Ressler v. Jones Motor Co., Inc.

487 A.2d 424, 337 Pa. Super. 602, 27 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 140, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5425
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 18, 1985
Docket310
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 487 A.2d 424 (Ressler v. Jones Motor Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ressler v. Jones Motor Co., Inc., 487 A.2d 424, 337 Pa. Super. 602, 27 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 140, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5425 (Pa. 1985).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge:

Appellants Ressler and Hertwig brought suit on behalf of themselves and a class of non-union employees of appellee Jones Motor Company’s now defunct General Commodities Division (“GCD”), seeking recovery of sums withheld from their wages as “contributions” to an Earnings Participation Plan (“EPP” or “Plan”). The Plan placed salaries on a sliding scale varying as a function of the employer’s profit or loss ratio, and was instituted by Jones Motor during a period of significant financial hardship. The trial court found no violation of the Commonwealth’s Wage Payment and Collection Law (“WPCL”), 1 and granted summary judgment on behalf of Jones Motor upon a determination that the “contributions” to the Plan were wage reductions. Appellants’ motion for certification of a class action under Pa.R.C.P. 1707 was also denied without discussion. Because we find sufficient evidence in the record to establish that the sums withheld were “deductions” from pay, we reverse the trial court’s order granting summary judgment to the employer.

*605 Our survey of the statutes and case law of this Commonwealth uncovers no definition of the term “deduction” as set forth in the WPCL beyond a group of specified “authorized deductions.” [See infra at 606-609]. Therefore, a clear recitation of the events giving rise to this controversy is in order to establish precisely what type of salary adjustment we are here deeming to be a “deduction” from pay.

In 1979, the GCD began to suffer serious financial losses, which continued through 1980 and into 1981. In a desperate effort to reduce these losses, the EPP was instituted, which placed salaries on a sliding scale varying according to the GCD’s ratio of total expenses to total revenues. According to the Plan proposal, when this ratio equals 95%, employees would draw their regular salaries. If the ratio is 96% or above, employees would “contribute” to the Plan based upon a figure related to the ratio and their wage brackets, with the amount withheld varying at each expense ratio. The proposal indicates further that if the expense ratio falls below 100%, “a lump sum adjustment payment will be made to plan participants.” Even where the expense ratio falls to 94% or below, all employees, regardless of wage bracket, receive the same percentage bonus, calculated at each expense ratio.

Prior to implementation of the Plan, Jones Motor’s management, including the named appellants, met with employees and explained the EPP, promoting it in terms of the company’s ultimate survival. A key to the Plan’s effectiveness was obtaining 100% participation by all employees, union and non-union alike. Approximately 97% of the GCD employees signed authorization forms agreeing to participate and stating they would be legally bound to “make contributions or receive benefits under the Plan.” The EPP was implemented on June 14, 1981, at which time the expense ratio was 112%, resulting in smaller paychecks for all employees.

After approximately three months, a Delaware Teamster’s Union local filed a grievance claiming the Plan violated their collective bargaining agreement. Jones Motor *606 agreed to discontinue the Plan for its union employees, and paid back the “contributions” they had already made.

Jones Motor continued the EPP with its non-union employees, but it proved to be an insufficient cost-cutting mechanism, and the GCD ceased operations on October 29, 1982. Appellants brought suit in the Court of Common Pleas of Lebanon County on behalf of themselves and a group of non-union employees for recovery of their “contributions,” claiming they were withheld in violation of the WPCL. The amended complaint alleged breach of contract under the terms of the EPP agreement, and appellants further sought certification of a class action.

The trial judge determined the EPP to be “nothing more than a program of wage reductions (or increases should the company reenter a period of prosperity) dressed up in a fancy name to be more acceptable to the employees; ...” and found no provisions “which, by any interpretation, would infer that the Defendant’s employees could expect a return of the reduction which they realized in their paychecks.” Opinion of July 26, 1983 at ll. 2 The court granted Jones Motor’s motion for summary judgment, and denied appellants’ motion for certification of a class action without discussion. Upon careful examination of the record, however, we believe the “contributions” withheld by Jones Motor from its employees’ paychecks were wage deductions, thus raising a genuine issue of material fact as to conformity with the law of this Commonwealth.

Viewing the EPP in its entirety, it is clear to us that the sums withheld from employees’ paychecks were deductions from earnings rather than reductions in salary. As noted previously, the “contributions” or “benefits” were to be *607 calculated at each expense ratio level. There appears to be no fixed or easily ascertainable sum which would be withheld or paid out, and we find such indefinite, unpredictable amounts to more closely resemble deductions than reductions as held by the trial court. Furthermore, Jones Motor’s President Sheehy, in a letter dated September 25, 1981, stated: “In order to avoid a possible strike action while we attempt to resolve the E.P.P. issue, I am temporarily suspending the payroll deductions for E.P.P. contributions from union personnel. The non-union personnel will be required to continue the participation.” [Emphasis added].

Finally, and perhaps most persuasive, we find a letter dated July 22, 1982, from the Director of the Department of Labor and Industry’s Bureau of Labor Standards. Responding to a request by Jones Motor’s Vice President and General Counsel for clarification of a claim by a former terminal manager, the director states:

[The employee] advised us that $85.80 was deducted from his earned wages each pay period for a total of 20 pay periods from June 20 through October 30, 1981; a total of $1716.
Our claimant maintains he signed no authorization for the deduction in question which is identified on his pay slip as EPP contribution.
Unless Jones Motor can produce an authorization signed by [the employee] to permit this deduction we must consider said deduction illegal under the Wage Payment and Collection Law.

This letter is significant at this point in our analysis because it is the only indication we find in the record that the contributions were identified on employees’ pay slips as an amount presumably subtracted from gross pay. Common sense dictates that salary reductions would not be so designated. This supports a conclusion that we are here dealing with deductions, much like any other type of deduction which would be noted on a pay slip. We must therefore turn to the WPCL to determine whether the amounts in question were lawfully withheld from employees’ wages.

*608 The Wage Payment and Collection Law states, in pertinent part:

260.3 Regular payday

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Bluebook (online)
487 A.2d 424, 337 Pa. Super. 602, 27 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 140, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 5425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ressler-v-jones-motor-co-inc-pa-1985.