Angello v. Labor Ready, Inc.

859 N.E.2d 480, 7 N.Y.3d 579, 825 N.Y.S.2d 674
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 859 N.E.2d 480 (Angello v. Labor Ready, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angello v. Labor Ready, Inc., 859 N.E.2d 480, 7 N.Y.3d 579, 825 N.Y.S.2d 674 (N.Y. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Chief Judge Kaye.

Labor Ready, Inc., a national temporary employment firm, and its subsidiary Labor Ready Northeast, Inc., operate nine branches in western New York. Labor Ready supplies daily workers who perform manual labor — for example, stocking shelves or doing yard work — for businesses and individual customers. In 2002 Labor Ready had 7,000 customers in New York State and employed approximately 18,000 unskilled and semiskilled laborers whose average salary was $6.41 per hour.

To compete with other temporary employment firms, Labor Ready pays its employees at the end of every work day — the *582 company’s slogans are “Work Today, Paid Today” and “Work Today, Cash Today.” Typically, the temporary employees coming to Labor Ready do not have bank accounts and are unable to sustain themselves financially on a weekly basis. Since many live in shelters or rooming houses where they have to pay daily, they choose to go to Labor Ready because they know that they will be paid at the end of the day.

Upon completion of a job, a worker brings a supervisor a work ticket and is offered the option of being paid by check or by cash voucher. Those who choose a payroll check each day can cash it wherever they wish, including at a Fleet Bank for no charge. Neighborhood check-cashing facilities in Buffalo charge a fee of about 50 cents to one dollar; however, a worker may prefer not to receive cash at these places where other people may loiter.

Employees who opt for a cash voucher — redeemable only at a Labor Ready branch — receive a paper that looks just like a payroll check, but the signature space is voided and the voucher contains a PIN number that the employee must use at a cash dispensing machine (CDM). The voucher lists the gross wages, withholdings and the Labor Ready fee for redeeming cash. Thus, the actual value of the voucher is the worker’s net wages minus the transaction fee. Labor Ready charges the worker one dollar plus any change that would have been part of the day’s wages. If, for example, a worker’s after-tax wages were $44.85, the voucher would be for $43, and upon accessing the CDM, the worker would receive $43 in cash.

Labor Ready makes multiple disclosures regarding the fees. The precise fee is on the voucher itself. Notice is also on pamphlets at Labor Ready branches, on a sign over each CDM and on the CDM screen during the transaction. Furthermore, during the transaction a worker may elect to return the voucher in exchange for a paycheck, which will be issued quickly.

The CDMs were first leased and operated by Labor Ready and in 2000 assigned to Labor Ready Properties, Inc., another subsidiary, which purchases maintenance services from unrelated companies, such as Brinks, and ultimately receives the transactional fees. In New York in 2002, on average 67% of the temporary employees received their wages by cash voucher. Labor Ready Properties generated $17,800 in revenue at Buffalo branches between 1999 and 2000 and $8.3 million in gross revenue nationally in 2000 from CDM fees charged to the temporary employees.

*583 Having received complaints, the State Department of Labor in 1999 investigated Labor Ready’s Buffalo branches for alleged unlawful deductions from wages for transportation and equipment costs and for deductions of CDM fees. In August 2002 the Department issued an amended order to comply with Labor Law article 6, directing payment to multiple named claimants. The parties settled the transportation and equipment cost deduction issues, with Labor Ready agreeing to pay more than $38,000 in restitution, interest and penalties. The parties were, however, unable to settle the issue concerning the CDM fees and stipulated that the amount of CDM fees generated at the Buffalo branches was approximately $17,800.

Upon review, the Industrial Board of Appeals (IBA) found no violation of Labor Law § 193 (1). Determining that the CDM charge against the employee’s wages was a separate transaction under Labor Law § 193 (2), and entirely voluntary, the IBA found no violation. The IBA added, however, that it did “not in any sense condone” Labor Ready’s practice of “extracting what is, relative to [the workers’] daily wages, an extravagant amount of money to cash their vouchers,” and repeated that the fees seemed “excessive” when compared with the minimal amount of daily pay these laborers customarily received.

The Department then commenced this CPLR article 78 proceeding to annul the IBA’s determination. Supreme Court transferred the proceeding to the Appellate Division, which reversed. Finding the matter one of statutory interpretation rather than agency deference, the Court concluded that the fee deduction and the payment of wages were inseparably connected and interrelated, and that the direct deduction of a fee for the service of providing cash wages was a violation of Labor Law § 193. We now affirm.

Analysis

As a threshold matter, we conclude that the Appellate Division applied the proper standard of review. Where, as here, the words are clear and the question simply involves proper application of a statute, there is little basis to rely on any special competence or expertise of the administrative agency (see Matter of Trump-Equitable Fifth Ave. Co. v Gliedman, 62 NY2d 539, 545 [1984]). We further agree with the Appellate Division that the IBA’s interpretation directly contravened the plain language of Labor Law § 193.

The purpose of Labor Law article 6 is “to strengthen and clarify the rights of employees to the payment of wages” (see *584 Truelove v Northeast Capital & Advisory, 95 NY2d 220, 223 [2000], citing Mem of Indus Commr, June 3, 1966, Bill Jacket, L 1966, ch 548, at 4; see also Gottlieb v Kenneth D. Laub & Co., 82 NY2d 457, 461 [1993]). Labor Law § 193 (1) (b), part of article 6, explicitly prohibits an employer from deducting monies from the wages of an employee except as required by law or as “expressly authorized in writing” by and “for the benefit of the employee.” The statute, moreover, specifies the deductions that an employee may authorize: “payments for insurance premiums, pension or health and welfare benefits, contributions to charitable organizations, payments for United States bonds, payments for dues or assessments to a labor organization, and similar payments for the benefit of the employee.”

A “deduction” literally is an act of taking away or subtraction. While under section 193 (1) (b) an employee may authorize an employer to take away or subtract wages, the clear language of this subdivision limits the types of deductions to those enumerated and to “similar payments.” Labor Ready’s fee for the service of providing a voucher for cash is a direct deduction of monies from wages. Even though the employee has the option of receiving a check, once the employee chooses the voucher the employer subtracts money from the amount received as wages.

Labor Ready does not argue that the deductions are similar payments to those the statute authorizes, for the money subtracted from the voucher is equivalent to service fees, not payments to a union or such organizations dealing with health, pensions or savings bonds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
859 N.E.2d 480, 7 N.Y.3d 579, 825 N.Y.S.2d 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angello-v-labor-ready-inc-ny-2006.