Rosen Law Wins Wage Act Case
May 27th, 2011Are retirement deductions “wages”?
In Massachusetts, an employer who fails to pay wages within six days after the end of the pay period is liable for treble damages and attorneys’ fees. But what about payroll deductions that are supposed to go into a retirement account? Does an employer get penalized for failing to invest them as directed?
In our case, yes.

A large Boston real estate company deducted wages from our client’s pay, stating that they were being invested in the employee’s retirement account. The employee became curious when he wasn’t getting any account statements. He repeatedly asked the employer about it but never got an answer. Two years later, when he quit, the employer admitted it had never deposited the money. Our client sued under the state’s Wage Act.
The employer took the position that payroll deductions weren’t wages, citing a case in which the City of Boston took longer than six days to invest patrolmen’s wages in their accounts. But this was a special kind of retirement account in which municipalities own the funds until the employee is entitled to them. In the usual case, the funds belong to the employee.
Besides, the Court said, the retirement account was never created. “It defies logic to rely upon what was supposed to occur, but did not, as a basis for exoneration from the strict requirements of the Wage Act.” Pacheco v. H.N. Gorin, et al., MICV2009-01946.
Photo: Orin Zebest








