perpetstudent
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Maryland
This is a little bit complicated for me to explain, but I'll try my best! My fiance was working as a personal trainer for several years at Gym A. The way that pay works there is that the gym pays their trainers a percentage of their monthly sales, typically a 60% commission. So, say that a member signs up with him for 3 months of training and pays $1000. At the end of the month that he made the actual sale, the gym would pay him his 60%, which would be $600. So basically they gave him his whole cut of the sale the first month, rather than splitting it up over the 3 months the member signed up for.
This has now become a problem because at the beginning of the month, my fiance accepted a position that is a better career opportunity for him at another gym, Gym B. He put in his letter of resignation at Gym A and has agreed to still work part-time at Gym A until the end of the month so that he could finish off whatever remaining sessions he has with clients there. However, one of his clients paid for six months of training, and at the end of the month when my fiance leaves Gym A for good, she will have three months of training left that she paid for. My fiance has offered to her that he can finish up those three months of sessions with her at Gym B, which is nearby. The client is totally okay with that and willing to do that because she really wants to stay with him as her trainer. However, the manager at Gym A is having a hissy fit about that and is saying that it's not okay. He is now demanding that my fiance pay back the money that he was already paid for the sale that he made a couple months ago, which amounts to $1400, and has threatened to sue my fiance if he does not pay the money.
The thing is that that has never been the policy there. The policy has never been that if a trainer leaves or is fired, that they have to give money back to the gym that they were already paid for the sales they made months ago. In fact, my fiance has asked about what would happen in that scenario many times. Since they pay their trainers the commission on their sale upfront, then what happens if a trainer leaves and hasn't completed all the sessions a client paid for? And he has repeatedly been told that if that happens and a trainer leaves, then the gym just needs to swallow those costs and have another trainer finish the remaining sessions for free. Actually in the past, a situation like that did occur. A trainer disappeared and never came back but had a client with three months of paid sessions left. So the manager begged my fiance to finish off those 3 months with the client for free, which my fiance agreed to and did.
But now all of a sudden the manager is changing his tune and demanding that my fiance pay back $1400 to the gym. Legally do we have to do that? We're planning a wedding and I'm a full time grad student, so to us that is a substantial amount of money right now. It also doesn't really make sense to us since it's not like my fiance would be leaving his client high and dry. He will be honoring and completing those sessions left with her, just at a different location, which she has absolutely no problem with at all.
This is a little bit complicated for me to explain, but I'll try my best! My fiance was working as a personal trainer for several years at Gym A. The way that pay works there is that the gym pays their trainers a percentage of their monthly sales, typically a 60% commission. So, say that a member signs up with him for 3 months of training and pays $1000. At the end of the month that he made the actual sale, the gym would pay him his 60%, which would be $600. So basically they gave him his whole cut of the sale the first month, rather than splitting it up over the 3 months the member signed up for.
This has now become a problem because at the beginning of the month, my fiance accepted a position that is a better career opportunity for him at another gym, Gym B. He put in his letter of resignation at Gym A and has agreed to still work part-time at Gym A until the end of the month so that he could finish off whatever remaining sessions he has with clients there. However, one of his clients paid for six months of training, and at the end of the month when my fiance leaves Gym A for good, she will have three months of training left that she paid for. My fiance has offered to her that he can finish up those three months of sessions with her at Gym B, which is nearby. The client is totally okay with that and willing to do that because she really wants to stay with him as her trainer. However, the manager at Gym A is having a hissy fit about that and is saying that it's not okay. He is now demanding that my fiance pay back the money that he was already paid for the sale that he made a couple months ago, which amounts to $1400, and has threatened to sue my fiance if he does not pay the money.
The thing is that that has never been the policy there. The policy has never been that if a trainer leaves or is fired, that they have to give money back to the gym that they were already paid for the sales they made months ago. In fact, my fiance has asked about what would happen in that scenario many times. Since they pay their trainers the commission on their sale upfront, then what happens if a trainer leaves and hasn't completed all the sessions a client paid for? And he has repeatedly been told that if that happens and a trainer leaves, then the gym just needs to swallow those costs and have another trainer finish the remaining sessions for free. Actually in the past, a situation like that did occur. A trainer disappeared and never came back but had a client with three months of paid sessions left. So the manager begged my fiance to finish off those 3 months with the client for free, which my fiance agreed to and did.
But now all of a sudden the manager is changing his tune and demanding that my fiance pay back $1400 to the gym. Legally do we have to do that? We're planning a wedding and I'm a full time grad student, so to us that is a substantial amount of money right now. It also doesn't really make sense to us since it's not like my fiance would be leaving his client high and dry. He will be honoring and completing those sessions left with her, just at a different location, which she has absolutely no problem with at all.
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