A.
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Facts and Issues
In this case, the plaintiffs - nurses, clinical pathologists, and radiologists employed at the hospital affiliated with the Korea Workers’ Compensation and Welfare Service (“COMWEL”) - filed a claim against COMWEL for unpaid wages resulting from the reassessment of their ordinary wage by COMWEL. Specifically, the plaintiffs argued that various allowances, including bonuses, meal allowances, long-service pay, transportation allowances, position and job-related expenses, welfare points, and retroactive wage increases, should all be deemed ordinary wage. Accordingly, they also claimed that their ordinary wage should be recalculated to include all of the aforementioned allowances, and based on this recalculated amount of ordinary wage, COMWEL should reassess their overtime, annual leave, severance pay etc., and make additional payments to cover the difference in what they would been entitled to taking into account the recalculated ordinary wage and what they had received to date.
As for the Retroactive Wage Increase, COMWEL regularly conducted wage negotiations with its labor union in December of each year, agreed on an annual wage increase rate, and then paid the increased wage to the employees retroactively from a certain date (the “Retroactive Base Date”). In addition, COMWEL had designated employees perform on-call and standby duty for medical treatment such as urgent surgical assistance and received on-call and standby allowances in connection thereto. If patients required night-time surgery while the plaintiffs were at home after work, they reported to the hospital and worked in the operating room.
In response to the plaintiffs’ claims, COMWEL countered that none of the above allowances should be included in the ordinary wage. It argued that the on-call and standby duty allowances do not qualify as statutory allowances under the LSA, since such duties are significantly less burdensome to the employees than their normal work. Therefore, COMWEL’s position was that the allowance paid for on-call and standby work should be excluded from the calculation of ordinary wage.
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