LaCoursiere v. CamWest Development, Inc.

289 P.3d 683, 172 Wash. App. 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 3, 2012
DocketNo. 67034-4-I
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 289 P.3d 683 (LaCoursiere v. CamWest Development, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaCoursiere v. CamWest Development, Inc., 289 P.3d 683, 172 Wash. App. 142 (Wash. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Spearman, A.C.J.

¶1 — To be considered compensation protected by the provisions of Washington’s antikickback statute, chapter 49.52 RCW (the Wage Rebate Act or WRA), a bonus that is discretionary must be given regularly to create an implied contract and reliance, otherwise it is a mere gratuity. Additionally, the Wage Rebate Act is violated only where an employer collects a “rebate” of wages already paid.

¶2 Here, the discretionary bonuses provided to Shaun LaCoursiere by his employer CamWest Development were not given regularly, did not create an implied contract that they would be paid every year, and LaCoursiere could not have relied upon them, given he knew CamWest had no obligation to provide them. Moreover, even if the bonuses amount to wages, the record here shows there was no rebate to CamWest and that instead, CamWest paid LaCoursiere precisely as he agreed to be paid under the employment contract. As such, the trial court properly dismissed LaCoursiere’s WRA claim, and we affirm that order.

¶3 We reverse, however, the court’s order denying Cam-West’s motion for attorney fees. A trial court may award attorney fees for claims other than breach of contract when the contract is central to the existence of the claims, i.e., when the dispute actually arose from the agreements. Here, LaCoursiere’s claim arose out of the parties’ employment agreement and that agreement was central to the dispute.

[145]*145¶4 Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.

FACTS

¶5 CamWest Development Inc. is in the business of building new homes in King and Snohomish Counties. Eric Campbell is president of CamWest. Shaun LaCoursiere started working at CamWest in May 2003. On January 1, 2005, CamWest promoted LaCoursiere to the position of project manager, entering into a written employment agreement with LaCoursiere.

¶6 Under the employment agreement, LaCoursiere agreed to participate in a discretionary bonus structure (the LLC Bonus Structure) associated with membership in CamWest Managers LLC (LLC). The LLC is a separate entity from CamWest. Its primary purposes are to loan money to Cam-West for real estate investment and to provide a return to its members. The LLC’s members consist primarily of CamWest management employees who have chosen to acquire membership interests in the LLC.

¶7 The LLC Bonus Structure involves the payment of a discretionary bonus to Cam West’s project managers, the amount of which is based upon employee performance and CamWest’s construction profits. If CamWest exercises its discretion and issues a bonus to a project manager, the bonus is calculated and paid as follows:

• The Project Manager’s performance for the year is rated on the basis of several criteria, and the Project Manager is assigned a score based upon that performance rating;
• CamWest credits the Project Manager with a percentage of the net profits generated by projects managed by the Project Manager that year;
• CamWest credits a percentage of the same net profits to a “pool” of funds;
• The Project Manager is credited with a pro rata share of the “Project Manager pool,” based upon his performance rating for the year;
[146]*146• CamWest distributes the resulting bonus amount to the Project Manager, with 44% of the bonus issued as a direct payment to the employee;
• The remaining 56% of the bonus is contributed to the Project Manager’s capital account in the LLC.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) 102-03, 160.

¶8 Once a project manager makes his first capital contribution to the LLC, he acquires a membership interest in the LLC. That interest is subject to a vesting schedule set forth in the LLC Agreement. A new member’s membership interest in the LLC is 20 percent vested upon the member’s first capital contribution. After the first anniversary of membership in the LLC, the individual’s membership interest is 40 percent vested and thereafter vests an additional 20 percent annually. The above-described LLC Bonus Structure is voluntary, and some CamWest employees opt out of the LLC Bonus Structure, choosing to instead receive a pure percentage-of-salary bonus. Participation in the LLC Bonus Structure and membership in the LLC are not requirements of employment with CamWest.

¶9 When he was promoted, LaCoursiere reviewed and voluntarily signed the employment agreement. He testified that he did not need more time to review it, and that he did not sign it under threat of any kind. LaCoursiere received bonuses for three years: 2005, 2006, and 2007. For 2005, LaCoursiere’s total bonus amount was $121,021.00. Of that amount, CamWest issued $49,961.80 (41.28 percent) as a contribution on behalf of LaCoursiere to the LLC. CamWest paid LaCoursiere directly in the amount of $30,255.25 (the remaining 58.72 percent of the bonus minus tax withholdings).

¶10 For 2006, LaCoursiere’s total bonus amount was $98,690.00. Of that amount, CamWest issued $40,348.96 (40.88 percent) as a capital contribution on behalf of LaCoursiere to the LLC. CamWest paid LaCoursiere directly in the amount of $24,672.50 (the remaining 59.12 percent of the bonus minus tax withholdings).

[147]*147¶11 For 2007, LaCoursiere’s total bonus amount dropped to $31,745.00. Of that amount, CamWest issued $16,710.36 (52.64 percent) as a contribution on behalf of LaCoursiere to the LLC. CamWest paid LaCoursiere directly in the amount of $4,444.30 (the remaining 47.36 percent of the bonus minus tax withholdings).

¶12 Due to the economic downturn, CamWest did not pay any discretionary bonuses for work performed in 2008. LaCoursiere does not claim that he was entitled to any bonus for that year. In fact, he acknowledges that he was never told by CamWest management that he would “receive a bonus every year.” CP at 56.

¶13 Because of reduced business in 2008, CamWest’s need for project managers declined. Rather than immediately laying off the Project Managers, CamWest chose to transfer the affected employees to “Senior Laborer” positions, providing them with the option to leave if they did not want to accept the change in position. CamWest initiated two rounds of transfers and layoffs of project managers, ultimately reducing the number of project managers from approximately 27 to 12. LaCoursiere was one of the project managers affected by the second round. LaCoursiere chose to accept the transfer to senior laborer, rather than ending his employment with CamWest. According to CamWest, following his transfer to senior laborer, LaCoursiere demonstrated a pattern of poor attendance and punctuality. CamWest fired LaCoursiere on March 6, 2009.

¶14 According to the LLC Agreement, when a member of the LLC leaves CamWest, that individual must sell his membership interest to Eric Campbell, CamWest, or the remaining LLC members. For purposes of determining the individual’s vested membership interest in the LLC, “the purchase and sale [of the membership interest] shall be deemed to have occurred upon the date of the event triggering the purchase and sale.” CP at 196. “[I]n the event of the termination of a Member’s employment with CamWest [the triggering event] shall be the date of such termination.” [148]*148Id. On the date he was fired, LaCoursiere’s membership interest in the LLC was 60 percent vested.

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Bluebook (online)
289 P.3d 683, 172 Wash. App. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacoursiere-v-camwest-development-inc-washctapp-2012.