O'Neal v. Intermedical Hospital

585 S.E.2d 526, 355 S.C. 499, 2003 S.C. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJune 2, 2003
Docket3646
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 585 S.E.2d 526 (O'Neal v. Intermedical Hospital) 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
O'Neal v. Intermedical Hospital, 585 S.E.2d 526, 355 S.C. 499, 2003 S.C. App. LEXIS 79 (S.C. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*502 HUFF, J.:

In this wage payment dispute, the trial court trebled the jury’s $1,350 award of damages to plaintiff Betty P. O’Neal and ordered defendant Intermedical Hospital of South Carolina (Intermedical) to pay O’Neal $8,100 in attorney’s fees. We affirm in part, and reverse in part.

FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

O’Neal became employed as a registered nurse for Intermedical on September 21, 1998. O’Neal understood that her base pay was to be $18.36 per hour with “shift differential” pay of an additional $1.50 per hour for night shifts beginning after 11 p.m., and an additional $5.00 per hour for weekend shifts. She further understood that she was required to work every other weekend.

At some point in her employment, O’Neal began complaining to' Teri Hooper, who was in charge of Intermedical’s payroll, that she was not receiving the proper pay. On March 31, 1999, O’Neal filed a claim against Intermedical with the Department of Labor for approximately $681.61 in wages owed. Specifically, O’Neal asserted that between January 9, 1999 and March 20, 1999, Intermedical improperly withheld wages for 28.18 regular hours at $18.36 per hour, shift differential pay for 17 weekend hours at $5.00 per hour, and shift differential pay for 52.82 night hours at $1.50 per hour.

After an investigation, the South Carolina Department of Labor determined Intermedical failed to comply with the provisions of South Carolina Code Ann. § 41-10-40(D) in that it failed to pay O’Neal $376.09 in wages in accordance with her regular pay schedule. 1 Nonetheless, the Department of Labor ultimately found that as of March 25, 1999, O’Neal had been paid all wages due to her and had in fact been overpaid by $110.77. In August of 1999, the Department of Labor as *503 sessed a $375.00 penalty against the hospital for the late payment of wages.

In April 1999, Virginia Herring, Intermedical’s nurse manager, created, posted, and distributed copies of the nurses’ working schedule for April 11 through May 9, 1999. Herring scheduled O’Neal to work a number of shifts, including a shift beginning at 11:00 p.m. on Friday, April 23, 1999. By letter dated April 13, 1999, O’Neal complained to Herring that her regular working schedule of two eight hours shifts and two twelve hour shifts had been changed to five eight hour shifts without prior notice. O’Neal also complained that in creating the schedule, Herring failed to consider a prior request for vacation and also improperly “split [her] weekend again” by scheduling her to work on Friday, April 23.

On April 14, Herring and O’Neal met to discuss the concerns O’Neal expressed in her April 13 letter; however, Herring and O’Neal dispute the content of the discussion. According to Herring, the parties did not discuss the 11:00 p.m. April 23 shift during their meeting and Herring did not say or do anything during the discussion to give O’Neal the impression she would remove her from the schedule for April 23. Herring further stated she informed O’Neal she could not guarantee the schedule O’Neal requested in her April 13 letter. O’Neal, on the other hand, asserted, although she remained on the master schedule for April 23, Herring removed her from Herring’s personal copy of the schedule and assured her she would “fix” it.

O’Neal told a number of her co-workers that, although her name still appeared on the posted work schedule for the 11:00 shift on April 23, she would not be working that night because she had discussed the matter with Herring and had arranged to have the night off. Based on information the other employees relayed to Herring about these comments, Herring approached O’Neal on the morning of April 23 and informed her she was still on the schedule and was expected to report to work that night. O’Neal responded that she would not report to work because Herring had already given her the night off and because Friday was a weekend night. According to Herring, she explained to O’Neal that the hospital’s shift/differential pay policy did not apply to scheduling and Saturday *504 and Sunday were weekend days for scheduling purposes. O’Neal argued that Friday night shifts constituted weekend work according to the hospital’s policy. Herring reiterated that she expected O’Neal to report to work that night and inquired whether O’Neal was refusing to do so. O’Neal confirmed that she would not report to work that night. Herring again told O’Neal she expected her to report to work that night. O’Neal replied, “You do what you gotta do and I’ll do what I gotta do.”

O’Neal did not, in fact, work on April 23. On April 28,1999, Herring called O’Neal in for a conference, at which time she informed O’Neal her employment with Intermedical was being terminated for insubordination, refusal to work a scheduled shift, and unexcused absence from work.

O’Neal instituted the instant action against Intermedical on June 1, 1999, alleging (1) wrongful discharge in retaliation for filing a claim with the Department of Labor; (2) nonpayment of wages earned during the employment relationship including weekend shift differentials, overtime work, night hours, and regular hours; (3) and nonpayment of 138.42 hours of accrued time off pay due upon her discharge from employment. O’Neal also sought an award of attorney’s fees and costs. Intermedical answered, denying O’Neal was entitled to any of the relief requested in her complaint. Intermedical also affirmatively asserted that it acted at all times in good faith and that O’Neal’s own conduct caused all adverse employment action taken against her.

Prior to trial, Intermedical sought and was granted leave to amend its pleading to include, as an additional affirmative defense, the assertion that O’Neal breached her duty of loyalty to the hospital. 2 Intermedical also moved for summary judgment on O’Neal’s claim for wrongful discharge. The trial court granted the motion and the trial proceeded on the actions for (1) nonpayment of wages due during the employment relationship and (2) nonpayment of wages due at the time of termination.

*505 At trial, O’Neal asserted the hospital shorted her 28.18 hours of regular pay at $18.36 an hour, 17 hours of weekend pay at $5.00 an hour, and 52.82 hours of night pay at $1.50 an hour, for a total due of $681.61. She also sought 138.42 hours of accrued time off at $18.36 an hour, for a total of $2,541.39. Intermedical took the position that although it failed to pay O’Neal all of her wages in a timely manner, the hospital had, by the time of her discharge, paid O’Neal all of the wages she was due during her employment at the hospital, including shift differential pay. Intermedical did not dispute that O’Neal had accrued 138.42 hours of time off for which she was not paid at the time of her discharge. The hospital sought to establish, however, that O’Neal was terminated for misconduct, in which case the hospital’s policy prohibits payment for accrued time off. In attempting to establish that O’Neal’s misconduct warranted her termination, Intermedical introduced evidence relating to her failure to work her scheduled shift on April 23, 1999, as well as other incidents such as “nodding off’ at work and being unfriendly to co-workers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
585 S.E.2d 526, 355 S.C. 499, 2003 S.C. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneal-v-intermedical-hospital-scctapp-2003.