Susan Carragher v. Pittman Broadcasting

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 2006
DocketCA-0006-0857
StatusUnknown

This text of Susan Carragher v. Pittman Broadcasting (Susan Carragher v. Pittman Broadcasting) 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
Susan Carragher v. Pittman Broadcasting, (La. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

06-857

SUSAN DUNN CARRAGHER

VERSUS

PITTMAN BROADCASTING SERVICES, L.L.C.

************

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2002-4395, HONORABLE CHARLEY QUIENALTY, DISTRICT JUDGE PRO TEMPORE

MICHAEL G. SULLIVAN JUDGE

Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, Jimmie C. Peters, and Michael G. Sullivan, Judges.

AFFIRMED AS AMENDED.

Benjamin W. Mount Bergstedt & Mount Post Office Drawer 3004 Lake Charles, Louisiana 70602 (337) 433-3004 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Susan Dunn Carragher

Jimmy R. Faircloth, Jr. Faircloth, Vilar & Davidson, L.L.C. Post Office Box 12730 Alexandria, Louisiana 71315-2730 (318) 442-9533 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: Pittman Broadcasting Services, L.L.C. SULLIVAN, Judge.

Pittman Broadcasting Services, L.L.C. (“Pittman Broadcasting”) appeals an

award of unpaid wages, penalties, and attorney fees in favor of its former employee,

Susan Dunn Carragher. For the following reasons, we affirm as amended.

Discussion of the Record

Ms. Carragher was employed by Pittman Broadcasting from January 15, 2000

through October 5, 2001 as sales manager for the radio station KAOK in Lake

Charles, Louisiana. Prior to working for Pittman Broadcasting, she had been

employed for approximately five years as an account executive by Cumulus

Broadcasting (“Cumulus”), where she earned between $47,000.00 and upwards of

$50,000.00 in the last two years of her employment there. Ms. Carragher testified

that she agreed to work for Pittman Broadcasting after its owner, Dr. Marcus Pittman,

guaranteed her a salary of $5,500.00 per month, or $66,000.00 per year, plus

commissions, for a minimum of two years. She explained that she accepted Dr.

Pittman’s offer because of the salary guarantee, so that she would not have to worry

about earning commissions anymore.

It is undisputed that for the first three months of her employment at Pittman

Broadcasting, Ms. Carragher was paid according to the above terms, but that she

received a substantially smaller check in May of 2000. She testified that, when she

questioned Dr. Pittman about this, he explained that he was having serious financial

problems, but that he would pay her “the balance due” as soon as he received a

settlement from a lawsuit involving damage to a broadcasting tower that occurred

before she started working there.

In a letter dated May 29, 2000, Ms. Carragher wrote to Dr. Pittman stating that

she had left her former job at Cumulus “based on a promise to pay me $5,500 per month and a commission on sales over thirty thousand,” but that “[w]e have

continually chipped away at that deal, now to the point of a new pay plan,” which

plan she described as “unacceptable.” She included with the letter a proposed

contract with a lower “salary” and “guaranteed commissions” that would not have to

be paid until the following month, but that would still guarantee a minimum pay of

$66,000.00 per year. That agreement was never signed by either party.

Ms. Carragher explained that she continued working for Pittman Broadcasting

based upon Dr. Pittman’s assurances that he would pay her “the right amount” when

he received the expected settlement proceeds. She testified that she left that job in

October of 2001 because of “lack of payment,” her inability to live on what she had

been receiving, and the failure to “get a straight answer” on when she would be paid

what she was owed.

Jane Young, who worked with Ms. Carragher at Cumulus, testified that she was

concerned about Ms. Carragher leaving her position there, where she was the leading

salesperson who was making “a good bit of money.” Ms. Young explained that she

overheard the conversation in which Dr. Pittman offered Ms. Carragher the job at his

company, when his call came while the two were working together and Ms. Carragher

transferred it to a conference call. According to Ms. Young, she heard Dr. Pittman

offer Ms. Carragher $5,500.00 a month for two years, which offer was to be put in

writing within one week.

Scott Bailey, a longtime friend of Ms. Carragher’s who also participated in a

program on KAOK, testified that Ms. Carragher sought his advice about whether to

accept the position at Pittman Broadcasting. Mr. Bailey testified that he was

concerned about Ms. Carragher leaving her job at Cumulus, where she had reached

2 her highest income ever, but that Ms. Carragher explained to him that the new

position included a guarantee of $5,500.00 a month and represented a chance to get

into management, whereas her job at Cumulus was still on a commission basis.

Justin Morris, a producer who worked with Ms. Carragher at Pittman

Broadcasting, testified that he overheard numerous conversations in which

Ms. Carragher asked Dr. Pittman, “When am I going to get what’s owed?” According

to Mr. Morris, Dr. Pittman always replied that it was contingent on receipt of monies

from the damage to the tower, as well as from insurance proceeds that would be

forthcoming from a fire in which Pittman Broadcasting’s office was destroyed in

February of 2001. Mr. Morris also described the payment of wages at the station as

“completely unstable,” in that employee paychecks were rarely delivered in a timely

manner.

Ted Williams, who contributed to a gardening program on KAOK, testified that

he was present during a “pretty heated discussion” at a restaurant in which

Dr. Pittman suggested bringing in a new employee as general manager of the station

and Ms. Carragher then brought up that she was still owed a sum of money based

upon her guaranteed salary of $5,500.00 a month. Mr. Williams also described a

conversation in which Dr. Pittman and Ms. Carragher’s husband “were coming almost

to blows,” with the Carraghers stating, “You’re not paying us what you said you

would pay us,” and Dr. Pittman replying that he would pay them as soon as he

received the insurance money.

Dr. Pittman testified that he offered Ms. Carragher only three months at

$5,500.00 per month, which amount represented a monthly salary of $1,500.00 plus

a draw of $4,000.00 towards future commissions; after the first three months, she

3 would be paid a salary of $1,500.00 per month plus a thirty-percent commission on

her advertising sales. He explained that in May of 2000, Ms. Carragher’s salary was

not reduced, nor was her commission schedule altered, but rather she was no longer

receiving the automatic $4,000.00 draw because that was to come from actual

commissions. He stated that he did not agree to the terms of the written contract that

Ms. Carragher presented to him in May of 2000 and that he was not aware of the

letter dated May 29, 2000 until June of 2005. He testified that in May of 2000, when

Ms. Carragher began complaining about the commissions, he allowed her to live in

a house that he owned rent-free, whereas before she had been paying him $510.00 per

month for use of the home. Dr. Pittman also allowed Ms. Carragher to operate her

own advertising agency from his broadcasting offices. Dr. Pittman acknowledged

that he had spoken of receiving a settlement for the damaged tower, but he testified

that when he did so, he referred to using that money to upgrade the station’s

equipment or to hire additional salespeople, rather than to pay Ms. Carragher any

additional money.

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