窃取时间:现代工资盗窃诉讼中主张普通法转换的正当性

Q2 Social Sciences
H. Goldberg, Nanci K. Carr, P. Silvia
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[1] See Brady Meixell and Ross Eisenbrey, An Epidemic of Wage Theft Is Costing Workers Hundreds of Millions of Dollars a Year, Economic Policy Institute (Sep. 11, 2014),  http://www.epi.org/publication/epidemic-wage-theft-costing-workers-hundreds/; Josh Eidelson, LinkedIn Stiffed its Own Employees, Agrees to Pay Millions, BUSINESSWEEK (Aug. 5, 2014), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-08-05/linkedin-stiffed-its-own-employees-agrees-to-pay-millions; and Monica Potts, The Very Real Scourge of Wage Theft, THE DAILY BEAST (Feb. 15, 2015), http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/15/the-very-real-scourge-of-wage-theft.html. [2] Hilda L. Solis, Wage Theft Harms All of Us , The Huffington Post (July 19, 2015), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hilda-l-solis/wage-theft-harms-all-of-u_b_7829514.html. 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引用次数: 1

摘要

当工人起诉雇主欠薪或拖欠工资时,“工资盗窃”一词经常成为头条新闻。[1]“工资盗窃”是指雇主非法拒绝向工人支付其合法获得的工资和福利。[2]在美国,雇主违反工资和工时法是一个巨大而持久的问题,影响到多达三分之二的工人。为了打击这种对小时工底线的普遍威胁,立法机构制定了许多法律,有些甚至援引了“工资盗窃”术语的权力,如纽约的《工资盗窃预防法案》。[3]然而,尽管媒体、政客和权威人士普遍使用“工资盗窃”一词,但在法律图书馆搜索“工资盗窃”一词却几乎找不到先例。这就引出了一个问题:雇主是否应该为未能补偿员工的工作时间而承担转换责任?在与工资有关的诉讼中,转换请求的效力仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。然而,如果作为一个社会,我们在每一个可能违反工资和工时法的事件中都发出警报,那么我们最终会误导潜在原告的人口,使他们对盗窃或转换未支付工资的可行性提出索赔。“工资盗窃”并不是一个艺术术语;其最接近的法律推论是普通法上的非法转换侵权。尽管作为一个社会,我们经常将欠薪或不付工资认定为“工资盗窃”,但辩护并证明雇主已将雇员的工资转换为工资,这是一项很少有原告能够克服的挑战。在本文中,我们将探讨在我们的社会中使用的术语“工资盗窃”,并将这种普遍理解与严格的法律框架进行对比,在法律框架中,原告必须提出“工资盗窃”索赔。最后,我们将探讨这种脱节,试图调和为什么在对工人现实的普通描述和使工人再次完整的法律之间存在并持续存在这种差距。虽然“工资盗窃”一词似乎更容易等同于愤怒的感叹,而不是有效的救济要求,但它的持续存在强调了继续需要普通法补救措施,如转换,以填补持续被动立法留下的执法空白。[1]参见布雷迪·梅塞尔和罗斯·艾森布雷:《工资盗窃的流行使工人每年损失数亿美元》,经济政策研究所(2014年9月11日)http://www.epi.org/publication/epidemic-wage-theft-costing-workers-hundreds/;Josh Eidelson, LinkedIn解雇自己的员工,同意支付数百万美元,商业周刊(2014年8月5日)https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-08-05/linkedin-stiffed-its-own-employees-agrees-to-pay-millions;莫妮卡·波茨,《工资盗窃的真实祸害》,The DAILY BEAST(2015年2月15日)http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/15/the-very-real-scourge-of-wage-theft.html。[2]《工资盗窃危害我们所有人》,《赫芬顿邮报》(2015年7月19日),http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hilda-l-solis/wage-theft-harms-all-of-u_b_7829514.html。[3]《防止工资盗窃法》,2009 N.Y.S.N. 8380(2011年4月12日)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Stealing Time: The Propriety of Alleging Common Law Conversion in Modern Wage Theft Lawsuits
The words “wage theft” frequently make headlines when workers sue employers for underpayment or nonpayment of wages. [1] Wage theft is “the illegal refusal by an employer to pay a worker the wages and benefits that he or she has legally earned.” [2] In the United States, employer violation of wage and hour laws is a vast and enduring problem, affecting as many as two-thirds of workers. In an attempt to combat this epidemic threat to hourly workers’ bottom lines, legislatures have fashioned numerous laws, some even invoking the power of “wage theft” terminology, such as New York’s Wage Theft Prevention Act. [3] However, despite the pervasive usage of the term “wage theft” by the media, politicians, and pundits, a search of the term “wage theft” in legal libraries yields little precedent. This begs the question: can employers be liable for conversion for failing to compensate employees for time-spent working? The efficacy of conversion claims in wage related lawsuits remains an unsettled question. However, if as a society we are sounding the alarm in every incidence of possible wage and hour law violations, we ultimately misinform the population of potential plaintiffs regarding the viability of a claim for theft, or conversion, of earned yet unpaid wages. The term “wage theft” is not a term of art; its closest legal corollary is the common law tort of conversion. Although we as a society frequently identify underpayment or nonpayment of wages as “wage theft,” pleading and proving that the employer has converted an employee’s wages presents an array of challenges that few plaintiffs can overcome. In this paper, we will explore the term “wage theft” as used in our society, and we will contrast this common understanding with the strict legal framework within which plaintiffs must present “wage theft” claims. Finally, we will explore this disconnect in an attempt to reconcile why such a gap exists, and persists, between the commonplace description of a worker’s reality, and the laws available to make the worker whole again. While it appears the term “wage theft” equates more readily with an exclamation of outrage than an effective claim for relief, its persistence underscores the continuing need for common law remedies, like conversion, to fill in the enforcement gaps left behind by persistently reactive legislation. [1] See Brady Meixell and Ross Eisenbrey, An Epidemic of Wage Theft Is Costing Workers Hundreds of Millions of Dollars a Year, Economic Policy Institute (Sep. 11, 2014),  http://www.epi.org/publication/epidemic-wage-theft-costing-workers-hundreds/; Josh Eidelson, LinkedIn Stiffed its Own Employees, Agrees to Pay Millions, BUSINESSWEEK (Aug. 5, 2014), https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-08-05/linkedin-stiffed-its-own-employees-agrees-to-pay-millions; and Monica Potts, The Very Real Scourge of Wage Theft, THE DAILY BEAST (Feb. 15, 2015), http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/02/15/the-very-real-scourge-of-wage-theft.html. [2] Hilda L. Solis, Wage Theft Harms All of Us , The Huffington Post (July 19, 2015), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/hilda-l-solis/wage-theft-harms-all-of-u_b_7829514.html. [3] Wage Theft Prevention Act, 2009 N.Y.S.N. 8380 (Apr. 12, 2011).
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