(b) of the Act.
McCabe noted a timely appeal to the Court of Special Appeals. The Court of Special Appeals reversed the circuit court. See McCabe v. Medex,
We granted certiorari, Medex v. McCabe,
II. Incentive Fees as “Wages” Under § 3-501(c)
Determination that the incentive fees at issue in this case are governed by the terms of the Act requires a preliminary finding that the incentive payments constitute “wages” under § 3-501 (c). The statutory definition of wage is very broad:
“(1) Wage’ means all compensation that is due to an employee for employment.
(2) Wage’ includes:
(i) a bonus;
(ii) a commission;
(iii) a fringe benefit; or
(iv) any other remuneration promised for service.”
§ 3-501(c). Commissions are clearly within the scope of the Act, and a cause may arise under the Act for an employer’s failure to pay commissions earned during employment yet not payable until after resignation. See Admiral Mortgage, Inc. v. Cooper,
“Under that law, the term ‘wage’ includes a commission. § 3—501(c)(2). Section 3-505, dealing with the payment of*36 wages on termination of employment, requires an employer to pay all wages due for work that the employee performed before the termination of employment, on or before the day on which the employee would have been paid the wages if the employment had not been terminated. Under that statute, if [the employee] was due a commission on the closing of a loan generated or developed by him, the commission should have been paid, at the latest, when the loan was closed. Section 3-507.1 gives an employee a civil cause of action to recover wages withheld in violation of § 3-505.”
Medex argues that the “incentive fees” were not simply commissions, but more akin to a bonus for continued employment. Even were this so, and evidence produced in the record seemed to belie this contention, § 3-501 (c)(2) expressly includes “bonus” as an example of compensation that may fall within the ambit of the Act. This is in contrast to other jurisdictions where bonuses are separated from wages into a category of fringe benefits. See e.g. Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 408.471 (2002) (listing “commission” within the definition of “wages,” and “bonus” within the definition of “fringe benefits”). In Maryland, not all bonuses constitute wages. See Whiting-Turner v. Fitzpatrick,
In Whiting-Turner, the employee argued that he was entitled to a bonus share of the employer’s profits. The employee was hired with a salary and an opportunity to join in profit sharing after two years of service. The employer offered to begin the profit sharing early, but the employee resigned prior to payment. As the Court found, the money sought was not compensation for the employee’s services, but merely a gratuity, revocable at any time before delivery. Id. at 306, 783 A.2d
Such a situation stands in marked contrast to the case sub judice. In this case, the incentive fees were related directly to sales made by the employees during a defined fiscal year. McCabe had performed all the work necessary to earn the fees, and Medex had registered the sales. In the terminology of the incentive plan itself, some of the incentive fees “begin to earn” at meeting 80% of a target goal, while another “[ijncentive begins” upon the sale of certain goods. The work of the employee may have preceded the payment date of the fees, but the fees were compensation for work performed, and, thus, wages under the Act.
III. “Wages Due” Under § 3-505
Having determined that the incentive fees constitute wages, we must determine whether they are owed to McCabe as “wages due.” Medex urges us to accept the reasoning of the Circuit Court that found that the wages could not become due unless the employee were employed at the date of payment. The language of both the employment contract and incentive plan states that, to be eligible for the incentive fees, the employee must still be employed at the date of payment. McCabe signed off on this language. Under common law contract principles, such an employment contract provision would have been sufficient to deny the employee the incentive fees. See Maryland Credit Fin. Corp. v. Hagerty,
We have often stated that the paramount rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the Legislature. See e.g, Derry v. State, 358 Md. 325, 335,
Section 3-505 states as follows:
“Each employer shall pay an employee or the authorized representative of an employee all wages due for work that the employee performed before the termination of employment, on or before the day on which the employee would*39 have been paid the wages if the employment had not been terminated.”
Restated simply, where an employee earns wages under the Act, the employer must pay them, regardless of the ensuing termination of the employee. In Whiting-Turner we looked at the language of § 3-505 and concluded that:
“what is due an employee who terminates employment with an employer are wages for work performed before termination, or all compensation due to the employee as a result of employment including any remuneration, other than salary, that is promised in exchange for the employee’s work.”
Contractual language between the parties cannot be used to eliminate the requirement and public policy that employees have a right to be compensated for their efforts. As the Court of Special Appeals noted, “a contract conflicting with public policy set forth in a statute is invalid to the extent of the conflict between the contract and that policy.” McCabe,
More recently, in Tuttle v. Geo. McQuesten Co.,
Likewise, in O'Brien v. Encotech Constr. Serv., Inc.,
“Such laws provide a floor, both as to amount and frequency, below which parties are precluded from contracting with respect to payment for labor services. Such laws by their very nature deny parties the right to contract for the payment of wages.... [I]t is their manifest public policy to limit freedom of contract with respect to the payment of wages in order to serve more important public purposes.”
Id. at 1049.
In accordance with the policy underlying the Maryland Act, an employee’s right to compensation vests when the employee does everything required to earn the wages. Medex argues that the contractual provision does not conflict with the right to payment of wages, because the wages never became due. According to Medex, no wage has been earned without the continuous employment required by the employment policy. Such reading leads to results that are both unreasonable and illogical.
First, if Medex’s plan is acceptable, then employees necessarily will be incapable of receiving some portion of the incentive fees for the sales they made. Had McCabe continued his employment until the payment date of March 81st, he would have been denied all incentive fees for sales made from February 1st until that date. A contract that necessitates the deprivation of some portion of the fees worked for by the employee contravenes the purpose of the Act.
Second, while Medex stated that the company paid all incentive fees to workers that it terminated, nothing in Medex’s reading of the statute and incentive plan necessitates this result. Under its reading, employees who leave involuntarily, perhaps because they were fired or died, would have failed to achieve the requirements of the incentive plan, and thus not have “wages due.” Some states have separate provisions for voluntary and involuntary departures by employees. See e.g. Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 408.475 (2002). The Maryland statute makes no such distinction, giving equal protection
Medex argues, in the alternative, that absent an enforceable requirement for McCabe to continue employment until the incentive is paid, the compensation plan represents an unenforceable gratuity. There is no enforceable contractual obligation created when an employer offers an employee a bonus for doing that which the employee is already required to do. See Johnson v. Schenley Distillers Corp.,
The record reflects that Medex represented these incentive fees as a portion of the employee’s “Total Target Cash Compensation.” According to Medex’s documents, the incentive fees were supplemental to the fixed salary as a combined measure of compensation. Successive annual incentive plans were in operation throughout the duration of McCabe’s employment. The right to future commissions formed part of the inducement for his initial and continuing employment.
IV. Bona Fide Dispute
Section 3-507.1 governs the civil remedy upon violation of the Act by an employer. It states, in relevant part, as follows:
“(b) Award.—(1) If, in an action under subsection (a) of this section, a court finds that an employer withheld the wage of an employee in violation of this subtitle and not as a result*43 of a bona fide dispute, the court may award the employee an amount not exceeding 3 times the wage, and reasonable counsel fees and other costs.”
§ 5-507.1.
The Court of Special Appeals held that the parties’ disagreement over the incentive payments constituted a bona fide dispute. McCabe,
We discussed the nature and definition of a “bona fide dispute” under this statute in Admiral Mortgage,
“All of the definitions articulated by the courts focus really on whether the party making or resisting the claim has a good faith basis for doing so, whether there is a legitimate dispute over the validity of the claim or the amount that is owing. The issue is not whether a party acted fraudulently; fraud is certainly inconsistent with the notion of ‘bona fide’ or ‘good faith,’ but it is not required to establish an absence of good faith. The question, simply, is whether there was sufficient evidence adduced to permit a trier of fact to determine that [the employer] did not act in good faith when it refused to pay commissions to [the employee] on the five loans that closed after he terminated his employment.”
Id. at 543,
Reviewing the facts of the case, we found evidence sufficient to question the employer’s credibility in withholding wages.
Before this Court, Medex argues that the withholding of wages was based solely upon a contractual provision it believed in good faith to be enforceable. While there is little in the record to dispute this claim, this is not the proper forum to make such an assessment.
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS VACATED. CASE REMANDED TO THAT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO REVERSE THE JUDGMENT OF
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all subsequent statutory references shall be to Maryland Code (1991, 1999 Repl.Vol.) § 3-501 et seq. of the Labor and Employment Article.
. According to Medex, his resignation was precipitated by a statement in December, 1999 by Medex’s president that the company was lor sale and that he could not assure the sales force that their jobs would be secure if Medex were sold. McCabe anticipatorily sought another job and left Medex for it.
. Section 3-507.1(b) reads as follows:
“Award and costs.-(1) If, in an action under subsection (a) of this section, a court finds that an employer withheld the wage of an employee in violation of this subtitle and not as a result of a bona fide dispute, the court may award the employee an amount not exceeding 3 times the wage, and reasonable counsel fees and other costs.”
. Other states have included express language in their wage payment laws to prevent statutory contravention by private agreement or contract of the employer and employee. See e.g., Cal. Lab.Code § 219(a) (2002) (“[N]o provision of this article can in any way be contravened or set aside by a private agreement, whether written, oral, or implied.”); W. Va.Code Ann. § 21-5-10 (2001) (“Provisions of law may not be waived by agreement"); N.Y. Labor Law § 191(2) (2002) (“No employ
. Furthermore, there are references to at least some compensation, $3,600 under a separate "Show Me The Money” compensation plan, which Medex did not pay over to McCabe until over a year after his resignation. The withholding of this money, agreed by both parties to be rightfully McCabe's, might itself be evidence of a lack of good faith on the part of Medex. See Baltimore Harbor Charters,
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion by
in which CATHELL, Judge, joins.
I do not agree with the conclusion drawn by the majority that the incentive payments at issue in this case were wages promised, and due, as part of the compensation for service of Timothy J. McCabe, the respondent. Consequently, I also do not agree either that the Maryland Wage Payment Collection Law, Maryland Code (1991, 1999 Repl.Vol.) § 3-501 et seq. of the Labor and Employment Article, is applicable or that any payments are due the respondent.
The case sub judice cannot be distinguished from our decision in The Whiting-Turner Contracting Co. v. Fitzpatrick,
I.
The initial determination of whether the incentive payments were a commission or a gratuity was a question of fact. Both the petitioner and the respondent argued in the trial court their respective positions as to how the disputed payments should be classified. In that court, it was undisputed that the respondent was paid a yearly salary of $49,000.00. Finding for the respondent, the majority states that payments made under the Incentive Plans were “commissions,” expressly disagreeing with the petitioner that the payments were “more akin to a bonus for continued employment.” See Medex v. McCabe, at 36. The majority goes on to state further that the evidence produced at trial “seemed to belie” the contention that the payments were akin to a bonus. Id. The opinion and order of the trial was to the contrary, however. It found that the respondent was not a “commissioned sales representative, nor paid a draw against commissions.”
Unless the determinations of the trial court are clearly erroneous, an appellate court will “not set aside the judgment of the trial court on the evidence ... and will give due regard to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.” Maryland Rule 8 131(c).
II.
Whether, or not, the payments are categorized as commissions or bonuses, the critical determination to be made is whether the petitioner promised the payments to the respondent in exchange for the respondent’s service as an employee. We interpreted the Maryland Wage Payment Collection Act in Whiting-Turner.
In Whiting-Turner, this Court held that § 3-505 is applicable only when wages have been promised as part of the compensation for the employment arrangement and all conditions agreed to in advance for earning those wages have been satisfied. We explained:
“[t]he conditions of employment are determined in advance of the employment. What, if anything beyond the basic salary, the employee will receive is a matter for discussion, consideration and agreement. If a bonus is to be made part of the wage package, it can be negotiated and included in what has been promised. Similarly, whether commissions are to be paid or what fringe benefits attach are a matter for agreement in advance of the employment or to become a part of the undertaking during the employment. Once a bonus, commission or fringe benefit has been promised as part of the compensation for service, the employee would be entitled to its enforcement as wages. Consequently, this*48 interpretation of § 3-501 (c), rather than rendering the language of the statute devoid of meaning, gives it a very definite one and creates a bright line test that is easily applied.”
Whiting-Turner,
The majority states “[w]here the payments are dependent upon conditions other than the employee’s efforts, they lie outside of the definition” of the statute. Medex, supra, at 36. This statement of our holding in Whiting-Turner is stated too broadly. Many, if not most, payments made by an employer to an employee in addition to periodic salary, will be dependent upon the employee’s efforts. This alone does not, and logically cannot, bring that additional payment within the scope of § 3—501(c).
Here, the payments under the Incentive Plan made to the respondent are attenuated by a clear qualification: the respondent’s continued employment. The petitioner’s duty to pay is clearly conditional. We noted in Whiting-Turner that the “conditions of employment are determined in advance of the employment.” Id. at 305,
Despite the trial court’s determination, as we have seen, under the majority’s analysis the incentive payments are classified as commissions. Pursuant to § 3-505, the commissions must have been promised as compensation as part of the employment arrangement. The facts are that the respondent was paid a salary of $49,000.00 for his service, the Account Manager Incentive Plan did not begin until a year after the respondent began his employment, and the petitioner was free to adopt or not adopt an Incentive Plan from time to time. Taken as a whole, these facts cast doubt upon the majority’s conclusion and its interpretation of the agreement reached by the parties. It is clear, however, as we noted in Whiting-Turner, had the respondent been employed with the petitioner when distributions under the Incentive Plan were made to the petitioner’s employees, the respondent clearly would have been entitled to the payment. Id. at 306-07,
Whether the incentive payments are construed as commissions or a bonus, § 3-505(c) requires “remuneration promised for service” to constitute wages. Where “such remuneration is not a part of the compensation package promised, it is merely a gift, a gratuity, revocable at any time before delivery.” Id. at 306,
I respectfully dissent. Judge CATHELL joins in the views herein expressed.
. Maryland Code (1991, 1999 Repl.Vol.) § 3-505 of tile Labor and Employment Article requires employers, upon the termination of an employee's employment, 1o pay that employee, or his or her authorized representative, "all wages due for work that the employee performed before the date of termination of employment, on or before the day on which the employee would have been paid the wages if the employment had not been terminated.”
. Maryland Rule 8-131 provides:
"(c) Action Tried Without a Jury. When an action has been tried without a jury, the appellate court will review the case on both the law and the evidence. It will not set aside the judgement of the trial court on the evidence unless clearly erroneous, and will give due*47 regard to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of witnesses.”
. Section 3-501(c) defines "wages” as follows:
"(c) Wage. — (1) 'Wage' means all compensation that is due to an employee for employment.
"(2) 'Wage' includes:
"(i) a bonus;
"(ii) a commission;
"(iii) a fringe benefit; or
"(iv) any other remuneration promised for service.”
