• FreeAdvice has a new Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, effective May 25, 2018.
    By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our Terms of Service and use of cookies.

Company is requiring us to pay back money for training if we quit within a year

Accident - Bankruptcy - Criminal Law / DUI - Business - Consumer - Employment - Family - Immigration - Real Estate - Tax - Traffic - Wills   Please click a topic or scroll down for more.

What is the name of your state? Michigan

The company has provided and paid for an outside company to train employees on a new computer system necessary for us to do our job. This training was done at work, during work hours and we were paid while we trained. We had to sign a paper saying that if we left the company within a year ,we agree to pay them back $1300 for the training. The same form stated that we agree that they would take the money out of our last paycheck if we quit. Is this legal, and/or enforcable?What is the name of your state?
 


HomeGuru

Senior Member
mitgr5200@yahoo said:
What is the name of your state? Michigan

The company has provided and paid for an outside company to train employees on a new computer system necessary for us to do our job. This training was done at work, during work hours and we were paid while we trained. We had to sign a paper saying that if we left the company within a year ,we agree to pay them back $1300 for the training. The same form stated that we agree that they would take the money out of our last paycheck if we quit. Is this legal, and/or enforcable?What is the name of your state?


**A: what did the DOL say when you asked?
 

JETX

Senior Member
mitgr5200@yahoo said:
We had to sign a paper saying that if we left the company within a year ,we agree to pay them back $1300 for the training. The same form stated that we agree that they would take the money out of our last paycheck if we quit. Is this legal, and/or enforcable?
Of course, we can't tell you whether the form is legal or not... without seeing it. HOWEVER, based on your post, the employer did get your written permission to deduct if you leave..... so that part of the 'deal' is likely valid.... and enforceable.
 

JETX

Senior Member
mitgr5200@yahoo said:
we were made to sign it, does that make a differance?
Unless a gun was aimed at your head at the time, no.
You had the choice of agreeing to their offered terms... or likely to pursue other employment opportunity's.
You chose to agree.
 
is it a lawyer answering these?

meaning no disrespect, but how does one know if it is a lawyer writing the answer, or if it is just a regular poster?
 

justalayman

Senior Member
mitgr5200@yahoo said:
meaning no disrespect, but how does one know if it is a lawyer writing the answer, or if it is just a regular poster?

Those other 2 guys that gave you answers ARE indeed lawyers.

BTW: DOL= department of labor
 

mlane58

Senior Member
Michigan Labor and Economic states that any deduction required by law (i.e. taxes, friend of the court payments) and union dues. All other deductions require the employer to get your signed authorization before the deduction is made. The employer is required to itemize deductions on your pay stub. Since you have signed a document allowing your employer to deduct any monies for training if you leave within a year after your training, I would say that everything was done legally.
 
I know it is common, just had heard that it was unenforceable. Normally though, they make you sign that you owe money, but they didn't used to make you sign that you authorized them to take it from your check.
 

cbg

I'm a Northern Girl
Whether it is or is not enforceable depends on the EXACT terms of the agreement and, to a certain extent, state law. You should assume in signing anything that it is enforceable until proven otherwise.
 

Find the Right Lawyer for Your Legal Issue!

Fast, Free, and Confidential
Top