Employers take note: the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”) ruled this week for an employee seeking treble damages for untimely paid wages under the Massachusetts Wage Act (“Wage Act”), even though the employer had corrected its mistake and paid the wages before the employee filed suit. Writing for the majority in Reuter v. City of Methuen, Justice Scott L. Kafker interpreted the “strict time-defined payment policies” and liquidated damages provisions under the Wage Act to find that the employer was responsible for treble the amount of late wages, and not treble the amount of interest, even though the wages were ultimately paid before the complaint was filed. This underscores the importance of paying all wages, including vacation or PTO in a timely fashion.
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- NYDFS Cybersecurity Crackdown: New Requirements Now in Force—Are You Compliant?
- Video: New Tips and Overtime Guidance, NLRB Circuit Split, and Stalled Nomination - Employment Law This Week
- Companies and Employees Increasingly at Risk of AI-Powered Cyber Attacks
- Video: New Leadership and Priorities for the EEOC - Employment Law This Week
- Expanded Pay Transparency Requirements Coming to Columbus, Ohio