Velez v. Robert J. DeBry & Associates, PC

2015 UT App 15, 343 P.3d 324, 24 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 286, 778 Utah Adv. Rep. 56, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 16, 2015 WL 300924
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 23, 2015
Docket20131080-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 15 (Velez v. Robert J. DeBry & Associates, PC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Velez v. Robert J. DeBry & Associates, PC, 2015 UT App 15, 343 P.3d 324, 24 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 286, 778 Utah Adv. Rep. 56, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 16, 2015 WL 300924 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Memorandum Decision

PEARCE, Judge:

{1 A. Jason Velez appeals from a district court order concluding that he could have asserted his wage-payment penalty claim in a prior arbitration and that his failure to do so precluded him from asserting that claim in a later court proceeding. We agree with the district court and affirm.

( 2 Velez practiced law at Robert J. DeBry & Associates (DeBry) pursuant to a written employment agreement (the Employment Agreement). On July 9, 2010, DeBry exercised its contractual right to terminate Velez's employment without cause by giving him sixty days' written notice. After Velez received the termination notice, Velez and DeBry agreed that Velez could keep thirteen of the more than 200 clients whose cases he handled so long as he did not contact the other clients. DeBry paid Velez his salary for the first month of the sixty-day termination period but refused to pay the second month's. DeBry justified its nonpayment by claiming that Velez had violated their separation agreement by contacting clients and by renting a billboard to display a sign announcing his departure.

1 3 Velez demanded in writing that DeBry pay the second month's salary. When De-Bry refused, Velez filed a complaint in the district court, asserting causes of action for breach of contract, defamation, and violation of Utah's wage-payment statute. The complaint explicitly sought the award of a penalty equal to sixty days' wages pursuant to Utah Code section 1

{4 DeBry moved to compel arbitration because the Employment Agreement contained a clause requiring arbitration of "[alny controversy or claim arising out of or directly or indirectly relating to this Agreement or [Velez's] association with [DeBry]." Velez agreed to arbitrate but expressed concern about the arbitration process in a letter sent to the American Arbitration Association (the AAA), which was to conduct the arbitration. In that letter, Velez asserted that he did not believe that all of his claims arose out of the Employment Agreement. He referenced "a minimum of [two] claims" that "are subject to a filing requirement under state statute." Velez confessed that he was "unclear as to how raising the issue in an arbitration setting could affect [those] claims in another venue," and asked for clarification. He also asked that "no adverse action, such as foreclosure of [his] counterclaims be taken" until he could raise them in an appropriate venue. The AAA did not respond to Velez's letter.

15 Velez and DeBry participated in an arbitration hearing, which resulted in a written ruling that, among other things, (1) required DeBry to pay Velez the second month's salary and (2) set a mechanism for *326 splitting the fees on Velez's cases that DeBry kept. Velez did not ask the arbitrator to award him the statutory penalty he now contends DeBry owed for failing to pay his salary when due, nor. did he renew the concerns expressed in the letter to the AAA that had gone unanswered.

T6 DeBry filed a motion to confirm the arbitration award in district court. Velez did not oppose the motion but asserted that the court should also impose the statutory penalty and include it in the order confirming the award. The district court heard argument on the motion to confirm and the question of Velez's ability to recover the statutory penalty. The court denied Velez's request to include the penalty in the confirmed award, finding, "I do believe that even though it was statutorily [required that] you've got to bring the cause of action, you did, and then it went into arbitration. It could have and should have been handled there, so I'm simply going to confirm the arbiter's final award." In other words, the district court found that res judicata prevented Velez from litigating the issue in the district court.

¶7 We review the district court's application of principles of res judicata for correctness. Gillmor v. Fomily Link, LLC, 2012 UT 88, 19, 284 P.3d 622. Res judicata takes two forms: claim preclusion and issue preclusion. Macris & Assocs, Inc. v. Ne-ways, Inc., 2000 UT 98, 119, 16 P.3d 1214. For claim preclusion to bar a subsequent cause of action, a party must show that: (1) both cases involve the same parties or their privies; (2) the claim alleged to be barred was raised in the first action or could and should have been raised in the first action; and (8) the first action resulted in a final judgment on the merits. Id. 120.

1 8 Velez does not dispute that the arbitration involved the same parties as his subsequent attempt to have the court award the statutory penalty. Nor does Velez contend that the arbitration did not result in a final judgment on the merits. Velez focuses his argument on the second element, claiming that the district court erred because his statutory wage-payment penalty claim was not one that he could or should have raised in arbitration. Indeed, he argues that he could not have arbitrated the issue, because the arbitrator lacked jurisdiction over the claim.

T9 Velez roots that argument in the language of Utah Code section 34-287. Section 84-28-7 provides, in relevant part, that "no provisions of this chapter can in any way be contravened or set aside by a mutual agreement unless the agreement is approved" by the Utah Antidiscrimination & Labor Division (the Division). Utah Code Ann. § 84-28-7 (LexisNexis 2011). The penalty section of the wage-payment statute explains that an "employee may recover the penalty thus aceruing to the employee in a civil action." Id. § 34-28-5(1)(b)(ii). Velez reads these provisions together and concludes that an agreement to arbitrate necessarily contravenes or sets aside the provision allowing the employee to recover the penalty by filing a civil action. In Velez's view, this renders the arbitration clause in his Employment Agreement invalid as to claims arising out of the wage-payment statute unless the Division has approved the clause.

10 There are two problems with Velez's reading of the statutes. First, his reading does not comport with the plain language of section $4-28-7. When presented with a question of a statute's meaning, we presume the Utah Legislature chose its words carefully and used each term advisedly and according to its ordinary meaning. See D.A. v. D.H., 2014 UT App 138, ¶ 6, 329 P.3d 828. Here, the Legislature chose to use the terms "contravene[s]" and "setfs] aside" to describe the content of an agreement that would need the Division's approval to be enforceable. See Utah Code Ann. $ 34-28-7. Thus, the question before us is, "Does an agreement to arbitrate contravene or set aside the ability of an employee to collect the penalty provided for by the wage-payment statute?"

111 Velez suggests that his arbitration agreement with DeBry sets aside the wage-payment statute's language providing that an aggrieved employee "may recover the penalty ... in a civil action." See id. § 84-28-5(1)(b)GH). Velez does not elucidate how arbitrating the claim would run afoul of that provision, nor does he cite any case law to *327 support his argument that arbitrating a statutory penalty sets aside or contravenes the wage-payment statute.

{12 The United States Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in Rodriguez de Quijas v.

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2015 UT App 15, 343 P.3d 324, 24 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 286, 778 Utah Adv. Rep. 56, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 16, 2015 WL 300924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/velez-v-robert-j-debry-associates-pc-utahctapp-2015.