Confirming an Employee's Compensation and Payment of Wages
My question involves labor and employment law for the state of:
An employee of mine asked if I could sign a form he wrote up stating that he receives payment in form of check and cash (which he does). He said that he needed it in order to get a new apartment because his official income was not enough. I was extremely busy at the time and not thinking straight but now I feel like it was very suspicious. I found out after this happened that he has been acting suspicious, snooping around and asking strange questions. My company makes handmade jewelry and he is one of the main people that makes it. I could not sleep last night thinking about this. If anyone could give me some advice it would be greatly appreciated. I have a family with a 5 year old son and if something were to happen I dont know what I would do.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
Did you read the form before you signed it? Let's start with that.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
Yes I did. It states that he has been working for me since February and that he makes a certain amount in check and also in cash.
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I was just trying to help the guy out. I know that it was foolish to trust him but my eyes are wide open now. I should also mention that pretty much everything involving our business is under my wife's name and not mine.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
So, exactly what do you think he's planning to do with the form and how do you think a statement to that effect incriminates or threatens you in any way?
BTW, I am not seeing how you were "tricked".
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
"It states that he has been working for me since February and that he makes a certain amount in check and also in cash."
If the date and the amounts stated on the form are accurate, then what's your problem? I sign forms like this all the time, I think I've signed millions of 'em for employees. They need them for a variety of reasons such as mortgages, loans, new apartments, credit applications, visas, you name it. It's perfectly normal for employees to ask for these forms (or confirmation letters as they're usually called), and perfectly normal for employers to provide them. Heck, I've had to request one of these from my employers at least several times during my work life.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
Would any signed paper be considered official or would it have to be notorized? Would I be able to just deny having signed it? Being that the business is under my spouses name would my signature even be able to affect the business? I'm sorry for all the questions but this employee has been suspected of trying to possibly steal ideas and maybe hurt our business. He was acting very strange the day he asked for the signed form.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
Please read my post. Why do you have a problem with this? Why would you deny having signed this form? How are you going to be hurt by this form, a type of form that millions of employers sign millions of times every day? (And no it doesn't have to be notarized to be valid. If the boss signs it, it's valid.)
Given how common this sort of thing is, you're the one who's acting suspicious for getting so paranoid about it. Certainly your employee isn't being suspicious for requesting it, he's just acting like a normal employeed.
Having a signed form attesting to one's pay and stealing the employers ideas are two completely different and separate concepts. One has nothing whatsoever to do with the other.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
You haven't answered my questions. What do you think he is planning to do with this paper and how do you think it can harm you?
Like eerelations, I sign all kinds of forms like this for all manner of reasons, including housing, and I've never had one backfire on me yet.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
It might be the OP is not making deductions from the cash portion of the employee's pay and he's afraid the employee is going to convey this information to the IRS - except that would get the employee in trouble too if he's not reporting the cash pay. Or the employee is job hunting and will use this form to negotiate his compensation at his potential new job - and the OP translates "job hunting" and "compensation negotiating" to mean "stealing ideas." Either way the OP seems awfully paranoid about this and it's very odd indeed that he's not answering our questions - there's definitely more to the OP's story than what he's telling us.
Re: Tricked into Signing a Form by an Emmployee
Well, I'm not answering any more of his questions until he answers mine.