Court Rules "Bonuses with Employment Conditions Also Count as Ordinary Wages"… Financial Supervisory Service Employees Win Lawsuit
[Asia Economy Reporter Seongpil Cho] Employees of the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) won partial victories in both the first and second trials in a lawsuit demanding that regular bonuses and qualification allowances be recognized as ordinary wages.
According to the legal community on the 6th, the Seoul High Court Civil Division 1 (Presiding Judge Ji-won Jeon) ruled in favor of some of the approximately 1,800 FSS employees who filed a wage claim lawsuit against the FSS. The court stated, "Regular bonuses are wages, that is, compensation for labor, and even if the payment period is on a multi-month basis, it is merely deferred payment of labor compensation accumulated over several months," adding, "It is reasonable to consider them as ordinary wages."
The court also pointed out that attaching 'conditions' related to payment despite wages accruing daily for the days worked violates the Labor Standards Act. The appellate court recognized regular bonuses paid before January 1, 2015, which the first trial had excluded from ordinary wages due to 'employment conditions,' as ordinary wages.
Hot Picks Today
"How Did the Top Company Fall? Stock Price Halved Since Early This Year... Shaken by Owner Risk"
- [Breaking] Bae Kyunghoon: "Investing 550 Trillion Won in AI Data Centers by 2029... The Heart of AI"
- "Arriving Three Hours Early at Airports? Not Enough" ... Six-Hour Delays at European Airports Explained
- Red Devils: "Hong Myung-bo Trampled Football Fans with Absurd Excuses... He Must Leave the Football World"
- One Injection Costs 15.8 Million Won... Grandfather in His 70s Puts on Makeup for His Grandson
However, the court excluded 'selective welfare expenses' recognized by the first trial from ordinary wages. The court explained, "Welfare points are part of establishing a corporate welfare system rather than compensation for labor," and "do not qualify as wages." It is reported that after the first trial ruling, the FSS recalculated various allowances and reimbursed some differences. The court ordered the FSS to pay employees the unpaid amounts based on the scope of ordinary wages recognized in the appellate trial.
© The Asia Business Daily. All rights reserved. Unauthorized AI training and use prohibited.