HACKER Q&A
📣 daenz

Owed Salary, Founder Rebranded


The short version of the story:

I was a key engineer in a small startup. Towards the end of the startups life, the founder was involved in some sketchy business dealings with money. The other few employees and I worked IOUs for the final months while "promised money" was being wired, but never came. When I left, I was owed about $15k in salary. The startup is still in business with the state and re-filed their business information as "active."

Recently, the founder started a new startup in the very same space, with the same mission statement as the old startup. I suspect he is using much of the same code, as we had basically a completed product before I left the old startup. It would take years to rewrite from scratch without re-using the old code.

It seems that he is letting the old startup die, while using work that he never paid for power his new venture and raise investments. Is this a loophole? Do you have any experience with a situation like this as an employee who was owed money? I know all situations are unique, but how did your experience pan out?


  👤 redis_mlc Accepted Answer ✓
1) If you were a W2 employee, and your concern is only getting paid, then call him in the morning and say, "Have a check for $15,000.00 dated today by 2 pm or I will file a complaint with OLS."

https://olsconnect.microsoftcrmportals.com/employee-inquiry/

If he doesn't pay you, then you and your co-workers can fill in that form with the "wage theft" option and the state will investigate for free. And they are relentless.

You're also eligible for unemployment, and when you file, the state will also check what forms and payments he made. There are severe penalties for skipping that, and the state doesn't like holding the bag on UI. They will go looking for employers that do that.

2) If you're a contractor, then likely all you can do is to have a lawyer write a demand payment letter, and also state that you retain copyright on anything you wrote and weren't paid for.

Every time there's PR (press, funding rounds, etc.), mail him (and the board, if any) a copy of the letter. But move on with your life otherwise.

Lawyers typically start billing in the range of $20,000 for anything beyond a letter in large cities. If you sign any contract with a lawyer, add a "not to exceed" clause with what you can afford to spend or it will cost more than the wage theft.

IANAL, but I've done my own legal paperwork, filings and representation for two decades. It's a handy skill.


👤 Buttons840
Most predictable and most important answer: talk to a real lawyer.

👤 smileysteve
You should start by talking to an employment practices attorney, and likely send a demand for payment, then a violation for failing to pay minium wage.

If you had no equity, while the new company seems fraudulent, you have little recourse beyond salary owed.


👤 yladiz
As the other commenters mention, talk to a lawyer. There’s a lot of specifics that they would know about, that even if we knew about, can’t help with. Possibly we can recommend some lawyers if you tell us where you’re at.

👤 cellis
Just bucking the "lawyer up" theme of this thread (even though it is probably the wisest course of action): you could also threaten to expose him on social media / the press, unless he cuts you in to the "new" startup. Assuming he cares about business reputation, this could work out better than going down the legal route.