Martin v. Sterling Associates, Inc.

72 So. 3d 411, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 948, 2011 WL 3477055
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 10, 2011
DocketNo. 46,461-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 72 So. 3d 411 (Martin v. Sterling Associates, 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
Martin v. Sterling Associates, Inc., 72 So. 3d 411, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 948, 2011 WL 3477055 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

MOORE, J.

| Sterling Associates Inc. and Sterling Pharmacy LLC (“Sterling”1) appeal a summary judgment that awarded a former employee, Amy Martin, a penalty wage of $45,000 and attorney fee of $6,500 under the Payment of Employees Law, La. R.S. 23:631-632. Finding genuine issues of material fact, we reverse and remand.

Factual Background

In February 2005, Sterling hired Ms. Martin2 as a pharmacist in its Ruston store. By 2009 she was normally working four days a week, 10 hours a day, at $50 an hour. She also received paid time off or “flextime” in a specified amount for hours worked.

On March 2, 2009, she gave written notice that she was quitting effective March 6. Her final pay stub, dated March 20, stated that the check was for 38.27 hours’ work, but did not include payment for 70.28 hours’ flextime recorded on the previous pay stub. On April 16, Ms. Martin sent Sterling’s president, CEO and registered agent, Scot Simmons, a written demand for payment, advising that she would take legal action if not paid. Simmons’s office assistant, Brandy Andrews, signed the certified return receipt on April 17, but Sterling sent no payment.

Ms. Martin then retained counsel who sent another letter to Simmons on August 12, 2009, demanding 90 days’ penalty wage and attorney fees under R.S. 23:632. This time, Sterling promptly sent via FedEx a check for |2the unpaid flextime, $3,514.00, together with a check for $500.00 to cover any “associated fees and costs.” A cover letter from Sterling’s attorney firmly stated that they owed nothing more, based on Ms. Martin’s “conduct and manner in departing” her employment. Ms. Martin cashed the wage check but not the fees and costs check.

Procedural History

Ms. Martin filed this suit on September 3, 2009, demanding penalty wages and attorney fees.

By answer, Sterling admitted that when she quit, Ms. Martin had accrued 70.28 hours’ flextime pursuant to company policy. However, it raised the legal defense that she did not comply with the statute in that Simmons himself had not received her demand letter (even though his secretary signed the certified return receipt on April 17). Sterling also raised various equitable defenses to payment: (1) Ms. Martin’s “abrupt departure and insufficient notice” required Sterling to incur additional costs to fill her time slots; (2) she violated her “employment obligations” by removing or improperly using Sterling’s proprietary business information, data, equipment or supplies; (3) she improperly charged Sterling for time she did not work, and had been disciplined for this; (4) she breached her “fiduciary employment duties” by disclosing confidential, proprietary information to Sterling’s competitors; and (5) she violated her professional duty to ensure quality patient care by suddenly leaving an area which is suffering a shortage of pharmacists.

|aMs. Martin filed this motion for summary judgment, arguing that Sterling failed to pay her flextime by the next [414]*414regular payday or 15 days after her final day of work, as required by R.S. 23:631; thus she was entitled to 90 days’ penalty wage of $45,000 plus attorney fees under R.S. 23:632. In support, she attached her own affidavit, that of her attorney (claiming a fee of $4,400), and copies of her pay stubs and her demand letter to Sterling. She also attached copies of Sterling’s answers to interrogatories, in which Sterling asserted that she stole from the pharmacy.

Sterling then filed its own motion for partial summary judgment, asking to dismiss the penalty wage claim. It attached Simmons’s affidavit stating that when he hired Ms. Martin, she was on five years’ probation from the Louisiana Pharmacy Board for stealing hydrocodone, a controlled narcotic, from a prior employer to give to her husband, but she failed to disclose these facts at the time; also, audits revealed that while she was working for Sterling, “noticeable amounts of hydro-codone went missing,” and he believed she stole from the pharmacy. The affidavit also asserted that Simmons had disciplined her for falsifying her time records (he attached a document labeled “Policy— Written Reprimands/Termination” signed by Ms. Martin on October 3, 2006); as a result, Sterling installed a biometric time clock, after which Ms. Martin’s time decreased six hours a week. Finally, Simmons believed that when Ms. Martin left, she misappropriated sensitive information (price lists, client information, internal accounting procedures, Sterling’s policies and procedures, and prospective client files) and conveyed them to her new employer, toySterling’s detriment.

Ms. Martin opposed Sterling’s motion, arguing that much of Simmons’s affidavit was unsupported speculation, notably his suspicions that she stole narcotics from Sterling and passed its sensitive information to her new employer. In support, she attached the affidavit of her immediate supervisor at Sterling, David Gann, who admitted that even though small amounts of hydrocodone could not be accounted for, nobody ever suspected Ms. Martin of theft. She also argued that the “Policy — Written Reprimands/Termination” was not a disciplinary action but, by its own terms, merely an acknowledgment of Sterling’s discipline policy.

Sterling filed two additional affidavits of Simmons in opposition to Ms. Martin’s motion. These reiterated his earlier assertions but supplied no documentation that Ms. Martin stole any hydrocodone from Sterling, passed confidential information to Sterling’s competitors, or any of his other allegations against her.

Action of the District Court

After a hearing in April 2010, the district court issued a 6y2-page written ruling. Quoting the applicable law of R.S. 23:631-632, the court noted that while penalty wage claims are subject to equitable defenses, Beard v. Summit Inst., 97-1784 (La.3/4/98), 707 So.2d 1233, an employer can avoid the penalty only with a “good-faith, non-arbitrary defense,” Carriere v. Pee Wee’s Equip. Co., 364 So.2d 555 (La.1978). The court then rejected each of Sterling’s defenses:

(1) the conditions of Ms. Martin’s probation were matters of public record and Simmons admitted he was aware of her probation |fistatus when he hired her, so lack of disclosure was not valid.
(2) the affidavit of Gann, the pharmacist in charge, denied that anyone at Sterling ever suspected Ms. Martin of stealing hydrocodone, so Simmons’s assertion that she might have done so was “after-the-fact-speculation.”
(3) the “Policy — Written Reprimands/Termination” document ap[415]*415peared to be Sterling’s blanket policy, not a reprimand of Ms. Martin; at any rate, Ms. Martin stayed on the job over three years after the alleged reprimand, during which time Sterling never charged her for alleged overcompensation; hence, the claim of time theft was not made in good faith.
(4) Ms. Martin’s at-will status under La. C.C. art. 2747 totally negated any claim that she failed to provide adequate notice of her voluntary termination and was liable for Sterling’s incidental expenses.
(5) Simmons admitted that Sterling’s computer system was incapable of tracking whether Ms. Martin stole any data, and without other proof, the allegation of theft of pricing, client lists and other sensitive information was baseless.

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Bluebook (online)
72 So. 3d 411, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 948, 2011 WL 3477055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-sterling-associates-inc-lactapp-2011.