Legal Question in Employment Law in Washington

Restitution after being fired?

I was fired a few days ago at which time my boss gave me a letter outlining why I was fired. He also informed me that I needed to come back in and speak to him about restitution for food that was eaten. When I met with him, he provided a dollar amount of $2400 that is based on an assumed pattern of behavior, not documented accounts. If I do not pay the amount within one week, he says he will press charges. Can he make me pay? If so, what am I liable for? What should and can I do?


Asked on 1/03/08, 8:56 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Merry Kogut Key Peninsula Law

Re: Restitution after being fired?

Your boss has two things he can do to you. (1) File criminal charges and/or (2) File a civil complaint.

To win a criminal charges, one must prove the crime beyond a reasonable doubt - therefore, your boss would have to be able to provide hard proof.

For a civil complaint (such as Small Claims Court), one must prove the case by a perponderance of the evidence - your boss would have to convince a judge or jury that it's more likely than not that you committed a theft from him. He can also win attorney fees.

Only you, not I, know what really happened. I also don't know whether you were allowed to eat on the job. For example, when I was young I worked at a theater where we could eat as much popcorn and drink as much soda as we wanted. I also worked at another theater, where we were not allowed to do either.

Best of luck.

Merry Kogut

[email protected]

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Answered on 1/03/08, 9:48 pm


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