Aрpellant (Sanchez) brought suit against appellee (Magafan), alleging that Magafan had violated the Wage Payment Act, D.C.Code § 32-1301
et seq.
(2001) (the Act), by failing to pay him wages Sanchez
I.
In reviewing the grant of summary judgment, we examine the record independently, employing the same standard of review as the trial judge. The focus of our inquiry is twofold: first, we look to see if the moving party has met its burden of proving that no material fact remains in dispute, and then we also must dеtermine whether the party opposing the motion has offered competent evidence admissible at trial showing that there is a genuine issue as to a material fact. The burden on the nonmoving party is that sufficient evidence supporting the claimed factual dispute be shown to require a jury or judge to resolve the parties’ differing versions of the truth at trial.
Hill v. White,
[Magafan] has met his initial burden, arguing principally that no actionable employment relationship existed between [Sanchez] and the individual [defendant. [Sanchez] has failed utterly to mаke any meaningful legal counterargument, making [instead] conclusory and legally unsupported allegations and leaving the Court to conclude that he has failed to meet his burden of establishing a genuine and triablе issue as to the existence and terms of an employment relationship with [Magafan].
This conclusion cannot be sustained. Attached to Sanchez’s opposition to the motion for summary judgment, in which he assertеd that he had “had a personal contract of employment with ... Magafan,” were record excerpts that included Sanchez’s answers to requests for admissions and interrogatories, as well as portions оf his deposition. In these materials he asserted essentially the following facts: In November 1999, Sanchez — experienced in restaurant operations — had been introduced to Magafan by the general manаger of a restaurant/bar called Au Pied de Cochon, owned by Magafan. Sanchez met with Magafan that month to discuss renovating “Georgetoons,” the property next to Au Pied de Cochon; Magafan wanted Sanchez’s help with renovating Georgetoons and managing it once it reopened under a new name. Magafan sought to defer payment of a salary to Sanchez until June 1, 2000, but agreed to pay him a lump sum on thаt date for the previous six months’ work at a rate of $2,400 per month. (Magafan explained that he needed to recover his renovation expenses before he could afford to pay Sanchez.) After June 2000, Magafan would begin paying him on a bimonthly basis at the same rate. Sanchez agreed.
because I could afford to, at that time, ... but I also ... told him that I didn’t want my existence there to have anything to do with that restaurant succeeding because [before renovation] ... it was a dive аnd no one ... in their right mind would have taken that business thinking they could have turned it over ... starting new again.
So [Magafan] and I came to the agreement that I would work for [Maga-fan,] because I didn’t want to have any agreement with the restaurant and its success or not. (Sanchez’s Deposition.)
In short, Sanchez wanted Magafan “to personally ... pay me,” and Magafan replied, “I will take care of you personally. Don’t worry .... Those [were] pretty close to his words” (Sanchez’s Deposition). Although Sanchez worked for Magafan until November 2000, some eleven months altogether, Magafan made only a single wage payment of $1,000 to him in August 2000.
In his brief, Magafan acknowledges this proffer of evidence but appears to argue that it was incompetent — or legally insufficient — to create triable issues of fact. See Br. of Appellee at 11 (“[T]here is no еvidence in the record, other than Mr. Sanchez’s testimony, that would establish an employment agreement between the parties.”) (emphasis added). This does not pass the straight-face test. For Sanchez’s testimony to be admissible and sufficient to carry the day at a trial, nothing in law would require it to be corroborated. 2 If a jury were to believe his version of the agreement, that alone would permit it to conclude that Magafan agreed to be “рersonally responsible for [Sanchez’s] salary” — that, in the words of the Act, Maga-fan was an “individual ... employing any person [i.e., Sanchez] in the District of Columbia,” § 32-1301(1) (defining “Employer”), and thus obligated to pay him “all wages earnеd” from the employment. Id. § 32-1302. The issue is one for a jury.
At oral argument, Magafan asked us to hold that Sanchez’s conceded failure to submit with his opposition to the summary judgment motion a statement under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 12 — I(k) enumerating disputed material faсts suffices, by itself, to sustain the trial judge’s ruling.
3
In his brief, however, Magafan did not defend the summary judgment on this ground, never mentioning Rule 12-I(k).
See, e.g., Ramos v. United States,
n.
Magafan .makes two additional contentions easily answered. First, the agreement, as described by Sanchez in his deposition was not too “vague” to be enforced. Although unwritten, it established the duties he was to perform — helping with renovation of “Georgetoons” and managing it when it reopened — and the terms of payment for his servicеs. If a jury finds that Sanchez contracted with Magafan personally, as it fairly may on the record presented so far, the remaining terms of the agreement will “provide[ ] a sufficient basis for determining whether a breaсh” — and correspondingly a violation of § 32-1302 — “has occurred and for identifying an appropriate remedy.”
Rosenthal v. National Produce Co.,
Reversed and remanded for trial.
Notes
. Magafan contended further that Sanchez had not been an employee at all, but rather an independent cоntractor.
, See, e.g., Standardized Civil Jury Instructions for the District of Columbia, No. 3.02 (2002) ("Indeed, the testimony of a single witness, which you believe to be the truth, is enough to prove any fact.”).
. The trial judge noted that Sanchez’s "Opposition also fail[ed] to include any statement of material facts in dispute as required by Superior Court Civil Procedure Rule 12-I(k),” but, as pointed out earlier, the basis for the grant of summary judgment was the broader conclusion that Sanchez had made only "conclu-sory and legally unsupported allegations” insufficient to create "a genuine and triable issue” as to his employment by Magafan personally.
. Sanchez has raised no issue requiring a рossible “piercing of the corporate veil.”
. Not until his reply brief has Sanchez argued in this court that the trial court erred also in rejecting his separate claim under the Minimum Wage Act, D.C.Code § 32-1001
et seq.
(2001).
See Bell Atlantiс-Washington, D.C., Inc. v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
