You did the right thing, both ethically and legally. If you pursued this legally the co would be placed in jeopardy concerning labor laws and forcing staff to work without compensation. Keep up the good work!
I Refused to Work Overtime Without Pay—It Turned Into a Legal Problem

This is Ethan’s story.
Dear Bright Side,
I have been with my current employer for less than a year but since I walked in, I have done exactly what was stated in my contract and nothing more. I have been in a situation where I was misused for showing what I was capable of and for being dedicated. I was not going to let it happen again.
Well, a couple of months ago, my manager wrote me up for always leaving on time. I was shocked because I left at 5 pm, not a minute sooner but apparently that wasn’t the problem. When I asked my boss why I was in trouble, he said, “Show some loyalty. Everyone stays until at least 6.”
I laughed because I really thought he was joking but he wasn’t. So I told him that I was just following my contract and he couldn’t really write me up for that. I guess that was a mistake. He smirked and said, “We’ll see.”
After that, I kept doing what I was doing because I thought the warning was ridiculous. Two weeks later I got another warning and the third arrived two weeks after that. It was my last and final warning as per the company policy.
It had been a month since this started and then HR called me in. I thought I would have a chance to explain my side of the story but my throat tightened when I saw a lawyer in the room. My manager was also there, looking as smug as ever.
HR told me that my boss had given me 3 written warnings and was now demanding that they let me go because I was still disobeying his orders. Then they pulled out my contract and the atmosphere in the room shifted along with their attention.
They looked over at my boss and said that writing me up for leaving on time violated company policy and my contract. The lawyer explained that forcing unpaid overtime could put the company at serious risk and he should be lucky I didn’t report him.
HR then asked if anyone else had been pressured to stay late. When I said yes, the room went quiet, and my manager stopped smirking. I told them that everyone on my team was pressured into it and none of them got paid for their work.
After that my manager was placed on probation, pending an investigation into the matter. All the employees who worked overtime got paid out and I was thanked for sticking to my job description. But at times I wonder if that was the right thing to do.
So Bright Side, what do you think? Should I put more effort into my work and hope it will get me somewhere? Or should I keep doing things this way?
Regards,
Ethan G.
Some advice from our Editorial team.

The manager was using the employees to make himself look good. He thought if he stood up to you that you would crumble. You did the right thing by telling him to shove off. He needs to learn nothing in life is free
Dear Ethan,
Thank you for reaching out and sharing your story with us. Keep doing exactly what you’re doing, but document everything and stop second-guessing yourself.
This situation proved something important: the moment you went “above and beyond” in the past, it was used against you, and the moment you held the line this time, the system corrected him, not you.
Your manager wasn’t testing your work ethic. He was testing whether he could quietly turn unpaid overtime into an expectation. The fact that HR, a lawyer, and company policy all snapped into place the second your contract came out tells you everything you need to know.
You didn’t stall your career. You exposed a liability. If advancement ever comes at this company, it should come through written expectations, paid time, and formal recognition, not loyalty tests that magically start at 6 p.m.
Do your job well, keep receipts, and if “effort” ever becomes a requirement, make sure it’s in ink and on payroll before you give it.
Sometimes going above and beyond could end up costing you more than your willing to give. And as it was in Ethan’s case, doing the bare minimum can save you from unnecessary trouble.
But Ethan isn’t the only one with HR struggles. Another one of our readers shared their experience. Read the full story here: I Refused Extra Work, and Now HR Is Cutting My Salary.
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