MEMORANDUM OPINION
In this dispute between an employer and employee over wages and benefits, the employee has alleged four causes of action: (i) breach of contract, (ii) quantum meruit, (iii) violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq., and (iv) violation of the Virginia Wage Payment Act, Va.Code § 40.1-29. Defendant’s threshold dismissal motion targets the last of these causes of action and presents the question, not yet addressed by the Supreme Court of Virginia, whether the Wage Payment Act creates a private cause of action.
I
Plaintiff Joseph G. Pallone was employed by defendant The Marshall Legacy Institute (“MLI”), a non-profit corporation organized under the laws of the District of Columbia, with its principal place of business currently in Alexandria, Virginia. At all relevant times, defendant Gordon Sullivan was the Chairman of MLI’s Board of Directors, defendant William G. Foster was MLI’s president and a member of its Board of Directors, and defendant Daniel H. Layton was MLI’s Vice President and Executive Director and a member of its Board of Directors.
Plaintiff, who was an at-will employee of defendant MLI, alleges that defendant MLI agreed to pay him a compensation package that included wages and certain fringe benefits, including paid vacation leave. During the course of his employment, plaintiff apparently upset the company’s management, and he was eventually terminated. Plaintiff does not allege that his termination was unlawful; instead, the sole relief he seeks is based on defendant MLI’s alleged failure (i) to pay plaintiffs wage for certain periods, (ii) to pay certain fringe benefits due to plaintiff, including vacation pay, (iii) to compensate plaintiff for his overtime work at the appropriate rate, and (iv) to reimburse plaintiff for expenses he incurred on behalf of MLI.
On May 25, 1999, plaintiff filed a motion for judgment in the Circuit Court for the City of Alexandria, alleging that defendant MLI breached plaintiffs employment contract, but plaintiff took a non-suit in the course of trial.
1
On March 14, 2000, plaintiff filed the instant action in the Circuit Court for Arlington County. Counts I, II, and IV allege state law claims for relief solely against defendant MLI. Count I is a claim of breach of contract, Count II is a claim of quantum meruit, and Count TV is
II
The Supreme Court of Virginia has not addressed the question whether the Wage Payment Act (“the Act”) provides a private cause of action. Because this is a question of statutory construction, analysis must begin with the plain language of the statute.
See Davis v. Tazewell Place Associates,
In general, whether a private cause of action may be found by implication in an otherwise silent statute is a matter of discerning the legislature’s intent in this regard.
5
Typically, courts undertaking this analysis consider whether the statute was created for the benéfit of the class of which plaintiff is a member, whether there is any legislative intent to
An examination of the Act discloses that it imposes a duty on employers and derivatively, creates a right in favor of employees and an administrative scheme to enforce that right. Significantly, the Act does not create the right to be paid for work performed; that right exists, if at all, by virtue of other legal theories, including the common law doctrines of contract and quantum meruit.
8
Simply put, the Act prescribes the
manner
in which an employer must pay certain employees. And in that regard, the Act provides an express, albeit limited, administrative remedy for employees aggrieved by an employer’s failure to comply with the Act’s requirements.
9
Specifically, the statute provides that an aggrieved employee may submit a claim for unpaid or untimely paid wages to the Commissioner of Labor and Industry (“the Commissioner”), and the Commissioner may in his discretion pursue those claims on behalf of the employee, through both the administrative process and, if need be, through court action.
See
Va.Code § 40.1-29(F).
10
In addition,
In short, the statute sets forth a scheme by which (i) the Commissioner may pursue the employee’s claim for unpaid or untimely paid wages through the administrative process or in court, (ii) the Commissioner may retain an attorney to do so, and (iii) the attorney so retained will be paid by the employer an amount that is equal to one-third of the amount recovered from the employer. This is the sole remedy provided by the Act, there is no language stating that the statutory remedy is not the exclusive remedy, and accordingly no further, private remedy may be implied.
See Giannoutsos,
Plaintiffs contrary reading of the statute is not persuasive. First, plaintiff claims that the statute must provide a private cause of action because the statute
For these reasons, defendant motion to dismiss plaintiffs claim based on the Wage Payment Act must be granted. This is not to say that an employee lacks a remedy when he or she is not paid in a timely way, or is not paid at all. Indeed, in this case, plaintiff still has his FLSA, breach of contract, and quantum meruit claims, each of which provides relief that is essentially similar to that plaintiff seeks under the Act.
An appropriate Order has entered.
Notes
. See Va.Code § 8.01-380.
. Defendant also suggests that Count IV is not necessary because plaintiffs claims "overlap.” This may be so, but that fact is not relevant on a motion to dismiss, because under the Federal Rules, plaintiff is free to state claims in the alternative. See Rule 8(e)(2), Fed.R.Civ.P.
. Va.Code § 40.1-29(A)(1) provides as follows:
All employers operating a business shall establish regular pay periods and rates of pay for employees except executive personnel. All such employers shall pay salaried employees at least once each month and employees paid on an hourly rate at least once every two weeks or twice in each month, except that a student who is currently enrolled in a work-study program or its equivalent administered by any secondary school, institution of higher education or trade school may be paid once each month if the institution so chooses. Upon termination of employment an employee shall be paid all wages or salaries due him for work performed prior thereto; such payment shall be made on or before the date on which he would have been paid for such work had his employment not been terminated.
. Va.Code § 40.1—29(B) provides as follows:
Payment of wages or salaries shall be (i) in lawful money of the United States, (ii) by check payable at face value upon demand in lawful money of the United States or (iii) by electronic automated fund transfer in lawful money of the United States into an account in the name of the employee at a financial institution designated by the employee.
Failure of the employee to designate a financial institution shall require payment of wages and salaries to be made in accordance with (i) or (ii) of this subsection.
.
See A & E Supply Co. v. Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
.
See, e.g., Cort v. Ash,
. This principle of statutory construction applies, with slightly less force, in the federal system as well.
See Transamerica Mortgage Advisors, Inc. v. Lewis,
.
See, e.g., Afify v. Simmons, 254
Va. 315, 317,
. The Act also gives the Commissioner of Labor and Industiy authority to police employers for compliance with the Act, and to impose civil penalties against violators. An employer who violates the Act may be “subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $1,000 for each violation,” Va.Code § 40.1-29(A)(2), and an employer who does so "willfully and with intent to defraud” may be subject to criminal penalties. Va.Code § 40.1-29(E). With respect to any civil penalties imposed, the Commissioner determines whether an employer has violated the statute and determines the appropriate penalty, within certain statutory constraints. See Va.Code § 40.1-29(A)(2) (stating that the Commissioner "shall consider the size of the business ... and the gravity of the violation” in determining the penalty, but limiting any civil penalty to $1,000 per violation). The Commissioner's decision with respect to civil penalties is final. See Va.Code § 40.1-29(A)(2).
.Va.Code § 40.1-29(F) provides as follows: The Commissioner may require a written complaint of the violation of this section and, with the written and signed consent of an employee, may institute proceedings on behalf of an employee to enforce compliance with this section, and to collect any moneys unlawfully withheld from such employee which shall be paid to the employee
. Worth repeating is the fact that an employee's underlying right to receive pay or wages derives not from the Act, but from the contract of employment, express or implied. The Act merely imposes a duty on employers to pay salaried and hourly employees periodically on specified bases. In so doing, the Act derivatively creates a right on the part of employees to receive pay or wages on the prescribed periodic bases, provided that the employee is otherwise entitled, presumably by contract, to receive the pay or wages.
. Plaintiff claims that the attorney's fees provision of the Wage Payment Act applies to private actions brought by aggrieved employees. The General Assembly’s intent, as reflected in tire language of the statute, suggests the opposite conclusion, namely that the attorney’s fees provision was established to finance litigation brought on behalf of the employee by the Commissioner.
. See Eslami v. Global One Communications, Inc., 1999 WL 51864, at * 2 (Va. Cir. Ct.1999) (holding that the Virginia Wage Claim Act does not provide a private cause of action)
. The ruling in
Teny v. Gordon’s Jewelry Co. of Va., Inc.,
is not contrary to the result reached here.
See
Plaintiff claims that several cases have been filed in this district and in state courts alleging private causes of action under the Wage Payment Act. Even assuming the truth of plaintiff's representation in this regard, none of the cases apparently addressed the question presented here.
.For example, one subsection states that ”[f]inal orders of the Commissioner, the general district courts or the circuit courts may be recorded, enforced and satisfied as orders or decrees of a circuit court upon certification of such orders by the Commissioner or the court as appropriate.” Va.Code § 40.1-29(H). Another subsection refers to the "entry of a final order of the Commissioner, [and the] entry of a judgment [by a court], against the employer.” Va.Code § 40.1-29(F).
. The DLI routinely inquires of aggrieved employees seeking administrative relief whether they have initiated their own lawsuit. Similarly, the DLLs internal guidelines recognize that an employee may in fact bring a private claim against their employer for unpaid wages. See Virginia Department of Labor and Industry Wage Payment Act Guidelines (“the Guidelines”).
. See Va.Code § 40.1-29(F).
