MATHIAS, Judge.
Bonnie Egan ("Egan") filed a complaint in Elkhart Superior Court against Eugene Topolski ("Topolski") alleging that he owed her back pay, liquidated damages, and attorney's fees under Indiana Code sections 22-2-5-1 and 2 for unpaid wages earned while working as Topolski's legal assistant. The trial court entered a judgment in favor of Egan for $85,104.14. Topolski now appeals and presents two issues for our review, which we restate as whether sufficient evidence supports the trial court's calculation of unpaid back pay Topolski owed to Egan and whether the trial court correctly awarded liquidated damages and attorney's fees to Egan under Indiana Code section 22-2-5-2.
We affirm.
Topolski is an attorney and has practiced law in Indiana since 1994. He operates a solo general law practice in Elkhart, Indiana, focusing primarily on worker's compensation. Beginning in early November 2005, Topolski employed Egan as a legal assistant. During Egan's initial interview, Topolski told her that the position was four days a week with the office open Monday through Thursday and closed on Fridays. He expressed to her that he could not compete with the benefits of a large law firm but would pay her forty hours per week so she could count on full-time pay. Before Egan accepted the offer, Topolski also indicated to her that she could take vacation time whenever she needed. He told Egan that his main concern was that the work be completed. Egan was also given remote access to the office, so she could work from home as needed.
Throughout the course of her employment with Topolski, Egan was paid a set amount of money on a weekly basis, regardless of number of hours worked. Neither Topolski or Egan ever kept time records documenting her hours. Starting in November 2005, Egan was paid thirteen dollars per hour or $520 gross per week. In January 2007, Egan received a raise to $560 per week and another raise in January 2008 to $600 per week. Between January 1, 2010 and April 12, 2012
In August 2011, Topolski also reduced Egan's work hours from four days per week to two days per week without an agreement on how much Egan would be paid. She believed that she would still be paid $600 per week, especially because the paychecks resumed in January 2012 in the amount of $600 before withholding. Even though Topolski resumed paying Egan, she still was not receiving a paycheck every week and never received the unpaid wages from 2010 and 2011. See Plaintiff's Exhibit M. Egan told Topolski on numerous occasions that she needed to be paid for full-time work or let go so she could collect unemployment benefits. Tr. p. 53.
On April 5, 2012, Egan had a conversation with Topolski about receiving a job offer from another law firm and her need to be paid. Topolski acknowledged that he owed Egan back pay but expressed that he needed "a little bit of time to get that money." Tr. p. 57. After determining that she could not keep working for Topolski without being paid, Egan accepted a legal assistant position at another law firm and submitted her resignation letter to Topolski on April 10, 2012. In her resignation letter, Egan requested her unpaid wages:
Plaintiff's Exhibit N.
Egan encountered Topolski again on June 4, 2012 after passing by his law office with her grandson. She had still not received payment, and Topolski told her again that he did not have the money but should be able to get it to her by the middle of the month. Tr. p. 68. Egan did not receive the promised payment and therefore filed a complaint in Elkhart Superior Court on July 26, 2012, against Topolski seeking unpaid back pay, liquidated damages, and attorney's fees under Indiana Code sections 22-2-5-1 and 2. A bench trial was held on September 30, 2014, and the court ordered both parties to submit proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. On January 27, 2015, the trial court entered a judgment in favor of Egan for $85,104.14, which included unpaid back pay, liquidated damages, and attorney's fees. Topolski now appeals.
Topolski argues that the trial court erred when it determined that
Topolski concedes that he owes Egan back pay from when she worked as his legal assistant, but he asserts that she was an hourly employee and should be compensated $8,280 instead of $21,600. A determination as to whether an employee is salaried or hourly is necessarily fact-sensitive, and is made based upon evaluation of the totality of the circumstances including, but not limited to, employment contract provisions, method and time of payment, and relation of time worked to pay received. Hendershot v. Carey, 616 N.E.2d 412, 418 (Ind.Ct.App. 1993).
The trial court considered that: 1) at the beginning of Egan's employment she worked four days per week and received a pay check for a full forty-hour work week; 2) Egan was authorized to take flexible vacation time and work from home as needed; 3) no actual time records were kept by Topolski or Egan; 4) no agreement existed that explicitly identified how much Egan would be paid; 5) between January 1, 2011 and April 10, 2012 Egan's expected pay was $600 per week regardless of hours worked; and 6) Egan referenced her "salary of $600 per week" in the April 10, 2012 resignation letter and that she was owed $24,000 which Topolski did not dispute at the time. Appellant's App. pp. 16-17. Based on the totality of the circumstances after weighing these factors, the trial court concluded that Egan was a salaried employee.
Topolski's argument that Egan was an hourly employee is a request to re-weigh the evidence and credit his testimony over Egan's testimony, which we will not do. Our court in Hendershot emphasized the fact-sensitive nature in determining whether an employee is salaried or hourly and also did not limit the factors exclusively to those set forth in the test. Here, the trial court listed numerous factors based on evidence presented at trial of Egan's and Topolski's employment relationship that support its legal conclusion that Egan was a salaried employee. After making this determination, the court then calculated Egan's back pay award based on its findings that her salary was $600 per week and she was not compensated for thirty-six weeks while she worked for Topolski. The trial court's findings support its proper application of the Hendershot factors in reaching its conclusion that Egan was a salaried employee and its calculation of her compensation as such. Therefore, we will not disturb the trial court's determination on appeal.
Topolski also argues that the trial court erred in awarding Egan liquidated
Under the Indiana Wage Payment Statute, Topolski was required to pay Egan her earnings no later than April 26, 2012, which he failed to do. As a result, Indiana Code section 22-2-5-2 applies which provides:
Topolski asserts that the Indiana Wage Payment Statute applies only to the frequency of pay, not the amount of pay. Our supreme court found in St. Vincent Hosp. & Health Care Ctr., Inc. v. Steele, 766 N.E.2d 699 (Ind.2002) that the plain, ordinary, and usual meaning of the statutory phrases "all wages" and "amount due" unambiguously established that the legislature intended the Wage Payment Statute to govern not only the frequency but also the amount the employer must pay its employee, and if the [statute] only governed the frequency, then the employer could avoid the penalty provisions of the statute by simply tendering $1.00 biweekly or semimonthly regardless of the amount of wages agreed to by the parties. Id. at 704. Topolski completely failed to pay Egan whether based on frequency and amount, so the Indiana Wage Payment Statute applies here.
Topolski also contends that Indiana Code section 22-2-5-1 does not apply or trigger the penalty provision of Indiana Code section 22-2-5-2 because Egan failed to submit a request for payment. However, the trial court determined that Egan made numerous oral requests for payment throughout the course of her employment and submitted a written request for payment in her April 10, 2012 resignation letter. That evidence clearly supports that these requests were made. We therefore conclude that the trial court properly awarded liquidated damages and
We conclude that sufficient evidence supports the trial court's calculation of unpaid back pay Topolski owed to Egan and that the trial court properly awarded Egan liquidated damages and attorney's fees under Indiana Code section 22-2-5-2.
Affirmed.
BAKER, J., and BAILEY, J., concur.