Calixto v. Coughlin , 481 Mass. 157 ( 2018 )


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    SJC-12515
    JILLIAN CALIXTO1 & another2    vs.   HEATHER COUGHLIN & others.3
    Middlesex.    November 8, 2018. - December 28, 2018.
    Present:     Gants, C.J., Gaziano, Lowy, Budd, Cypher, & Kafker,
    JJ.
    Massachusetts Wage Act. Damages, Breach of fiduciary duty.
    Practice, Civil, Motion to dismiss.
    Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
    October 11, 2016.
    A motion to dismiss was heard by Maynard M. Kirpalani, J.
    The Supreme Judicial Court granted an application for
    direct appellate review.
    Nicholas J. Rosenberg for the plaintiffs.
    David G. Thomas (Mian R. Wang also present) for the
    defendants.
    1 Individually and on behalf of all others similarly
    situated, and derivatively on behalf of ISIS Parenting, Inc.
    2 Kathryn Reynolds, individually and on behalf of all others
    similarly situated, and derivatively on behalf of ISIS
    Parenting, Inc.
    3 Heather Coughlin, Peter Delahunt, Gregg Dion, and S.
    Brendan Coughlin.
    2
    The following submitted briefs for amici curiae:
    Christopher H. Lindstrom & Matthew P. Ritchie for Greater
    Boston Chamber of Commerce.
    Ben Robbins & Martin J. Newhouse for New England Legal
    Foundation.
    Arthur P. Murphy & Geoffrey P. Wermuth for Murphy, Hesse,
    Toomey & Lehane, LLP.
    KAFKER, J.    The primary issue presented is the interplay,
    if any, between two employee protection statutes:    G. L. c. 149,
    § 148 (Wage Act), and the Federal Worker Adjustment and
    Retraining Notification Act, 
    29 U.S.C. §§ 2101-2109
     (2018) (WARN
    Act).   The defendant corporate officers (officers)4 directed ISIS
    Parenting, Inc. (company), where the plaintiff employees
    (employees) worked until it abruptly ceased operations and
    terminated its entire workforce.   Alleging a WARN Act violation
    for failure to provide them with sixty days' advance notice of
    the company's shutdown, the employees brought a class action
    lawsuit against the company in Federal court and received a
    nearly $2 million default judgment.   Subsequently, the employees
    brought a putative class action lawsuit against the officers in
    State court under the Wage Act, claiming that the $2 million
    WARN Act damages constitute wrongfully withheld "earned wages"
    for which the officers are individually liable.     In addition,
    4  One defendant did not work at the company, but was named
    only with respect to the fraudulent conveyance claim. The other
    defendants were the president/chief executive officer, chief
    financial officer, and corporate secretary.
    3
    the employees argue that the officers committed a breach of
    fiduciary duties that they owed to the company by allowing the
    company to violate the WARN Act.   Because we conclude that WARN
    Act damages are not "earned wages" under the Wage Act, and that
    the employees have not asserted a viable claim for breach of
    fiduciary duties, we affirm the dismissal of the employees'
    case.5
    1.   Background.   We review the allowance of a motion to
    dismiss de novo, accepting all well-pleaded facts in the
    complaint as true, and taking into account any attached
    materials.   See Cook v. Patient Edu, LLC, 
    465 Mass. 548
    , 549
    (2013).   The employees were among the more than 200 people who
    worked at the company, which operated for more than a decade and
    had several stores in the Boston area.6   At some point the
    company ran into financial difficulties, and its management
    decided to stop operating.   On January 14, 2014, without any
    prior warning, one of the officers informed the company's
    employees that the company was shutting down and their
    employment was terminated immediately.
    5 We acknowledge the amicus briefs of the Greater Boston
    Chamber of Commerce; the New England Legal Foundation; and
    Murphy, Hesse, Toomey & Lehane, LLP, in support of the
    defendants.
    6 The company offered pre- and postnatal classes and
    services and sold related products for children and parents.
    4
    That fall, the employees brought a class action lawsuit
    against the company in the United States District Court for the
    District of Massachusetts, alleging a violation of the WARN Act.
    The WARN Act provides that an employer, defined as a "business
    enterprise" that employs at least one hundred full-time
    employees or at least one hundred full- and part-time employees
    who collectively work at least 4,000 non-overtime hours per
    week, 
    29 U.S.C. § 2101
    (a)(1), "shall not order a plant closing
    or mass layoff until the end of a [sixty]-day period after the
    employer serves written notice of such an order" on each
    affected employee or the employees' representative, 
    29 U.S.C. § 2102
    (a).   If an employer fails to comply with the sixty-day
    notice requirement, it "shall be liable to each aggrieved
    employee who suffers an employment loss as a result of such
    closing or layoff" for "back pay" and employee benefits covering
    each day of the notice violation.   
    29 U.S.C. § 2104
    (a)(1).7
    "Back pay" under the WARN Act is owed for each day of violation
    and is set as the higher of the "average regular rate" received
    during the employee's last three years of employment or the
    7  Exceptions to the sixty-day notice period apply when (1)
    the employer, under certain circumstances, was actively seeking
    capital at the time when the notice should have been given; (2)
    business circumstances that were not foreseeable caused the
    plant closing or mass layoff without sixty days' notice; (3) a
    natural disaster caused the plant closing or mass layoff without
    sixty days' notice. 
    29 U.S.C. § 2102
    (b) (2018).
    5
    "final regular rate" received by the employee.      
    29 U.S.C. § 2104
    (a)(1)(A).     The WARN Act further provides that these
    remedies "shall be the exclusive remedies for any violation of
    this chapter."   
    29 U.S.C. § 2104
    (b).      The WARN Act also states
    that "[t]he rights and remedies provided to employees by this
    chapter are in addition to, and not in lieu of, any other
    contractual or statutory rights and remedies of the employees,
    and are not intended to alter or affect such rights and
    remedies."   
    29 U.S.C. § 2105
    .
    The company did not defend the lawsuit, and the Federal
    District Court judge eventually awarded a nearly $2 million
    default judgment under the WARN Act to the employees.       After
    failing to collect any of this judgment amount from the company
    due to the company's insolvency, the employees brought this
    putative class action in the Superior Court against the officers
    directly.    The officers moved to dismiss the complaint for
    failure to state a claim.8     The Superior Court judge granted the
    motion, finding that the Federal District Court's WARN Act award
    "does not qualify as 'earned wages' giving rise to a claim under
    the Wage Act."     This appeal followed.
    2.   Discussion.    a.   Whether WARN Act damages are earned
    wages under the Wage Act.     The Wage Act provides that "[e]very
    8 The employees voluntarily dismissed several counts of
    their original complaint.
    6
    person having employees in his service shall pay weekly or bi-
    weekly each such employee the wages earned by him to within six
    days of the termination of the pay period during which the wages
    were earned if employed for five or six days in a calendar
    week."    G. L. c. 149, § 148, first par.    It also provides that
    outstanding wages shall be paid "in full on the day of [an
    employee's] discharge."     Id.   To combat "unscrupulous employers"
    who violate these requirements by withholding earned wages
    (citation omitted), Segal v. Genitrix, LLC, 
    478 Mass. 551
    , 560
    (2017), the Wage Act, with limited exceptions not relevant here,
    provides a private cause of action, imposes personal liability
    on certain corporate officers, and awards mandatory treble
    damages and attorney's fees to a successful plaintiff.        See
    Melia v. Zenhire, Inc., 
    462 Mass. 164
    , 170 (2012) (describing
    these provisions of Wage Act).     It may also impose criminal
    liability.     See G. L. c. 149, § 27C.
    Although the statute does not specifically define "wages
    earned," we have adopted the "plain and ordinary meaning" of
    those terms.    Awuah v. Coverall N. Am., Inc., 
    460 Mass. 484
    , 492
    (2011).   Specifically, we explained there that "[w]here an
    employee has completed the labor, service, or performance
    required of him, therefore, according to common parlance and
    understanding he has 'earned' his wage."      
    Id.
       In   Massachusetts
    State Police Commissioned Officers Ass'n v. Commonwealth, 462
    
    7 Mass. 219
    , 220, 226 (2012) (State Police), we provided further
    guidance in the context of employees challenging a mandatory
    furlough program that they contended should not have been
    applied to them.   We rejected their argument that the
    deprivation of wages they would or should have earned was the
    deprivation of "earned wages" under the Wage Act.   
    Id. at 226
    .
    We agreed with the employer that "the right to payment of
    'earned' wages is secured by virtue of work or service actually
    performed," 
    id. at 225
    , and thus that "a prospective reduction
    in the number of days to be worked," even if improper, "does not
    deprive the plaintiffs of any wages 'earned'" under the Wage
    Act, 
    id. at 226
    .
    The same is true for the failure to pay the additional
    compensation awarded to workers under the WARN Act if the sixty
    days' notice of plant closure is not provided.   The payment is
    not for work that has actually been performed but for work that
    would have been performed had the sixty days' notice been
    provided.   In fact, the WARN Act provides that the amount of
    compensation "shall be reduced by . . . any wages paid by the
    employer to the employee for the period of violation" (emphasis
    added).   
    29 U.S.C. § 2104
    (a)(2)(A).   The extraordinary relief
    the Wage Act provides -- individual liability, treble damages,
    and possible criminal liability -- is directed at particularly
    egregious behavior, i.e., not paying wages for work actually
    8
    performed, and not at other employment violations.   See Segal,
    478 Mass. at 560 (purpose of Wage Act is to prevent employers'
    unscrupulous, long-term detention of wages).
    Furthermore, not only must the employees' work actually
    have been performed, but the wages also must be presently -- not
    just prospectively or potentially -- due to be paid by the
    employer.   See, e.g., State Police, 462 Mass. at 225; Weems v.
    Citigroup Inc., 
    453 Mass. 147
    , 153-155 (2009).   For example, we
    recently held that accrued, unused "sick time" was not an
    "earned wage" under the Wage Act where separating employees were
    only entitled to compensation for that accrued sick time under
    certain conditions.   See Mui v. Massachusetts Port Auth., 
    478 Mass. 710
    , 713 (2018).   We also rejected the argument that tax
    deferred compensation was wages under the Wage Act that must be
    paid within seven days of the end of the pay period, holding
    that "[t]he Legislature's remedy for the evil of unreasonable
    detention of wages is not applicable to deferred compensation
    contributions," as "[t]he contributed funds are intended to be
    held, out of the employee's possession, for an extended period."
    Boston Police Patrolmen's Ass'n, Inc. v. Boston, 
    435 Mass. 718
    ,
    720 (2002).   The work must have been actually performed and wage
    payments must be presently due to trigger the precise
    requirements and severe penalties of the Wage Act.
    9
    Characterizing WARN Act damages as back pay does not alter
    this analysis.   Earned wages are not the equivalent of back pay.
    Back pay compensates a variety of different types of employment
    law violations under State and Federal law.   In general, it
    compensates employees for amounts that they "normally would have
    earned" had a violation not occurred (emphasis added).   Phelps
    Dodge Corp. v. National Labor Relations Bd., 
    313 U.S. 177
    , 197
    (1941).   That can be for wages earned but unfairly compensated,
    as in cases of unequal pay, or for wages not earned, due to the
    failure to hire because of discrimination or the failure to
    provide notice, as under the WARN Act.   See 4 N.P. Lareau, Labor
    and Employment Law §§ 98.06, 109.03, 114.02, 125.03, 174.02
    (2018) (discussing back pay awards for violations of various
    Federal civil rights, antidiscrimination, and employee
    protection statutes).   Regardless, back pay is not the same as
    wages earned but not paid under the Wage Act, which has its own
    particular and precise requirements.9
    9 The employees rely on Federal bankruptcy cases classifying
    WARN Act damages as wages for purposes of bankruptcy creditor
    priority. But these cases have concluded that "back pay under
    WARN constitutes wages for the purposes of the Bankruptcy Code"
    because the Code explicitly includes severance pay in the
    definition of "wages," see 
    11 U.S.C. § 507
    (a)(4)(A) (2018), and
    because WARN Act damages may be regarded as "statutory severance
    pay." In re Hanlin Group, Inc., 
    176 B.R. 329
    , 334 (Bankr.
    D.N.J. 1995). By contrast, severance pay is not mentioned in
    the Wage Act, and it has not been deemed an "earned wage" under
    the act. See Prozinski v. Northeast Real Estate Servs., LLC, 
    59 Mass. App. Ct. 599
    , 603–605 (2003) (holding that severance pay
    10
    In sum, an employee who is terminated with inadequate
    notice and entitled to WARN Act damages for the amounts he or
    she would have earned had proper notice been provided has not
    "earned wages" for work actually performed and presently due as
    required by the Wage Act.   We thus hold that WARN Act damages
    are not wrongfully withheld wages for which the officers can be
    held liable under the Wage Act.
    b.   Breach of fiduciary duties.   The employees further
    argue that the officers committed a breach of their fiduciary
    duties to the company by causing it to incur WARN Act liability.
    As creditors of the company, the employees argue that they have
    standing to bring this claim derivatively.10
    It is true that, under Delaware law, "the creditors of an
    insolvent corporation have standing to maintain derivative
    claims against directors on behalf of the corporation for
    breaches of fiduciary duties."    North Am. Catholic Educ.
    is not covered by Wage Act in part because it is not expressly
    included in statute). See also Mui v. Massachusetts Port Auth.,
    
    478 Mass. 710
    , 713 (2018) (citing Prozinski, supra, for its
    holding that Wage Act does not cover severance pay); Weems v.
    Citigroup Inc., 
    453 Mass. 147
    , 151 (2009) (same).
    10A derivative suit is "a suit by the corporation, asserted
    by the stockholders on its behalf, against those liable to it.
    . . . The fundamental purpose of a derivative action is to
    enforce a corporate right that the corporation has refused for
    one reason or another to assert." R.F. Balotti & J.F.
    Finkelstein, Delaware Law of Corporations and Business
    Organizations § 13.10 (3d ed. 2018 Supp.).
    11
    Programming Found., Inc. v. Gheewalla, 
    930 A.2d 92
    , 101 (Del.
    2007).11   A court applying Delaware law has allowed such a suit
    to be brought by a bankruptcy trustee alleging harm to a company
    arising out of director misconduct that resulted in WARN Act
    violations.   See In re Golden Guernsey Dairy, LLC, 
    548 B.R. 410
    ,
    413 (Bankr. D. Del. 2015).   But "individual creditors of an
    insolvent corporation have no right to assert direct claims for
    breach of fiduciary duty against corporate directors."      North
    Am. Catholic Educ. Programming Found., Inc., 
    supra at 103
    .     A
    claim that a corporate officer committed a "breach of a duty
    owed directly to the plaintiff" is a direct suit, not a
    derivative one.   Branch vs. Ernst & Young U.S., No. Civ. A. 93-
    10024-RGS (D. Mass. Dec. 22, 1995).
    As the Delaware Chancery Court has cautioned, "fiduciary
    duty law" in the creditor context should be applied "quite
    cautiously, to avoid unduly benefiting creditors by enabling
    them to recover in equity when they could not prevail" on other
    legal theories asserted directly against defendants.   Prod.
    Resources Group, L.L.C. v. NCT Group, Inc., 
    863 A.2d 772
    , 801
    n.88 (Del. Ch. 2004).   Accordingly, we conclude that the
    employees' breach of fiduciary duty claim is improperly brought:
    11Under G. L. c. 156D, § 7.47, we apply the substantive law
    of the jurisdiction where a foreign corporation is incorporated
    -- in this case, Delaware -- to a derivative proceeding.
    12
    while styled as a derivative claim, it simply repackages the
    employees' primary argument that the officers committed a breach
    of duties owed to them under the WARN Act.    By its express
    terms, the WARN Act is the exclusive remedy for WARN Act
    violations.   See 
    29 U.S.C. § 2104
    (b).   We therefore affirm
    dismissal of the claim against the officers for breach of
    fiduciary duty.12
    3.   Conclusion.   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the
    Superior Court judge's grant of the officers' motion to dismiss.
    So ordered.
    12Because we affirm the dismissal of the Wage Act and
    breach of fiduciary duty claims, we also affirm the dismissal of
    the fraudulent conveyance claim.