Goodwyn v. Shadowstone Media, Inc.

757 S.E.2d 560, 408 S.C. 93, 22 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 993, 2014 WL 1491629, 2014 S.C. App. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedApril 16, 2014
DocketAppellate Case No. 2012-212705; No. 5220
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 757 S.E.2d 560 (Goodwyn v. Shadowstone Media, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodwyn v. Shadowstone Media, Inc., 757 S.E.2d 560, 408 S.C. 93, 22 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 993, 2014 WL 1491629, 2014 S.C. App. LEXIS 78 (S.C. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FEW, C.J.

Martha Goodwyn brought suit against her former employer Robert Pachaly and his company Shadowstone Media, Inc., alleging violations of the Payment of Wages Act, S.C.Code [95]*95Ann. §§ 41-10-10 to -110 (Supp.2013). After the jury returned a verdict for Goodwyn, the trial court granted her motion for treble damages and attorney’s fees under subsection 41-10-80(C) of the Act. We reverse this decision because there was a bona fide dispute as to Goodwyn’s entitlement to unpaid wages.

I. Facts and Procedural History

In April 2009, Goodwyn accepted a sales position with Shadowstone Media selling advertising space in a coupon book that was to be distributed to the public. After working five months, Goodwyn received a total of $1,298 from seven paychecks paid bi-monthly from May 15 to July 31, 2009. She also earned a total of $404 in commissions from ten sales. However, Goodwyn sent Pachaly a resignation letter in September 2009, claiming she was “forced to resign” because she “ha[d] not been getting paid per [their] agreement at the time of [her] hire.” In the letter, she requested back pay in the amount of $8,694. Goodwyn subsequently brought suit against Shadowstone Media and Pachaly for breach of contract and violation of the Payment of Wages Act.

At trial, Goodwyn testified that during her interview for the sales position, she told Pachaly she “had two kids that were in daycare” and needed to earn at least $300 per week to cover the cost of daycare. According to Goodwyn, Pachaly agreed to pay her a salary of $300 a week plus commissions earned on sales. Although Pachaly recalled Goodwyn mentioning that “she had to clear [$300] on a weekly basis,” he denied offering to pay her a fixed amount per week. Instead, Pachaly testified, “Initially, all the people that were working sales were placed on a commission basis,” and Goodwyn “had the same as everybody else in the beginning.” Pachaly relied on the terms of a “hiring letter,” which he claimed he “handed” to Goodwyn in the office soon after she began working and also mailed to her. The letter stated her compensation was “based on commissions earned from the [sale] of the [advertising space in the coupon books].” Goodwyn denied ever receiving the hiring letter.

According to Pachaly, this commission-based pay arrangement changed after Goodwyn approached him sometime in [96]*96May asking for a “draw” of $800 against her commissions. Pachaly told her he “could probably work something out” for $250. Pachaly planned for Goodwyn to sell each advertising space in the coupon book for $295 per month, with the goal being to sign up businesses for twelve months of advertising space. He stated, “[Biased on ... the price we were charging [for advertising space], if she was closing at that rate, that wouldn’t have been a problem” for her to draw against her commissions.

Goodwyn, however, was unable to sell the advertising space at the full monthly rate of $295, and instead negotiated sales at reduced rates. She testified she was unaware, at least in the beginning of her employment, that her commissions would be reduced as a result of selling advertising space at a discounted rate. Instead, she believed Pachaly would pay her a full commission of $1,000 per sale at the time she made the sale. Although Goodwyn admitted that around “the end of May, beginning of June,” Pachaly told her “he would have to adjust the commissions” due to the reduced sales rates, she claimed they “never talked about a number.”

Relying on the terms of the hiring letter, Pachaly disputed Goodwyn’s entitlement to full commissions at the time of the sale. Although the letter provided that the standard commission for selling twelve months of advertising space was $1,000, the letter also stated that if “an ad rate is discounted, then the commissions will be reduced accordingly.” Consistent with the terms of the hiring letter, Goodwyn’s commissions were reduced based on the price at which she sold the advertising space. This reduction in commissions was documented by an exhibit submitted by Pachaly at trial, entitled “Calculation of Commissions Earned,” which Goodwyn claimed she first saw after the lawsuit commenced. Pachaly also argued the hiring letter refuted Goodwyn’s claim that she was to receive a commission at the time of the sale. According to the letter, employees were to be “paid upon the collection by the company of the ad costs from the accounts,” which typically occurred “monthly over a 12 month period.” Thus, employees were to receive “one twelfth of the total commission ... each month upon collection of that month’s bill from the advertiser.”

[97]*97Pachaly never printed any coupon books and “thr[e]w in the towel on ... the [coupon] book idea” in August 2009. In September, Goodwyn sent Pachaly a letter that stated she was “forced to resign” because she had been paid “less than $1,500 despite [Pachaly] agreeing to pay [her] a $300 per week draw plus commission.” Although the letter stated Pachaly “began paying [her] something close to the $300/week at first (only $250/week),” she calculated Pachaly owed her $8,694 in back pay — $6,600 in salary, $3,500 in commissions, “less the $1406 [he] already paid [her].” Pachaly testified the amount Goodwyn claimed to be owed “seemed a little preposterous” because Shadowstone Media collected a total of only “$1200 to $1400 off [her] sales.”

During Goodwyn’s testimony, she clarified several inconsistencies between the amount she claimed in the resignation letter and the amount she claimed at trial. First, she testified she “misspoke” in using the word “draw*’ in the letter, as it did not correctly represent “what she and [Pachaly] agreed to.” She explained that while “a draw is when you get money up front for future sales,” Pachaly agreed to pay her $300 per week in salary on top of any commissions she earned. Second, Goodwyn testified she “guesstimated” in arriving at the commission figure stated in the letter — $3,500—because she had never seen “a scale or anything telling [her] exactly what [her] commission was.” Goodwyn claimed she later calculated the correct amount of commissions owed to her-$4,850-by using the Calculation of Commissions Earned document submitted by Pachaly. She reached this total by adding the figures from the column “Full Commission,” which showed the amount Goodwyn would have earned had each client paid for a year of advertising space. Pachaly asserted the correct amount of commissions due was $404, which is the total from the “Commissions Earned” column. Goodwyn testified she was entitled to full commissions for all her sales because “it was by no fault of [her] own that [the clients] didn’t pay the rest” of the monthly payments due under their year-long contracts. She explained that had Pachaly printed the coupon books, the clients would have paid the remainder of the monthly amounts because they “were extremely excited about the book.”

The jury awarded Goodwyn $3,444 in damages under the Payment of Wages Act, but nothing for breach of contract. [98]*98Goodwyn made a post-trial motion pursuant to subsection 41-10 — 80(C) for treble damages and attorney’s fees. The trial court granted the motion, finding “there was not a sufficiently close question of law or fact that would discourage the award of [treble] damages” and attorney’s fees.1

II. Existence of a Bona Fide Dispute

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Bluebook (online)
757 S.E.2d 560, 408 S.C. 93, 22 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 993, 2014 WL 1491629, 2014 S.C. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwyn-v-shadowstone-media-inc-scctapp-2014.