Chad Kiepe v. Chad Goslar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 17, 2021
Docket20-0765
StatusPublished

This text of Chad Kiepe v. Chad Goslar (Chad Kiepe v. Chad Goslar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Chad Kiepe v. Chad Goslar, (iowactapp 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 20-0765 Filed March 17, 2021

CHAD KIEPE, Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

vs.

CHAD GOSLAR, Defendant-Appellant/Cross-Appellee. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Crawford County, Duane E.

Hoffmeyer, Judge.

Parties cross-appeal from the district court judgment finding Chad Gosler

liable to Chad Kiepe for unpaid wages under the Wage Payment Collection Act.

AFFIRMED ON APPEAL; AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART ON

CROSS-APPEAL; AND REMANDED.

Maura Sailer of Reimer, Lohman, Reitz, Sailer & Ullrich, Denison, for

appellant.

Nathan Vos of Vos Law Firm, PLC, West Des Moines, for appellee.

Heard by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ. 2

AHLERS, Judge.

Chad Goslar appeals the district court judgment finding him liable to Chad

Kiepe for unpaid wages under the Wage Payment Collection Act. On appeal,

Goslar argues (1) the doctrine of judicial estoppel barred Kiepe from arguing

Goslar owed him for unpaid wages because Kiepe previously claimed in

bankruptcy proceedings that he was not owed any such unpaid wages; (2) the

district court’s finding that the parties agreed to an hourly component to Kiepe’s

employment with Goslar was not supported by substantial evidence; and (3) the

district court abused its discretion by awarding Kiepe attorney fees. On cross-

appeal, Kiepe argues the district court erred by improperly calculating liquidated

damages under Iowa Code section 91A.2(6) (2018) and by improperly concluding

Goslar modified the employment agreement rather than repudiating it.

I. Factual Background

The parties in this case have known each other for decades. Both owned

farms in the same community and had been friendly since high school. In 2015,

Kiepe decided to sell his farm. Goslar learned Kiepe was selling the farm and

contacted him to ask Kiepe if he would be interested in a job on his farm. Kiepe

expressed interest, so Kiepe and Gosler met to discuss terms in March 2015.

Kiepe’s son, Dylan, was present during the discussion.

The terms of the agreement produced by this meeting is the source of this

litigation. The parties do not dispute an agreement was reached that created an

employment relationship between Goslar and Kiepe in which Kiepe was to be

employed by Goslar, Goslar was to pay Kiepe bi-weekly, and the relationship could 3

be terminated at any time by either party. However, the number of months Kiepe

was to work each year and the payment terms of the contract are heavily disputed.

Kiepe and Dylan testified that Kiepe and Goslar reviewed a document

written on Hawkeye-branded letterhead that spelled out the terms of the

agreement. According to Kiepe, the agreement provided he was to work six

months of the year and be compensated for that six months via bi-weekly

payments throughout the entire year at a net amount of $1042.50. During the six

months Kiepe was not obligated to work, Kiepe asserts the agreement called for

Kiepe to essentially be open to requests to work from Goslar when Goslar needed

him and Kiepe was available. For any work performed during this six-month “off”

period, Kiepe was to be paid $14 per hour. Kiepe asserts he and Goslar both

signed the document at the meeting. Kiepe then took the document home and

showed it to his wife, Rachael, who testified to looking over the agreement. In his

own testimony, Goslar maintained that, while he did agree to pay the $1042.50 net

bi-weekly payments, he never agreed that Kiepe would receive an hourly rate and

never agreed that Kiepe did not have to work six months of the year.

Kiepe began working for Goslar in April 2015. He was paid his agreed bi-

weekly salary during the remainder of 2015. In January 2016, Kiepe presented

Goslar with a handwritten log of the hours he had worked during the “off” period

during 2015 and claimed a total owed on an hourly basis of $9627. Goslar

complained to Kiepe that the amount was high, but paid nonetheless. According

to Kiepe, Goslar then asked to see the written contract and the log tracking the

hours worked during 2015. Kiepe testified that he gave Goslar the documents. 4

Kiepe maintained the same practice as he worked throughout 2016 and

once again submitted a log of hours worked in 2016 to Goslar in January 2017.

This time, Goslar told Kiepe that he would not be paying Kiepe for any hourly

wages claimed. In spite of not being paid for his hourly work in the off months of

2016, Kiepe kept working for Goslar in 2017. Kiepe explained that he felt he had

no choice but to continue working for Goslar in order to provide for his family.

Kiepe quit on September 6, 2017. When he requested payment for the off-

period hours he worked during 2017, Goslar refused to pay. For Kiepe’s final bi-

weekly pay period in August, Goslar provided Kiepe with a check in the amount of

$415.18, which was less than the agreed upon amount of $1042.05. Kiepe refused

to cash the check because it was not for the agreed amount, and Goslar refused

to issue a new check.

II. Procedural History

Kiepe filed the petition in this litigation in December 2018, alleging Goslar

intentionally withheld wages for the hours Kiepe worked during the off-period

months in 2016 and 2017. Kiepe requested the following damages:

2016 Unpaid Hourly Wages: $15,983.50 2016 Liquidated Damages: $15,983.50 2017 Unpaid Hourly Wages: $13,821.50 2017 Unpaid Salary Wages: $ 1,280.001 2017 Liquidated Damages: $15,101.50 Total Damages: $62,170.00

Goslar attempted to defend himself, in part, by pointing to Kiepe’s

bankruptcy proceedings from earlier in 2018. Kiepe filed for bankruptcy in March

1 The bi-weekly check amount of $1042.05 previously mentioned was the net check after tax withholdings. The gross bi-weekly wages owed before tax withholding was $1280.00. 5

2018, and as part of his bankruptcy petition had included schedules stating he had

no “[c]laims against third parties” and no “[o]ther amounts someone owe[d]” him.

Kiepe explained in his testimony that at the time he filed the bankruptcy petition,

he did not believe that he had any claim against Goslar for the unpaid wages.

Following a bench trial, the district court determined an oral contract existed

between Kiepe and Goslar to pay Kiepe on an hourly basis for the off-season hours

he worked in 2016. The court awarded damages for unpaid wages of $15,983.50

for 2016.

As for 2017, the court found Goslar had disavowed any agreement to pay

on an hourly basis in January 2017 during the meeting in which Goslar refused to

pay Kiepe for hourly wages in 2016. As a result of that disavowal, the court

concluded there was no agreement to pay hourly wages during the off-season

months in 2017, so Kiepe was not entitled to any unpaid hourly wages for 2017.

The court further found Goslar inappropriately withheld Kiepe’s last salary check

from 2017, so awarded Kiepe damages for that year in the amount of $1280.00.

The court also awarded liquidated damages of $863.17, calculated as five

percent of the total unpaid wages for both years of $17,263.50. The court also

awarded Kiepe attorney fees and expenses of $33,568.38. This appeal followed.

III. Standards of Review

“[W]e . . .

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