WAC 296-126-030
Adjustments for overpayments. (1) An
overpayment occurs when an employer pays an employee for:
(a) More than the agreed-upon wage rate; or
(b) More than the hours actually worked.
(2) Recouping the overpayment may reduce the employee's
gross wages below the state minimum wage.
(3) An employer cannot recover an overpayment when the
disputed amount concerns the quality of work.
(4) An employer can recover an overpayment from an
employee's paycheck provided the overpayment was infrequent
and inadvertent. Infrequent means rarely, not occurring
regularly, or not showing a pattern. Inadvertent means an
error that was accidental, unintentional, or not deliberately
done. The burden of proving the inadvertent error rests with
the employer who made the error. The employer has ninety days
from the initial overpayment to detect and implement a plan
with the employee to collect the overpayment. If the
overpayment is not detected within the ninety-day period, the
employer cannot adjust an employee's current or future wages
to recoup the overpayment. Recouping of overpayments is
limited to the ninety-day detection period.
(5) In the case of employees covered by an unexpired
collective bargaining agreement that expires on or after
January 1, 2006, in which overpayments are included in the
terms of the collective bargaining agreement, the effective
date of this rule shall be the later of:
(a) The first day following expiration of the collective
bargaining agreement; or
(b) The effective date of the revised collective
bargaining agreement.
Helpful information:
The following are examples of when overpayments may or
may not be allowed:
Example 1. Allowed. Overpayment of agreed wage rate:
An employee was paid an agreed rate of ten dollars per hour
but received a paycheck at the rate of eleven dollars per
hour. The employer provided documentation of the overpayment
to the affected employee and adjusted the employee's next
paycheck for the amount overpaid in the previous pay period.
Example 2. Allowed. Overpayment for hours worked: An
employee worked seventy-two hours in the pay period, but the
employee was paid for eighty hours for that period. The
employer provided documentation of the overpayment to the
affected employee and adjusted the employee's next paycheck
for the eight hours overpaid in the previous pay period.
Example 3. Not allowed. Overpayment not detected within
ninety days of first occurrence: An employer agreed to pay an
employee ten dollars per hour, but when the first check was
received, the amount paid was paid at eleven dollars per hour.
The employee may or may not have brought it to the attention
of the employer. Six months later the employer detected the
overpayments and adjusted the employee's wages in the next
paycheck for the entire amount of the overpayment. This is
not an allowable adjustment because it was not detected within
ninety days from the first occurrence.
(6) The employer must provide advance written notice to
the employee before any adjustment is made. The notice must
include the terms under which the overpayment will be
recouped. For example: One adjustment or a series of
adjustments.
(7) The employer must provide documentation of the
overpayment to the affected employee or employees.
(8) The employer must identify and record all wage
deductions openly and clearly in employee payroll records.
(9) Regardless of the provisions of this section, if
appropriate, employers retain the right of private legal
action to recover an overpayment from an employee.
(10) This regulation does not apply to public employers.
See chapter 49.48 RCW, Wages -- Payment -- Collection.
[Statutory Authority: Chapters 49.12, 49.46, 49.48, 49.52 RCW, and RCW 43.22.270. 05-24-019, § 296-126-030, filed
11/29/05, effective 1/1/06.]