Smith v. Idaho Peterbilt, Inc.

683 P.2d 882, 106 Idaho 846, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 480
CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 19, 1984
Docket14458
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 683 P.2d 882 (Smith v. Idaho Peterbilt, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Idaho Peterbilt, Inc., 683 P.2d 882, 106 Idaho 846, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 480 (Idaho Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

WALTERS, Chief Judge.

Idaho Peterbilt, Inc. appeals from a judgment awarding treble damages against it under I.C. § 45-615(4) for unpaid wages due its former employee, Ron Smith. Peterbilt raises two issues. First, in deciding liability, was the trial court required to make a determination that commissions owed by Peterbilt to Smith had been withheld “wrongfully” by Peterbilt? Second, did the trial court err in holding that only an actual tender by Peterbilt to Smith, of the unpaid commissions found due, would preclude an award of treble damages under I.C. § 45-615(4)? We hold the court was not required to determine whether the commissions had been withheld “wrongfully,” but only whether the commissions were due and unpaid. We also uphold the trial court’s position requiring an actual tender. We therefore affirm the judgment.

Ron Smith was employed by Idaho Peterbilt as a truck salesman. Upon termination of his employment, a dispute arose concerning commissions due Smith. While the parties essentially agreed that commissions were owed by Peterbilt to Smith, they *848 could not agree to the total amount. Their dispute centered on the percentage rate upon which the commissions should be calculated. As a result of the disagreement, Smith filed suit to determine the amount due. For relief, he sought recovery of damages under I.C. § 45-615(4).

In pertinent part, I.C. § 45-615(4) provides:

Any judgment for the plaintiff in a proceeding pursuant to this act shall include all costs reasonably incurred in connection with the proceedings and the plaintiff ... shall be entitled to recover from the defendant, as damages, three (3) times the amount of unpaid wages found due and owing.

Following trial, the court found $5468.52 as the amount due Smith for unpaid commissions 1 and awarded judgment to him for three times that amount, i.e., $16,405.56.

I

At trial, Peterbilt urged that the court could not award damages under I.C. § 45-615(4) absent proof and a specific finding that Peterbilt “wrongfully” had withheld payment of the commissions due Smith. Peterbilt argued that an “honest business dispute” existed, as to the commission rate, which would justify withholding the payment of the commissions and preclude the award of treble damages because such a withholding would not be “wrongful”. Unpersuaded, the trial court ruled during trial that a showing of wrongfulness was not required. The court held that Smith simply had to show his commissions were due and unpaid. Accordingly, the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law are silent as to whether Peterbilt’s withholding of the wages found due was wrongful.

Peterbilt’s theory, that damages cannot be awarded under section 45-615(4) without a showing that the wages had been withheld wrongfully by the employer, is based upon language found in the cases of Goff v. H.J.H. Co., 95 Idaho 837, 521 P.2d 661 (1974) and Gano v. Air Idaho, Inc., 99 Idaho 720, 587 P.2d 1255 (1978). In Goff, the plaintiff sued for “bonus money” due him through his employment. He contended the bonus — a commission — should have been calculated on the amount of gross sales he made as a salesman for H.J.H. Company, a farm implement business. However, the employer,. H.J.H., asserted that the bonus was to be calculated on the net amount of the sales, arrived at by deducting from the gross sales the value of trade-ins. The issue was submitted to a jury. The jury found in favor of Goff and rendered a verdict based on the gross sales calculation. Goff then requested the trial judge to assess treble damages under I.C. § 45-615(4). The judge refused to do so, ruling that Goff was not entitled to the benefit of that statute because the defendant-employer, H.J.H., was not shown to have acted with wantonness, wilfulness, fraud or oppression. On appeal, the Supreme Court reversed. It held that the treble damage provision of I.C. § 45-615(4) was mandatory and applicable without a showing of wantonness, wilfulness, fraud or oppression.

The reference to “wrongfulness” in Goff, relied upon by Peterbilt in the instant casé, is found in the characterization by our Supreme Court of the issue before it, and in the Supreme Court’s description of the determination made by the jury. The decision in Goff commences with:

The Court is asked to decide whether I.C. § 45-615(4) requires that treble damages be awarded to any successful plaintiff in a suit for wages wrongfully withheld, even without a showing that the person who withheld the wages acted with malice, wantonness, fraud or oppression. For reasons that will be discussed, we have concluded that treble damages must be awarded whenever it is proved that wages have been wrongfully withheld. [Emphasis added.]

95 Idaho at 838, 521 P.2d at 662. Later in its opinion, the Court described the verdict of the jury: “Here the jury found that [the *849 employer] had wrongfully withheld part of [Goff’s] year end commission which was computed on gross sales.” 95 Idaho at 840, 521 P.2d at 664 (emphasis added). 2

The reference to “wrongfulness” by the Supreme Court is explained when the record on appeal in Goff is compared with the ultimate holding stated in Goff 3 The complaint in Goff contains no allegation that the employer wrongfully withheld the commission due. Nor does the transcript of the evidence in the trial of that case disclose that any issue was raised as to “wrongfulness.” Rather the cause was tried on the question of which calculation— net sales or gross sales — was to be used to arrive at the amount of commissions owed. Only after the verdict was rendered did the parties argue, in respect to I.C. § 45-615(4), whether there was an “honest business dispute” and whether the employer’s conduct was wanton, wilful, fraudulent or oppressive.

The verdict rendered by the jury in Goff recites in toto:

We, the jury impaneled to try the above-entitled cause, do find that the percentage agreement was as claimed by plaintiff, and so we do find in favor of plaintiff and fix the amount he has coming from defendant at the sum of $965.00 for the year 1970.
We further find that there was not an agreement for extension of the payment date for moneys earned in 1969 to December 31, 1970, and therefore we find nothing due plaintiff for the year 1969. [Clerk’s Record p. 17.]

This verdict, on its face, clearly makes no determination whether the employer had wrongfully withheld the commissions due.

The ultimate holding of the Supreme Court in Goff is found in the concluding paragraph of its opinion:

Because I.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
683 P.2d 882, 106 Idaho 846, 1984 Ida. App. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-idaho-peterbilt-inc-idahoctapp-1984.