Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Boss Refuses To Pay Overtime, So Worker Follows Orders Exactly And Leaves Job Half Done

by Leona Pham
October 23, 2025
in Social Issues

Sometimes, loyalty can become a trap. You give your time, your energy, even your weekends, thinking it will pay off someday. But when a company makes it clear your extra effort isn’t worth a dime, that illusion fades fast.

After being denied overtime pay, one employee decided to stop playing the “team player” role and follow the rules exactly as written. His decision left a client furious, a boss scrambling, and a company finally realizing how much damage a single act of fairness can cause when it’s turned against them.

A sales rep, doubling as a technician, was denied overtime pay by the company owner despite agreement from the technical manager

Boss Refuses To Pay Overtime, So Worker Follows Orders Exactly And Leaves Job Half Done
not the actual photo

'Company refuses to pay me overtime, I left jobsite with job incomplete and client unhappy?'

This happened years ago, when I was just starting to wake up to companies abusing employees, and employees taking it cause they are just thankful to have a job.

I worked as a sales rep for a company in the technology field. Two way radios and alarms to be specific.

Said company never had enough technical staff so I started training myself,

and asked our lead technician to teach me to program and sort out minor problems, as well as do installations.

Which was nice, since I was doing client visits 1-4 times a month, depending on how big the client was,

and then I could sort out problems while I was on site.

I ended up doing most of my client’s installations, and the manager of the technical department was happy cause its less work for him,

and he knows I do the jobs properly cause I want to keep my clients happy.

Accordingly he had no problem signing my timesheets and overtime hours as well. OT was around 10-20 hours a month, so 2-5 hours a week.

Which I think was a great deal considering I was doing the jobs of 2 people actually.

It went well for a few months until one day just before payday I get called in by the MD/owner.

He had my timesheets for the past few months in front of him.

He asked me what they were, and I gave him an explanation. He scratched my OT out, saying sales reps don’t get paid OT.

I tried to explain to him why I was claiming OT, and that he can ask the tech manager, but he was having none of it.

I was pissed as it was a little extra money, but whatever.

About a week later, I was at a client about 160km(100mi) from the office.

We had a big installation and was almost done except for programming and tidying up some cables.

I checked the time, and told the apprentice technician to pack up. He was like but we are not done with the job.

I told him I don’t care, I don’t get paid OT, its 2 pm and it's still a 2 hour drive back to the office.

We packed up, client comes out and I gave him the explanation, saying we will be back the following morning (to finish what was effectively 30-45min of work)

Client wasn’t happy, but understands that I don’t get paid to work late. I was on the road about 15min when my phone rang.

It was the owner (same one that said I don’t get paid OT) he asked what was I doing and why I wasn’t finishing the job, as the client was...

I told him the explanation above, and then I said that he said I don’t get paid overtime, so I’m not working late, and will drive back to finish tomorrow.

Silence for about 5 seconds as I assume he realised I was following his express instructions, and there was nothing he could do.

He told me to go back and finish the job and we can talk about it later. I told him no, unless he pays me OT.

He says he will, I tell him to put it in an email before I will turn back. I could hear him go red in the face, he said he...

I switched on my laptop, connected my dongle(this was still before smart phones and email on out phones).

A few minutes later, the email came through, We turned around and finished the job.

I got paid my overtime, and never again was there a query over my timesheets or hours booked.

I was the only rep out of 5 that got paid overtime.

OP later edited the post to add a few things

Edit for more info: This has blown up to where I can’t answer all the questions or reply to all the comments.

Thanks for the awards and wholesome replies. Of I don’t reply to your comment, nothing personal, I will try reply to as many I can in between work.

I will answer some common questions on here for clarity:

1. This happened in South Africa. The labour board there is not very efficient, especially if it comes to smaller companies.

Also, this employer had extensive government contracts, and knew a lot of people personally.

So even reporting him would not have helped much. And if they do investigate, it's pretty easy to get the investigation squashed with a bribe.

2. My contract stipulated I was not entitled to OT. I negotiated OT with the technical manager as it would be mutually beneficial for both him

and me if I did tech work as well, and ultimately the company would save money as well so he agreed to it without any objections.

3. The OT did not amount to much every months as it was based on basic salary which was low.

Commission made up 3/4 of my take home pay, excl allowances. So it wasn’t much about the money, more about the principle.

4. Other sales reps refused to do tech work as they said that was not why they were appointed.

The other guys also were on the wrong side of 40 and in shape. If you can call round a shape.

I was in my early 20s and wanted to get ahead so I did extra to prove myself.

5. The OT that he scratched put did not get paid. At least not to his knowing.

I added extra hours over the next 2 months to make up for that, so I did get paid eventually.

6. This happened in ‘08, so before smartphones and voice recording etc. My work phone was a Nokia that had no internet ability.

I could call and text. Don’t think it even had a camera. We connected to the internet on our laptops via a dongle.

It is a device that takes a sim card, plugs into the USB port and then connects to the cell network. Almost like dial-up internet.

It even made a similar sound. My laptop did not even have wifi. If I wanted to connect at the office I had to plug in the LAN cable.

There’s something deeply satisfying about seeing corporate stubbornness backfire. This story reminded me of those quiet victories workers get when they realize, “Wait, I don’t owe this company free labor.” The OP didn’t yell or quit on the spot. He simply matched the company’s energy: no overtime pay, no overtime work.

I’ve been there too, putting in extra hours for “team spirit” only to realize the appreciation rarely extends to the paycheck. Reading this, I couldn’t help but smile. Sometimes, the only way to make a point is to stop saving people from their own bad policies.

Workplace psychologist Dr. Marie G. McIntyre, author of Secrets to Winning at Office Politics, notes that “many employers view unpaid overtime as employee loyalty rather than exploitation.” It’s a cultural blind spot where gratitude becomes currency and burnout follows fast.

A 2021 Forbes survey revealed that nearly 59% of employees globally work unpaid overtime weekly, with an average of 7.3 hours lost per worker. That’s nearly a full day’s pay erased by company culture. OP’s decision to stop working unpaid time wasn’t rebellion, it was self-preservation.

Dr. Aaron Balick, an organizational consultant and author of The Psychodynamics of Work and Organizations, adds that when management fails to reward extra effort, “employees begin to withdraw discretionary effort”, the very initiative that keeps companies afloat. In this case, the withdrawal happened mid-job, and it was entirely justified.

The story also reflects a shift in workplace awareness. Younger workers are increasingly unwilling to tolerate unpaid labor; a LinkedIn Workforce Confidence report in 2024 showed that three out of four professionals value work-life boundaries over promotion potential. This employee’s refusal to comply without compensation marked the moment he reclaimed his worth.

By making the boss put that overtime approval in writing, the OP not only protected himself but set a precedent for fairness. It’s a subtle but powerful example of psychological boundary-setting in the workplace, something modern professionals are finally learning to do without guilt.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

These Redditors applauded OP’s firm professionalism

heaven_and_hell_80 − The "email it before I turn around and go back"part was brilliant. Never forget to get it in writing!

MyDangerDog − Great job standing up for yourself. Short sighted and unappreciative management is the worst.

This group related through personal experience, recalling similar run-ins with hypocritical companies that demand extra effort but refuse fair pay

thekcar − In a different field of work, I was nearly always the last to leave.

Old management appreciated it; new management insisted that there was to be no more overtime.

I clocked out on time. Got chewed out. I reiterated company policy. I was given exception.

I was later offered middle management. I noted that the position is locked weekly salary.

I put the numbers on paper for another middle management person's hours worked vs hourly pay rate,

and left the lower numbers on paper on the desk in plain view of not just the one middle management individual, but any staff walking by.

I left the job within weeks; one by one nearly the entire staff changed. I can't imagine why.

.. I read these stories and I can't help but remember a few of my own along the way...

Omega_totalis − DONT WORK EXTRA HOURS!... WHY AREN'T YOU WORKING EXTRA HOURS?!

This commenter focused on the bigger picture, agreeing that most people learn too late how companies exploit loyalty

[Reddit User] − This happened years ago, when I was just starting to wake up to companies abusing employees,

and employees taking it cause they are just thankful to have a job.

I've (and I assume most people) also come to this realization too late that companies typically don't have your best intentions in mind,

though there are some fantastic companies out there that do care about their staff.

I stand up for myself now, even if it means I have to find a new job (in a very job-seeker friendly market).

I also make every attempt to inform my coworkers at any job I have of their rights and the reality of the employee/employer relationship.

I won't pretend to be a champion of my fellow workers rights and needs,

but g__damn do I try to put it in my younger coworkers minds that these companies need you way more than you need them.

Good job standing up for yourself. Keep on keeping on

These users cheered for accountability, saying the boss was lucky OP didn’t quit or go to a competitor

spock_9519 − He better be glad you didn't go to a competitor.

lazylazybum − I hope you get the back pay when he scratched off the OT on the previous time sheet

baracuda68 − I hope your apprentice got paid, too!!

backward_z − He scratched my OT out, saying sales reps don’t get paid OT. I tried to explain to him why I was claiming OT,

and that he can ask the tech manager, but he was having none of it.

I was pissed as it was a little extra money, but whatever. Right then and there, I'd be throwing a b__ch fit.

You PAY ME FOR WHAT I'VE ALREADY WORKED. PERIOD. If you don't like that I went into overtime, we adopt that policy going forward,

I won't work overtime forward, but you don't get to turn the clock back on work you've already benefited from.

This commenter shared a cautionary corporate tale

HoldFastO2 − Back in the early '00s, a mid-sized German company a friend of mine worked at were looking to switch their old ERP system to SAP.

Since that kind of switch can be majorly disruptive to a company's processes, they were preparing as much as possible.

That included designating one guy as project manager, giving him a team, even sending him on lots of seminars at SA

(the company, you pay through the nose for those seminars).

From all accounts, the guy was good, did an excellent job organizing things,

but it was obviously a lot of work, and he was accruing OT hours like there was no tomorrow.

Unfortunately, the company had a policy of not paying out OT, only letting you take time off instead.

But he'd never be allowed to take off that much time (would've amounted to at least a couple of months),

so he requested an exception be made and his OT hours be paid out. The company refused, so he quit.

Gave his notice three months before the "Go Live" date of the new system (Germany has very long notice periods).

He apparently left excellent notes, so it wasn't as much of a c__astrophe as it could've been,

but the whole thing still cost them a lot more than that overtime payout would have.

Would you have done the same, or tried to negotiate face-to-face? Either way, it’s a reminder that knowing your worth, and putting it in writing, is the real power move.

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

Related Posts

A Woman Refused To Eat Food After The Meal Was Eaten Without Her
Social Issues

A Woman Refused To Eat Food After The Meal Was Eaten Without Her

5 months ago
Man Refused To Take A Smelly Co-Worker To The Airport, And Now Everyone Thinks He’s The Jerk
Social Issues

Man Refused To Take A Smelly Co-Worker To The Airport, And Now Everyone Thinks He’s The Jerk

2 weeks ago
This Collector Told His Friend to Never Come Back After He Destroyed $6K Worth of Antiques
Social Issues

This Collector Told His Friend to Never Come Back After He Destroyed $6K Worth of Antiques

4 months ago
Disturbed Boyfriend Plans To End Three-Year Romance After Girlfriend Proposes Opening Their Monogamous Bond
Social Issues

Disturbed Boyfriend Plans To End Three-Year Romance After Girlfriend Proposes Opening Their Monogamous Bond

4 weeks ago
Boss Forces Woman To Change Out Of Gym Clothes, Accidentally Destroys His Own Career
Social Issues

Boss Forces Woman To Change Out Of Gym Clothes, Accidentally Destroys His Own Career

2 months ago
Mom-To-Be Slammed As “Selfish” After Refusing To Let Another Child Nap In Her Baby’s Crib
Social Issues

Mom-To-Be Slammed As “Selfish” After Refusing To Let Another Child Nap In Her Baby’s Crib

3 months ago

TRENDING

Stepmom Refuses To Take Her Husband’s Son On Vacation, Then Learns A Hard Truth
Social Issues

Stepmom Refuses To Take Her Husband’s Son On Vacation, Then Learns A Hard Truth

by Layla Bui
November 8, 2025
0

...

Read more
Kid Carves Dad’s Truck, Dad Teaches a Lesson With the Nintendo Switch
Social Issues

Kid Carves Dad’s Truck, Dad Teaches a Lesson With the Nintendo Switch

by Sunny Nguyen
November 21, 2025
0

...

Read more
36-Year-Old’s Marriage Strains As His Pregnant Teen Daughter And Newborn Grandson Arrive, Testing His Wife’s Silent Resentments
Social Issues

36-Year-Old’s Marriage Strains As His Pregnant Teen Daughter And Newborn Grandson Arrive, Testing His Wife’s Silent Resentments

by Jeffrey Stone
December 2, 2025
0

...

Read more
She Ordered Rugs And Disrespect, Got A Locked Gate And A Long Drive Home
Social Issues

She Ordered Rugs And Disrespect, Got A Locked Gate And A Long Drive Home

by Charles Butler
November 21, 2025
0

...

Read more
Woman Told Her Daughter She Never Wanted Her, Husband Takes The Kids And Leaves
Social Issues

Woman Told Her Daughter She Never Wanted Her, Husband Takes The Kids And Leaves

by Layla Bui
October 13, 2025
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM