Russell v. US Bank National Association

265 P.3d 1, 246 Or. App. 74, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1389
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 12, 2011
Docket090811372; A144289
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 265 P.3d 1 (Russell v. US Bank National Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. US Bank National Association, 265 P.3d 1, 246 Or. App. 74, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1389 (Or. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

*76 HADLOCK, J.

Plaintiff appeals a judgment dismissing her claim for 30 days of statutory penalty wages against defendant, her former employer. The trial court dismissed the complaint on the ground that plaintiff had not filed it within the applicable statutory limitation period. On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred when it ruled that the three-year limitation period started running on the first day that plaintiff could have sued for penalty wages, i.e., the day immediately following the one on which her earned wages were due and defendant did not pay them. According to plaintiff, her claim for 30 days of statutory penalty wages did not accrue until the day on which all of those penalty wages became due, i.e., the thirtieth day after defendant allegedly should have paid plaintiff her earned wages. We agree with plaintiff and, accordingly, reverse and remand.

In this appeal from the dismissal of plaintiffs complaint, we review for legal error, “viewing the allegations, as well as all reasonable inferences, in the light most favorable to plaintiff, the nonmoving party.” Mason v. Mt. St. Joseph, Inc., 226 Or App 392, 394, 203 P3d 329, rev dismissed, 347 Or 349 (2009). Plaintiff alleged that she gave defendant at least 48 hours’ notice of her intention to quit her employment, and she claimed that defendant was, therefore, required to pay her all of her earned wages on the last day she worked: August 31, 2001. 1 Plaintiff also alleged that defendant did not pay her earned wages until December 11, 2001. Consequently, plaintiff claimed, she was entitled to $4,152 in statutory penalty wages, representing 30 days of full-time employment at her pay rate of $17.30 per hour. Plaintiff claimed those penalty wages under ORS 652.150, which provides, in part:

“(1) Except as provided in subsections (2) and (3) of this section, if an employer willfully fails to pay any wages or compensation of any employee whose employment *77 ceases, as provided in ORS 652.140 and 652.145, then, as a penalty for the nonpayment, the wages or compensation of the employee shall continue from the due date thereof at the same hourly rate for eight hours per day until paid or until action therefor is commenced. However:
“(a) In no case shall the penalty wages or compensation continue for more than 30 days from the due date[.]”

(Emphasis added.)

The parties agree that the three-year limitation period specified in ORS 12.100(2) applies to claims for penalty wages. 2 They also agree that, not counting time during which the limitation period was tolled, plaintiff filed her complaint three years and eight days after September 1, 2001, the day following her last day of work. 3 Whether plaintiffs complaint was timely therefore depends on when the three-year limitation period began to run: (1) on September 1,2001 (the first day following the date on which defendant should have paid plaintiff her earned wages), as defendant argues and the trial court held; (2) on September 30, 2001 (after all 30 days of penalty wages became due), as plaintiff contends; 4 or (3) on a day or days between those two extremes.

*78 The answer to that question depends on when an employee’s cause of action for penalty wages accrues. See ORS 12.010 (limitation periods described in ORS chapter 12 begin to run “after the cause of action shall have accrued”). In that regard, the key point is that the employee’s cause of action under ORS 652.150(1) is for the penalty wages themselves, not for the earned wages that the employer should have paid the employee on his or her last day of work. That point is stark in this case, as defendant had paid plaintiff her earned wages long before she filed suit to recover penalty wages.

Moreover, penalty wages are not compensatory “damages” for harm caused by the employer’s failure to timely pay earned wages, as defendant suggests. Rather, penalty wages are just that — a penalty. See North Marion Sch. Dist. #15 v. Acstar Ins. Co., 343 Or 305, 316, 169 P3d 1224 (2007) (penalty wages “are punitive, not compensatory, in nature”). Consequently, the cause of action for penalty wages does not accrue, and the statute of limitation cannot begin to run, until that penalty is owed. Put another way, it is not the employer’s initial wrongful act of failing to pay earned wages that triggers the statute of limitation for a claim for penalty wages. Rather, the limitation period can begin to run only when the employer commits the additional wrongful act of willfully failing to pay the earned wages on a day following the date on which those wages were originally due, as only that later act makes the employer liable for a penalty. See North Marion Sch. Dist. #15 v. Acstar Ins. Co., 205 Or App 484, 492, 136 P3d 42 (2006), aff'd, 343 Or 305, 169 P3d 1224 (2007) (“by definition, [penalty wages] accrue after the worker’s employment ‘ceases’ simply as a penalty against the employer” (emphasis in original)).

The next question is whether an employee who sues for penalty wages under ORS 652.150 has a single claim for the total amount of penalty wages the employer allegedly owes, or instead has up to 30 separate claims — each for one day of penalty wages — corresponding to each of the days on which the employer continued not to pay the employee’s *79 earned wages. 5 If the employee has a single penalty-wage claim, then the three-year limitation period began to run when that single claim accrued. On the other hand, if the employee has a series of up to 30 distinct penalty-wage claims, then a separate three-year limitation period began to run on each of the days on which those claims accrued. 6 In choosing between those alternative models, we look first to the statute’s text and context, keeping in mind that “[p]rior construction of a statute by this court is always relevant to our analysis of the statute’s text.” State v. Bryan, 221 Or App 455, 459, 190 P3d 470 (2008), rev den, 347 Or 290 (2009).

Although the text of ORS 652.150

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 P.3d 1, 246 Or. App. 74, 2011 Ore. App. LEXIS 1389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-us-bank-national-association-orctapp-2011.