Lowery v. Cenla Beverage, Inc.

333 So. 2d 435, 22 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 1130, 1976 La. App. LEXIS 4856
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1976
DocketNo. 5446
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 333 So. 2d 435 (Lowery v. Cenla Beverage, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowery v. Cenla Beverage, Inc., 333 So. 2d 435, 22 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 1130, 1976 La. App. LEXIS 4856 (La. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinions

BERTRAND, Judge.

Cenia Beverage, Inc., appeals from a judgment awarding to its former employee, Andrew J. Lowery, penalties and attorney’s fees under LSA-R.S. 23:632 for failure to. pay timely his earned wages after demand. The trial court awarded $1,860.00 in penalties and $750.00 for attorney’s fees. We affirm.

Lowery worked for Cenia as a truck driver from May 14, 1974 through May 17, 1974, and May 20, 1974 through May 22, 1974. His salary was $20.00 a day.

On May 22, 1974, Lowery drove a company-owned truck into the gate at Cenla’s plant in Alexandria, causing damage in the amount of $30.00. Lowery reported this accident to a superior. Cenia contends that on the same day Lowery damaged a building owned by Central Bottling Corporation in Jennings, Louisiana, by driving his truck into it. The extent of damage to the building was in the amount of $244.00. Although Lowery disputed this contention at trial, testimony showed that a Mr. Chal-ette had reported to the president of Cenia that Lowery had driven his truck into the building.

On May 23, 1974, Lowery’s wife telephoned Cenla’s office to report that her husband was ill. The following day, Mrs. Lowery appeared at Cenla’s office asking for her husband’s check. Because it was Cenla’s policy to pay its employees one week following the week in which the wages were due, the check received by Mrs. Lowery covered the pay period of May 14 through May 17. Mrs. Lowery neither demanded nor received Mr. Lowery’s wages for May 20 through May 22.

On May 31, 1974 Lowery telephoned Mr. Leo P. Dobard, Jr., the president and manager of Cenia. Lowery demanded his remaining pay in the amount of $60.00 for the time period extending from May 20 through May 22, 1974. Mr. Dobard refused payment, and stated that he must [437]*437first determine the extent of damages to the gate in Alexandria and the building in Jennings before any payment would be forthcoming. It was Mr. Dobard’s position that the amount necessary to repair these damages would be taken from the pay due Lowery. Mr. Dobard told Lowery that he would be willing to give him a written acknowledgment that he had worked those three (3) days and earned wages of $60.00. Lowery refused Mr. Dobard’s offer.

After Mr. Dobard’s refusal, Lowery contacted the Louisiana Department of Labor on June 5, 1974, and filed a labor claim for $60.00 in wages. On June 10, 1974, Mrs. Melba Guillot, an employee of the Labor Department, contacted Mr. Dobard regarding Lowery’s claim. Again Mr. Dobard refused to pay Lowery’s wages and told Mrs. Guillot of his intention to withhold payment of the wages until the property damages were determined.

Lowery filed this suit on September 3, 1974, claiming his earned wages (he mistakenly claimed $70.00 rather than the $60.00 actually owed), as well as $1,750.00 as wages for a ninety (90) day period due from May 14, 1974 plus reasonable attorney’s fees under the provisions of LSA-R. S. 23:632. In answer, Cenia reconvened for damages in the amount of $214.00 allegedly owed for the repair of its gate and the warehouse at Central Bottling Corporation. Cenia thereby implied that it credited Lowery with the $60.00 wages due him.

Lowery denied knowledge of any damage to Central Bottling Company’s premises. Lowery also filed a third party demand against Fireman’s Fund and American Insurance Company, alleging that if he was found culpable for those damages, the insurance company, as liability insurer of the truck driven by him, would be liable to him because he was insured under the policy. Fireman’s Fund thereafter paid to Cenia the sum of $244.00. Apparently, this payment by Fireman’s Fund to Cenia was triggered by Cenla’s payment of the same amount to Central Bottling Company for the damage to its building.

After Cenia received this payment from Fireman’s Fund, its attorney wrote to Lowery’s attorney to inform him of this payment, and admitted to owing and offered to pay to Lowery $30.00. Lowery refused to dismiss the suit against Cenia but did dismiss his third party demand against Fireman’s Fund.

Cenia amended its answer to show that it had been reimbursed by its insurer for the damages paid to Central Bottling Company and to claim that Lowery was now entitled to $30.00 in wages after the $30.00 expenditure for the repair of Cenla’s fence had been subtracted from the $60.00 in wages due. Cenia deposited the $30.00 in the trial court’s registry as a legal tender of the amount allegedly due.

The trial court awarded Cenia, plaintiff in reconvention, the sum of $30.00 for the damage to its gate. Lowery did not appeal from this judgment.

LSA-R.S. 23:631 reads as follows:

“It shall be the duty of every person, employing laborers or other employees of any kind whatever when discharging any laborer or other employee, or when any such laborer or employee has resigned, with twenty-four hours after such discharge or resignation, to pay the laborer or employee the amount due under the terms of employment whether the employment is by the day, week or month, upon demand being made upon the employer by the discharged or resigned laborer or employee at the place where the employee or laborer is usually paid.”

Cenia alleges that the trial court erred in granting judgment to Mr. Lowery because:

1. Lowery did not make sufficient demand for his wages; and
2. Cenia withheld Lowery’s wages in good faith and the reasons for doing so constituted equitable defenses.

[438]*438I. SUFFICIENT DEMAND

At trial, Lowery admitted that there was no demand made for the second week’s wages by his wife on May 24, 1974. However, the trial court found that Lowery made sufficient demand when he telephoned Mr. Dobard on May 31, 1974 to apprise him of his termination as an employee of Cenia and to ask for the wages due for May 20 through May 22, 1974. The trial court did not hold, as Cenia contends, that the demand by Mrs. Guillot on June 10, 1974 would have constituted sufficient demand. Instead, it was held that the demand by Mrs. Guillot merely strengthened Lowery’s position that his demand was in earnest.

Cenia urges that under the language of the statute Lowery should have personally come to Cenla’s place of business to make his demand. It cites Mitchell v. Fein, 281 So.2d 463 (4th Cir. La.App.1973), for the proposition that telephoned demands are not sufficient under the statute. However, the facts in Mitchell are different from those in the case now before us. In Mitchell, the telephone call by the plaintiff was to the person who formerly distributed checks to the defendant’s employees. In the present case, Lowery telephoned Mr. Dobard, the president and manager of Cen-ia. The court in Mitchell said:

“A telephone call to the person who formerly distributed checks is thus not in itself compliance with the statutory requirement. Perhaps being advised, upon telephoning, by a person in authority that the wages will not be paid would relieve one of the need of further demand (and readiness to accept delivery) at the place of usual payment as an act known beforehand to be futile.”

Lowery, in the instant case, did telephone “a person in authority” to whom he made his demand. It is the opinion of this court that such a demand is sufficient. (See also Jones v. LeBlanc, 263 So.2d 119 (1st Cir.

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Bluebook (online)
333 So. 2d 435, 22 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 1130, 1976 La. App. LEXIS 4856, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowery-v-cenla-beverage-inc-lactapp-1976.