Shawn C. Jeanes and Wayne Mains resigned as insurance agents and regional directors for ALLIED Life Insurance Company, an Iowa insurer. Jeanes and Mains then filed this diversity action, alleging they were forced to resign after discovering that ALLIED failed to tell them of an improper increase in the fees charged to universal life policyholders. A trial to the district court resulted in a judgment awarding Jeanes and Mains damages totaling more than $1.3 million on their claims of breach of contract and violation of the Iowa Wage Payment Collection Law. ALLIED appeals. The district court’s decision is reported at
Jeanes v. Allied Life Ins. Co.,
Iowa law governs this diversity case. Under Iowa law, when a breach of contract claim has been tried to the court, the court’s findings are binding if supported by substantial evidence; our review is then limited to correcting errors of law.
See
Iowa R.App.P. 6.4, 6.14(6)(a) (Supp.2002);
Wolf v. DaCom, Inc.,
I. The Breach of Contract Claims.
In separate agency contracts, ALLIED appointed Jeanes and Mains as California-based independent agents authorized to solicit applications for ALLIED policies in their respective territories, and as regional directors (formerly called managing general agents) authorized to supervise and encourage life insurance sales by assigned ALLIED Property/Casualty agents. Je-anes and Mains received commissions on premiums paid on ALLIED policies issued through them, and override commissions on premiums paid on ALLIED policies issued through their assigned agents. At issue in this lawsuit is paragraph 3(b) of the agency contracts, which provided:
Good Faith: Both parties will, at all times, act in good faith when dealing with our policyholders and each other. You will not make any actions that suggest or encourage any policyholder to surrender or lapse any policy or to cease premium payments. Any such activity gives us [ALLIED] the right to terminate this Agreement for cause.
In January 1994, ALLIED decided to increase by two percent the cost-of-insurance (COI) fees charged on outstanding universal life policies. After the increase was implemented in September, ALLIED charged COI fees at the new rate as each policy reached its anniversary date. The increased fee was not discernible on the policies’ annual statements, and ALLIED did not otherwise disclose the increase to its universal life policyholders. During a February 1995 meeting, ALLIED informed regional directors of the fee increase but did not explain the reason for the increase. In response to concerns that the fee increase might be invalid, ALLIED discontinued collecting it in April 1995 and eventually rolled back the additional charges by increasing the interest paid to policyholders on the affected policies.
In June 1997, Jeanes and Mains were told by another ALLIED regional director that the two percent COI fee increase had been imposed to maximize executive bonuses. After contacting an attorney handling a class action lawsuit against another life insurer, they resigned as ALLIED agents and regional directors on January 9, 1998, expressing concern that “unresolved issues” and “Senior Management’s standards for operation” could jeopardize their integrity as agents and their relationships with clients and other agents. This lawsuit followed. Following a bench trial, the district court ruled in favor of Jeanes and Mains on their breach of contract claims and awarded damages of $1,164,663.25 on those claims.
Our task on appeal is simplified by noting at the outset what is not at issue. First, the district court determined that ALLIED breached the universal life policies by imposing the two percent COI fee increase because the policies provide that COI fees will be determined “based on [ALLIED’s] expectations as to future mortality experience.” The court did not find that the increases were motivated by a desire to increase executive bonuses, as Jeanes and Mains argued, but it did find that the reasons put forward by ALLIED trial witnesses were not limited to the company’s expectations as to mortality experience, as the policies required. These findings and conclusions are not challenged by ALLIED on appeal.
Second, the district court concluded that ALLIED breached the express good faith provision in paragraph 3(b) of the agency contracts:
In this case, good faith would certainly include an obligation on the behalf of Allied to make changes in the cost of insurance known to its policyholders. *942 Good faith would also encompass an obligation by' Allied to be honest with its Regional Directors so that they are able to be honest with the company’s clientele. It is clear from the record now before the Court that Allied did not raise the COI for mor[t]ality experience. It is also clear that the true reason for the increase, be it to maximize executive bonuses or to cover new legislative requirements, was not revealed and was not made known to policyholders and to Messrs. Jeanes and Mains.
However, to prevail on their breach of contract claims under Iowa law, Jeanes and Mains must prove they suffered damages as a result of ALLIED’s breach.
Molo Oil Co. v. River City Ford Truck Sales, Inc.,
Under Iowa law, a constructive discharge occurs “when the employer deliberately makes an employee’s working conditions so intolerable that the employee is forced into an involuntary resignation.”
First Judicial Dist. Dept. of Corr. Servs. v. Iowa Civil Rights Comm’n,
In this case, Jeanes and Mains did not resign to avoid imminent improper termination. ALLIED did not want them to resign, its breach of the good faith covenant was not intended to force them to resign, and the fact that Jeanes and Mains would give up lucrative agency relationships was not a foreseeable consequence of ALLIED’s decision to conceal from them the reasons for the rescinded COI fee in *943 crease. “[D]amages are not recoverable for injury that is too remote from the conduct of the defendant constituting his breach of duty.” 5 Corbin on Contracts § 997 (1964). In these circumstances, the district court’s use of constructive discharge to justify the award of post-termination damages for a prior unrelated breach of the agency contracts was an unwarranted extension of Iowa law.
Moreover, even if the Iowa courts would apply the doctrine of constructive discharge in this novel manner, we conclude that Jeanes and Mains failed to prove they were constructively discharged. The test for constructive discharge is rigorous. “The conditions giving rise to the resignation must be sufficiently extraordinary and egregious to overcome the normal motivation of a competent, diligent, and reasonable employee to remain on the job to earn a livelihood and to serve his or her employer.”
Haberer v. Woodbury County,
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s award of damages for ALLIED’s breach of paragraph 3(b) of the agency contracts.
III. The Wage Payment Collection Law Claims.
Shortly after Jeanes and Mains terminated their agency contracts and filed this action, ALLIED ceased commission payments. Jeanes and Mains then amended their complaint to allege that the commissions were clearly due and therefore the refusal to pay them violated the Iowa Wage Payment Collection Law, Iowa Code Ch. 91 A. ALLIED paid Jeanes and Mains the withheld amounts a few weeks before trial. The district court concluded that ALLIED had violated the Wage Payment Collection Law and awarded Jeanes and Mains liquidated damages of $156,056.36, prejudgment interest, court costs, and attorney fees attributable to those claims. 1
The Iowa Wage Payment Collection Law is designed “to facilitate the collection of wages owed to employees.”
*944
Phipps v. IASD Health Servs. Corp., 558
N.W.2d 198, 201 (Iowa 1997). On appeal, ALLIED argues, as it did in the district court, that Chapter 91A does not apply because Jeanes and Mains were independent contractors, not employees. Applying the common law test of
Miller v. Component Homes, Inc.,
If the common law test for distinguishing employees from independent contractors were controlling, we would have great difficulty affirming the district court’s conclusion that these independent insurance agents were employees of ALLIED.
See Birchem v. Knights of Columbus,
Employee also includes a commission salesperson who takes orders or performs services on behalf of a principal and who is paid on the basis of commissions but does not include persons who purchase for their own account for resale.
1985 Iowa Acts Ch. 119. The district court downplayed the significance of this relatively recent amendment by stating, “While the statute includes commissioned salespersons, it does not include under its ambit independent contractors.”
ALLIED next argues that plaintiffs’ claims for liquidated damages for commissions earned prior to February 12, 1999 are barred by the two-year limitations period applicable to Wage Payment Collection Law claims, because Jeanes and Mains did not amend their complaint to include these claims until February 12, 2001. This contention is foreclosed by
Audus v. Sabre Communications Corp.,
Finally, ALLIED argues the district court erred in awarding prejudgment interest on the Wage Payment Collection Law claims for the two years prior to the assertion of those claims on February 12, 2001. We agree. The applicable Iowa
*945
statute provides: “Interest shall be allowed on all money due on judgments and decrees of courts at the rate of ten percent per year.... The interest shall accrue from the date of commencement of the action.” Iowa Code § 535.3(1). Here, the Wage Payment Collection Law claims do not relate back to the filing of the original complaint because they concern post-litigation conduct of ALLIED that was unrelated to ALLIED’s pre-termination conduct upon which the initial claims were based.
Compare Beeck v. Aquaslide ‘N’ Dive Corp.,
The judgment of the district court is reversed insofar as it (i) awards damages on count one of plaintiffs’ complaint of $570,977.99 for Jeanes and $593,685.26 for Mains; and (ii) awards prejudgment interest as to count seven of plaintiffs’ complaint prior to February 12, 2001. The judgment is otherwise affirmed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Iowa Wage Payment Collection Law applies to persons "employed in this state.” Iowa Code § 91A.2(3). We have some doubt whether the Act applies to wages and commissions owed by an Iowa employer to persons whose services were performed outside the State, such as Jeanes and Mains.
See Holiday Inns Franchising, Inc. v. Branstad,
