Ichiban Japanese Steakhouse, Inc. v. Samantha Greaney , 167 N.H. 138 ( 2014 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Merrimack
    Nos. 2013-779
    2013-780
    ICHIBAN JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE, INC.
    v.
    KYMBERLY ROCHELEAU
    ICHIBAN JAPANESE STEAKHOUSE, INC.
    v.
    SAMANTHA GREANEY
    Argued: October 9, 2014
    Opinion Issued: November 13, 2014
    Tarbell & Brodich Professional Association, of Concord (Friedrich K.
    Moeckel on the brief and orally), for the petitioner.
    Law Office of Kenneth J. Barnes, of Concord (Kenneth J. Barnes on the
    brief and orally), for the respondents.
    DALIANIS, C.J. In these consolidated appeals, the petitioner, Ichiban
    Japanese Steakhouse, Inc. (employer), appeals orders of the Superior Court
    (McNamara, J.) upholding the determinations of the New Hampshire
    Department of Labor (DOL) that the respondents, Kymberly Rocheleau and
    Samantha Greaney (employees), were entitled to lost wages and attorney’s fees
    because the employer’s tip pooling arrangement violated RSA 279:26-b (2010)
    (amended 2012). We affirm.
    The DOL found, or the record establishes, the following facts. The
    employer hired the employees as wait staff for its restaurant in August 2010.
    When they applied for the jobs, they were given a packet of documents,
    including a tip pooling agreement, to review. The agreement required wait staff
    to give approximately 60% of their tips to other employees and specified the
    percentage of tips that were to be given to other employees depending upon
    where in the restaurant the wait staff worked. For instance, the agreement
    stated that when wait staff worked in the hibachi grill area, they had to give 5%
    of all liquor sales to the bartenders, and distribute their tips as follows: 5% to
    the hibachi servers, 5% to the “bussers,” and 45% to the hibachi chefs.
    Similarly, when working in the sushi area, wait staff were required to give 5%
    of all liquor sales to the bartenders and 5% of their tips to the bussers, 5% to
    the sushi bar, and 50% to the sushi chef. When Rocheleau told the manager of
    the restaurant that she disagreed with the tip pooling agreement, the manager
    told her that if she failed to sign the agreement, she could not work at the
    restaurant. At Greaney’s hearing, the employer’s attorney conceded that if
    Greaney had not signed the tip pooling agreement, she would not have been
    hired as wait staff, but might have been employed in another position.
    Both employees left their jobs at the restaurant in 2011 – Rocheleau on
    April 30, 2011, and Greaney on May 21, 2011. Upon leaving their positions,
    each filed a wage claim with the DOL, seeking to recover lost wages. Following
    hearings on their claims, the DOL ruled in favor of the employees. The
    employer appealed those determinations to the superior court, which upheld
    the DOL’s decisions. See RSA 275:51, V (2010). These consolidated appeals
    followed.
    “Any party aggrieved by [a DOL wage claim] decision may appeal to the
    superior court . . . by petition, setting forth that the decision is erroneous, in
    whole or in part, and specifying the grounds upon which the decision is
    claimed to be in error.” 
    Id. “The scope
    of review by the superior court shall be
    limited to questions of law.” 
    Id. “After hearing
    and upon consideration of the
    record, the [superior] court may affirm, vacate or modify in whole or in part the
    decision of the commissioner, or may remand the matter to the commissioner
    for further findings.” 
    Id. We, in
    turn, review de novo the trial court’s decisions
    on questions of law. Grimard v. Rockingham County Dep’t of Corr., 
    161 N.H. 69
    , 71 (2010).
    The employer first argues that its tip pooling arrangement did not violate
    RSA 279:26-b because “both employees testified that they read, understood
    2
    and voluntarily signed” the tip pooling agreement. During the time pertinent to
    this appeal, RSA 279:26-b provided:
    I. Tips are wages and shall be the property of the employee
    receiving the tip and shall be retained by the employee, unless the
    employee voluntarily and without coercion agrees to participate in
    a tip pool which is not required and not controlled in any manner
    by the employer.
    II. If the employee agrees to participate, the employer is not
    precluded from administering a valid tip pool in which
    participation is voluntary, not coerced and the employer exercises
    no control over the manner in which tips are pooled other than for
    accounting and bookkeeping purposes.
    The employer contends that there was no “coercion” within the meaning of the
    statute because neither employee was “physically coerce[d]” or “pressure[d]”
    into signing the agreement.
    We reject the employer’s suggestion that coercion requires application of
    physical force. Although the employer argues that the employees signed the tip
    pooling agreement “voluntarily,” the DOL expressly found to the contrary. In
    Rocheleau’s case, the DOL found credible her testimony that the process was
    not voluntary and found not credible the employer’s “statement that the
    practice was voluntary.” The DOL credited Rocheleau’s testimony that “she felt
    pressure to sign the agreement or not work at the establishment,” and that
    “there was no way out of the employer’s mandated program.” In Greaney’s
    case, the DOL relied upon the employer’s admission to find that participating
    in the tip pooling arrangement was not voluntary, observing that the employer
    conceded that “a prospective employee would not be hired into a wait staff
    position if they did not sign the tip distribution sheet agreeing to the
    disbursement of their tips.” Because these factual findings are not erroneous
    as a matter of law, they must be upheld. See RSA 275:51, V. Moreover, even if
    the employees were not “coerced” within the meaning of the statute, the
    employer would still not prevail because, as the DOL found, the employer
    controlled the tip pooling arrangement. See RSA 279:26-b, I (a valid tip pooling
    arrangement is “not controlled in any manner by the employer”).
    The employer next asserts that the amount of lost wages awarded to the
    employees was improper. The DOL awarded Rocheleau $4,214. At the DOL
    hearing, Rocheleau produced records and explained, in detail, that she took
    home only 40% of the tips she earned. Rocheleau also produced evidence that,
    in all, she took home approximately $3,426 in tips, which means that her total
    tips, including the 60% she distributed to other employees, was $8,565. As
    $4,214 is less than 60% of $8,565, we conclude that the employer has failed to
    3
    demonstrate that the DOL erred, as a matter of law, when it awarded $4,214 in
    lost wages to Rocheleau. See RSA 275:51, V.
    The DOL awarded Greaney $8,390. At the hearing, Greaney produced
    her 2010 W-2 form and her final paycheck from the restaurant. Greaney
    testified that the amounts listed on her W-2 and her final paycheck were the
    amounts she “took home,” and did not include “the amounts [she] [gave] away.”
    Greaney produced evidence that she took home $4,869.50 in tips in 2010 and
    $3,663 in tips in 2011, which means that the total of her tips in 2010 was
    $12,173.75, and in 2011 was $9,157.50. As $8,390 is less than 60% of the
    total tips Greaney earned, we conclude that the employer has failed to
    demonstrate that the DOL erred, as a matter of law, when it awarded $8,390 in
    lost wages to Greaney. See RSA 275:51, V.
    The employer next argues that the trial court erred when it awarded the
    employees their attorney’s fees pursuant to RSA 275:53, III (2010). The
    employer contends that because the employees’ wage claims were brought
    under RSA 275:51, V, they are not entitled to recover attorney’s fees. The
    employer asserts that attorney’s fees may be awarded only in a direct superior
    court action brought under RSA 275:53 (2010). In Galloway v. Chicago-Soft,
    
    142 N.H. 752
    , 759-60 (1998), we expressly rejected identical arguments. See
    Demers Agency v. Widney, 
    155 N.H. 658
    , 664 (2007) (relying upon Galloway to
    conclude that “attorney’s fees and interest are available in superior court
    appeals under RSA 275:51”). The employer invites us to overrule Galloway,
    arguing that it is “inherently unworkable” because it conflicts with Ives v.
    Manchester Subaru, Inc., 
    126 N.H. 796
    , 803-04 (1985). We decline the
    employer’s invitation.
    “The doctrine of stare decisis demands respect in a society governed by
    the rule of law, for when governing legal standards are open to revision in every
    case, deciding cases becomes a mere exercise of judicial will with arbitrary and
    unpredictable results.” Appeal of Phillips, 
    165 N.H. 226
    , 231 (2013) (quotation
    omitted). “When asked to reconsider a holding, the question is not whether we
    would decide the issue differently de novo, but whether the ruling has come to
    be seen so clearly as error that its enforcement was for that very reason
    doomed.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    Generally, we will overrule a prior decision
    only after considering:
    (1) whether the rule has proven to be intolerable simply by defying
    practical workability; (2) whether the rule is subject to a kind of
    reliance that would lend a special hardship to the consequence of
    overruling; (3) whether related principles of law have so far
    developed as to have left the old rule no more than a remnant of
    abandoned doctrine; and (4) whether facts have so changed, or
    come to be seen so differently, as to have robbed the old rule of
    significant application or justification.
    4
    
    Id. at 231-32
    (quotation omitted). The employer has not briefed any of these
    factors.
    Its sole argument in its brief as to why we should overrule Galloway is
    that, in the employer’s view, it conflicts with Ives. The employer is mistaken.
    In Ives, we did not address whether attorney’s fees could be awarded in an
    action brought under RSA 275:51, V. 
    Ives, 126 N.H. at 803-04
    . We addressed
    only whether such fees could be awarded in a case brought under RSA 275:53
    and noted that they could. 
    Id. at 803.
    Until Galloway, we were not presented
    with the question of whether fees could be awarded in a case brought under
    RSA 275:51, V. In that case, we concluded that attorney’s fees could be
    awarded, even though a “strict construction” of the language of RSA 275:53, III
    might lead to a different result. 
    Galloway, 142 N.H. at 759
    . We reasoned that
    because RSA chapter 275 is protective legislation, see 
    Ives, 126 N.H. at 804
    , we
    construe it in general, and RSA 275:53, III in particular, “to effectuate the
    broad purpose of protecting employees.” 
    Id. Accordingly, we
    held that when a
    wage claim has been found to be meritorious, whether brought directly to the
    court pursuant to RSA 275:53, or on appeal from a DOL decision pursuant to
    RSA 275:51, V, the court “should exercise its statutory discretion by awarding
    reasonable counsel fees, unless the court . . . finds particular facts that would
    render such an award inequitable.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    Significantly, it has been sixteen years since we decided Galloway, and,
    in that time, the legislature has not amended RSA 275:53, III. Thus, we
    assume that our holding conforms to legislative intent. See Appeal of 
    Phillips, 165 N.H. at 232
    . We, therefore, affirm our decision in Galloway that attorney’s
    fees are available in a claim brought pursuant to RSA 275:51, V. Should the
    legislature disagree with our statutory interpretation, it is free to amend the
    applicable statutes as it sees fit.
    Affirmed.
    HICKS, LYNN, CONBOY, and BASSETT, JJ., concurred.
    5
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2013-0779, Ichiban Japanese Steakhouse, Inc. v. Kymberly Rocheleau, and 2013-0780

Citation Numbers: 167 N.H. 138

Filed Date: 11/13/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023