dissenting, in which HEELY, Circuit Judge, joins.
Because the majority’s analysis disregards the unambiguous distinction between tips or gratuities and service charges or porterage, as reflected by the applicable law and the agreement of the parties, I respectfully dissent. I believe that, under the circumstances of this case, the trial court was correct in its ruling that “service charges [or porterage fees] are wages under HRS § 387-1 and therefore can be used by [the Hotels] in their entirety to satisfy [the Hotels’] obligation to pay the minimum wage established by HRS § 387-2.”
A. Porterage Is Not Voluntary
Under the Master Agreement, the terms “gratuity” and “tip” are synonymous. Section 38.6(A) of the Agreement states: “A. Gratuity/Tip. A gratuity/tip is defined as any gift or payment given by a guest or customer for service rendered.” In contrast, “porterage” is defined separately in section 38.6(B) of the Agreement “as any service charge or pre-negotiated payment by a guest [or] a customer for service rendered.” (Emphasis added.)
It is common knowledge that gratuities, like tips, are voluntary payments made or gifts given by patrons in recognition of or appreciation for a particular service. A service charge, on the other hand, is a predetermined sum that patrons agree to pay in exchange for a particular service. In this ease, the particular service rendered is group baggage service for which porterage, a service charge, is levied.1 The fact that porterage is a payment required of hotel guests who elect to have group baggage service precludes it from being a gratuity. Hotel guests most assuredly would not consider porterage a “gift” that they have freely determined to pay to the Hotels for group baggage service. Furthermore, the Bellhelp render this service to the Hotels as their employers and not to the individual guests. A hotel guest, whose bags are handled as a group, has no discretion regarding the amount of the service charge; however, the guest retains the option of paying a gratuity, in addition to the service charge, if he or she so chooses. Inasmuch as the majority admits that porterage is not a tip, and tips are defined as the equivalent of gratuities, it logically follows that porterage cannot be a gratuity.
My difficulty in following the majority’s analysis and interpretation of HRS § 387-1 is due to the majority’s apparent misreading of the statute. HRS § 387-1 specifically excludes “tips or gratuities of any kind.” A plain reading of the statute indicates that tips and gratuities are synonymous, that is, that tips and gratuities are “alternative terms for the same thing.” Random House College Dictionary 934 (Rev. ed. 1979) (“or” is “used to connect alternative terms for the *360same thing”). The majority, however, states that HRS § 387-1 “expressly, but qualifiedly, excludes ‘tips’ and ‘gratuities of any kind’ from its definition of wages[,]” majority opinion at 354, 893 P.2d at 782 (emphasis added), thereby implying two separate and distinct categories. Consistent with the plain language of HRS § 387-1, the parties to the Master Agreement have clearly demonstrated their understanding and intention to treat tips and gratuities synonymously by defining “gratuity/tip” as one in the same. Nevertheless, in support of its position, the majority declares that, because there is no definition of “gratuities of any kind” in either HRS § 387-1 or DLIR § 12-20-1, “we must assume that the legislature would not enact superfluous language [and therefore] ‘gratuities of any kind’ must be something other than ‘tips.’” Majority opinion at 355, 893 P.2d at 783 (citations omitted). However, the implication that “something other than tips” includes a service charge is simply wrong. Such a holding would be incongruous because DLIR § 12-20-1 specifically and plainly draws a bright line between “tips or gratuities” and compulsory or negotiated service charges, e.g., porterage, thereby establishing two separate and distinct categories.
Furthermore, the definitions found in the Master Agreement, as agreed to by the Bell-help and the Hotels, are consistent with the DLIR definitions. “Tips,” as defined under DLIR § 12-20-1, is identical to the definition of “gratuity/tip” found in the Master Agreement; likewise, the phrase “compulsory or negotiated service charges,” as defined under the regulation, is equivalent to the definition of porterage found in the Master Agreement.
I agree with the majority that “the DLIR is only authorized to define relevant terms [of chapter 387 Wage and Hour] as long as its definitions do not limit the generality of the terms.” Majority opinion at 355, 893 P.2d at 783 (citing HRS § 387-11). Indeed, the plain and unambiguous language of the statute and DLIR § 12-20-1 indicate that the DLIR has not limited the generality of the term “gratuities of any kind,” which obviously includes any gift or gratuity voluntarily bestowed, be it monetary or non-monetary or be it in recognition of service or for no particular reason. However, to conclude, as the majority does, that compulsory service charges may be included in “gratuities of any kind” is illogical and expands the generality of the term to render it meaningless because it disregards the distinction between tips or gratuities and service charges set forth by the statute, the DLIR, and the Master Agreement.
Gratuities/tips have been used similarly by other sources as well. For example, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) examined a club that did not permit tipping, but added ten percent to cafe charges against members’ accounts, which amounts were then disbursed to waiters. In finding that these amounts constituted wages within the Social Security Act, the IRS held that “the 10 per cent added to the cafe charge is an arbitrary charge fixed by the club which the member is required to pay and is clearly not a gratuity.” S.S.T. 145, 1937-1 C.B., superseded in Rev. Rul. 69-28, 1969-1, C.B. 270. Additionally, as the majority recognizes, title 29, sections 531.55(a) and (b) of the Code of Federal Regulations clearly hold that service charges may be used to satisfy the wage requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).
The majority states that “upon superficial examination, it would seem logical to conclude that porterage payments are not gratuities because they are neither voluntary nor discretionary.” Majority opinion at 358, 893 P.2d at 786. I submit that, even upon a more in-depth examination, this conclusion is more than “seem[ingly] logical,” it is manifestly logical. Under the plain meaning of the Master Agreement, a gratuity, unlike porterage, is a gift or payment that is freely and voluntarily given by the hotel guests; a service charge, such as porterage, is not. Therefore, porterage simply cannot be considered “gratuities of any kind.”
Courts in other jurisdictions have also held that compulsory service charges are not gratuities, and therefore, service charges fall within the applicable statutory definition of wage. For example, in Restaurants and Patisseries Longchamps, Inc. v. Pedrick, 52 F.Supp. 174 (S.D.N.Y.1943), the plaintiff brought an action to recover employment *361taxes that it alleged were erroneously assessed. The plaintiff operated a number of restaurants where tipping was not permitted, but where customers were assessed a ten percent service charge, which was then apportioned among certain staff members. In finding that the charges constituted wages within the Federal Insurance Contributions Act, the court held that “[a] patron in a restaurant is under no compulsion to leave a ‘tip.’ In the instant case[,] the voluntary aspect is completely eliminated.” Id. at 174-75.
In Cohen v. Playboy Clubs International, Inc., 19 Ill.App.3d 215, 220-21, 311 N.E.2d 336 (1974), the court examined whether a fifteen percent mandatory service charge, added separately to the bills of private club members, was properly taxable under either of two taxes. The plaintiff maintained that the service charge, which stated that it included a gratuity, was, in effect, a tip or gratuity. The court found this contention to be without merit, holding that
[t]he service charge, though a fixed percentage of the bill, is mandatory. The customer has no discretion as to the decision to pay or not to pay the amount of the payment. He may or may not leave an additional amount as a gratuity. If he does, that amount is within his personal discretion. However, the service charge is not in any sense gratuitous.
Id. at 220-21, 311 N.E.2d at 340 (emphasis in original). The Cohen court noted that the fact that the service charge may be segregated from the food and beverage charges and that the service charge passes on to the waitstaff did not change the correctness of its holding. Id.
The question before the court in Beaman v. Westward Ho Hotel Co., 89 Ariz. 1, 357 P.2d 327 (1960), was whether a “service charge” constituted wages for which contributions to the Unemployment Compensation Fund were required to be paid. In that case, the hotel, which did not permit tipping, charged a service fee to its banquet and club customers, which was then passed on to the staff. In holding that the service fees were not tips but wages under the applicable Arizona statute,2 the court stated that
[w]hatever the payments in question here may be, they are not tips. They are not in any sense gratuitous. The patron does not control the amount, if any, to be given the one who waits on him. He does not even have anything to say about who shall share in the distribution of the money. It is common knowledge that patrons do not as a rule tip [those] with whom they do not come into direct contact. A tip is in law, if not always in fact, a voluntary payment. It is not the subject of negotiation or contract, as are the “service charges” here.
Id. at 4, 357 P.2d at 329.
In Cuevas v. Monroe Street City Club, Inc., 752 F.Supp. 1405 (N.D.Ill.1990), to which the majority cites in footnote 5 on page 354-355, 893 P.2d on page 782-783 of the majority opinion, eight ex-employees sued a private dining club, alleging violation of the FLSA. When examining the plaintiffs’ minimum wage claims, the court held that most of the plaintiffs had received weekly pay in excess of the minimum wage requirements for the total hours worked because, “[a]l-though the wage agreements ... were for $2.01 per hour[,] ... [plaintiffs] also received shares of a compulsory service charge billed to customers, [and] those shares are included in the determination of actual minimum wages paid to employees[J” Id. at 1417 n. 18 (internal citation omitted and emphasis added); see also Marshall v. Newport Hotel, 24 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 497, 503, 1979 WL 15529 (1979).
The Cuevas court referenced the provisions of title 29, sections 531.55(a) and (b) of the Code of Federal Regulations as supportive of its holding, which, as noted above, provide that compulsory service charges may be used to satisfy the wage requirements of the FLSA.
*362Moreover, in Revenue Ruling 66-74, Cumulative Bulletin 1966-1, the IRS advised that, when a club that does not permit direct tipping collects mandatory “gratuities” from its customers, the service charge so collected is not a tip or gratuity, but a wage subject to applicable taxes. The IRS noted that it has consistently held service charges to be wages and has differentiated between such charges and tips or gratuities. See also Rev.Rul. 59-252, 1959-2 C.B. 215; Rev.Rul. 57-397, 1957-2 C.B. 628.
The majority summarily dismisses the relevance of the plethora of authority holding that compulsory service charges are wages on the basis that many of these authorities involve tax issues. Majority opinion at 356-357 n. 11, 893 P.2d at 784-785 n. 11. However, the majority fails to cite any authority for the proposition that compulsory service charges are gratuities. Their reliance on the proposition that parties may contract to include porterage within the phrase “gratuities of any kind” is irrelevant and misplaced because, as discussed infra, the Master Agreement in this case does not include such an agreement. The majority also states that, had the legislature intended to have wages interpreted broadly to include porterage, they would have done so. Id. I submit that the legislature has done so by specifically providing that “every employer shall pay to each employee employed by the employer wages,” HRS § 387-2, and that ‘“wage’ means legal tender of the United States.” HRS § 387-1. Such expansive language that only excludes tips or gratuities clearly includes service charges, which includes porterage. I also submit that had the legislature intended to exclude service charges from the definition of wage, or include service charges within “gratuities of any kind,” the language was readily available for so stating. In any event, none of the positions taken by the majority turns porterage, as a compulsory service charge, into a gratuity.
Relying on St. Paul Hilton Hotel v. Commissioner of Taxation, 298 Minn. 202, 214 N.W.2d 351 (1974),3 and Rutledge’s affidavit, the majority contends that “porterage was designed to replace the tips and gratuities lost by the [Bjellhelp with the advent of large tour groups.” Majority opinion at 358, 893 P.2d at 786. The majority, citing to section 38.7(a)(1) of the Master Agreement, takes the position that “porterage retains an element of discretion or voluntariness, [and is] unlike typical service charges, because non-prearranged groups who visit the Hotels can choose for themselves to be handled as a group, with the convenience of porterage, or individually, under the tip system.” Majority opinion at 358 n. 13, 893 P.2d at 786 n. 13 (emphasis added). The majority also notes that, when hotel guests opt for group baggage handling, but refuse to pay porterage, “the Master Agreement contractually obligates the Hotels to pay [to its employees the] guaranteed amount [established for pre-ar-ranged group movement].” Majority opinion at 358 n. 13, 893 P.2d at 786 n. 13.
Clearly, the fact that guests in a non-prearranged group can choose, upon arrival at a hotel, to be handled as a pre-arranged group4 is of no consequence as to whether porterage is discretionary or voluntary. It *363remains compulsory. Patrons of any business establishment are always free to decide whether they will avail themselves of an offered service for which a service fee is charged. The element of discretion or volun-tariness applies only to the decision whether to accept or reject the offered service. Once accepted, the charge for the service is compulsory. In this case, the pre-determined charge owed to the hotel is a typical service charge, of which the amount or obligation to pay, is not controlled by the guest. Once choosing to be treated as a pre-arranged group for purposes of baggage handling, that guest is legally obligated to pay the established service charge for the group baggage service.
Further, it is untenable, to say the least, that porterage can be transformed, as the majority suggests, from a compulsory service charge to one that is discretionary or voluntary simply because a guest, who had opted for group baggage service, failed to pay the agreed upon fee. Under the Master Agreement, a guest’s failure to pay obligates the Hotels to pay the porterage fees to the employees. Clearly, the Hotels could, in turn, elect to legally pursue the guest for any owed porterage fees. The majority concedes that the porterage fee paid by the Hotels to the Bellhelp because of non-payment by a guest would properly be designated as a wage. Majority opinion at 358 n. 13, 893 P.2d at 786 n. 13. This strained exception highlights the inconsistency of the majority’s application and the mischaracterization that must be employed in order to redefine porterage fees as gratuities in this ease. I submit that, under the circumstances of this case, porterage is not in any sense a gratuity.
B. Trade Meaning Versus Common Meaning
The majority frames the “dispositive issue” in this case as “whether porterage falls within the general category ‘gratuities of any kind ’ under HRS § 387-1.”5 Majority opinion at 355, 893 P.2d at 783 (emphasis added). Because the legislative history provides no guidance with respect to the phrase “gratuities of any kind,” the majority points to the “pertinent rules of statutory construction in these circumstances,” majority opinion at 355, 893 P.2d at 783, found in In re Taxes, Hawaiian Pineapple Company, Limited, 45 Haw. 167, 363 P.2d 990 (1961), to support their holding that the Hotels are not entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. The “pertinent rule” on which the majority focuses essentially provides that, where a statute regulates a business, the words of such statute should be given the meaning as understood in the business rather than their ordinary meaning, and such trade or commercial meaning is a fact to be proved in each case. What the majority neglects to point out is that in Hawaiian Pineapple, this court has stated that “[t]he rule presuming the trade meaning of words in a statute involving or directed at a particular trade is the exeeption[,]” id. at 177, 363 P.2d at 996, and “[i]n order to invoke the presumption in any case, it is necessary that the trade meaning of the term under consideration be adequately proven.” Id. at 179, 363 P.2d at 997. Further, this court implicitly held that the burden of proving a “commercial or trade meaning” to defeat the “common meaning” is on the party asserting the trade meaning. Because the legislative intent as reflected in HRS § 387-1 and DLIR § 12-20-1 is clear, the Bellhelp are foreclosed from asserting thát the service charge of porterage is a gratuity.
However, even assuming, but not agreeing, that the majority is correct, review of the record clearly indicates that the business or trade meaning of the terms at issue in this *364case would yield the same result. The “business” in this case is the hotel industry. The trade meaning of the terms “gratuities” and “porterage” as defined by the parties directly involved in the hotel industry is clearly set forth in the Master Agreement. As previously stated, under the Agreement a “gratuity/tip” is “any gift or payment given by a guest or customer for service rendered.” Master Agreement, section 38.6(A). “Porterage” is defined separately in section 38.6(B) of the Agreement “as any service charge or pre-negotiated payment by a guest [or] a customer for service rendered.” Clearly, under “the meaning [of the subject terms] as understood in the business,” gratuities are not porterage. Therefore, the majority’s assumption that the trade meaning of “porterage” and “gratuities of any kind” are facts to be resolved at trial, is erroneous. The Master Agreement is clear and unambiguous. When a contract between two parties has a readily discernible meaning, there is no need to search for extrinsic evidence to illuminate already clear wording. See Cho Mark Oriental Food v. K & K International, 73 Haw. 509, 520, 836 P.2d 1057, 1063-64 (1992) (“A contract term or phrase is only ambiguous when it is capable of being reasonably understood in more ways than one.”); Pelosi v. Wailea Ranch Estates, 10 Haw.App. 424, 436, 876 P.2d 1320, 1327 (“if the language ... is clear and unambiguous ... construction of the covenant is a question of law, appropriate for summary judgment disposition” (citations omitted)), reconsideration denied, — Haw.App. -, 879 P.2d 591, cert. denied, 77 Hawai'i 373, 884 P.2d 1149 (1994); see also Smith v. New England Mutual Life Ins. Co., 72 Haw. 531, 537, 827 P.2d 635, 638 (1992); Amfac v. Waikiki Beachcomber Inv., 74 Haw. 85, 108, 839 P.2d 10, 24, reconsideration denied, 74 Haw. 650, 843 P.2d 144 (1992).
In coneludmg that a genurne issue of material fact exists, the majority mistakenly relies on extrinsic evidence, namely, the prior Master Agreements, Rutledge’s affidavit, and the employee pay stubs. The majority implies that, because of the historical development of porterage as a kind of gratuity, the issue whether porterage fees are gratuities or wages within the meaning of HRS § 387-1 must be resolved at trial and not at the summary judgment stage. However, because the language defining porterage and gratuities in the current Master Agreement is unambiguous, the extrinsic evidence upon which the majority relies is inadmissible. See Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 56(e) (“[supporting and opposing affidavits ... shall set forth facts as would be admissible in evidence....” (Emphasis added.)).6
Nevertheless, even if I were to agree that the extrinsic evidence may have been appropriately considered, the current Master Agreement evinces a different and distinct treatment of porterage by the Hotels and the Bellhelp when they agreed on the definition of porterage as a “service charge or pre-negotiated payment.” The specific intent of the Bellhelp to treat porterage differently than in the past is acknowledged by the majority’s statement that the “uncontested affidavit submitted by Rutledge claims that porterage was designed to replace the tips and gratuities lost by the [B]ellhelp with the advent of large tour groups.” Majority opinion at 358, 893 P.2d at 786 (emphasis added). Clearly, the fact that the current Agreement specifically defines porterage as a “service charge or pre-negotiated payment” and the fact that porterage was not included within *365the definition of “gratuity/tip” demonstrates a conscious choice and recognition by the parties that porterage fees are not gratuities. When parties to a contract unambiguously define the terms therein, there is no room for interpretation. Hanagami v. China Airlines, 67 Haw. 357, 688 P.2d 1139 (1984). Further, it is well established that the court’s function is to construe and enforce contracts made by the parties, not to make or alter them. Strouss v. Simmons, 66 Haw. 32, 657 P.2d 1004 (1982); Scotella v. Osgood, 4 Haw.App. 20, 659 P.2d 73 (1983).
C. Ownership of Porterage Is Irrelevant
Relative to section 38.5(A)(1) of the Master Agreement, wherein porterage is deemed to be the “exclusive property” of the Bellhelp, the majority takes the position that
the Hotels are not prohibited by HRS chapter 387 from reaching an agreement with Local 5 to (1) collect “porterage” from hotel guests on behalf of the Bellhelp, and then (2) transmit this “exclusive property” of the Bellhelp as an addendum to their paid wages. Cf. Williams, 315 U.S. at 397-98, 62 S.Ct. at 666-67 (permitting the opposite arrangement, where gratuities in the form of tips are included in employee wages pursuant to an agreement between the parties); Hayden v. Bowen, 404 F.2d at 686 (inferring from Williams that tips should be excluded absent such an agreement).
Majority opinion at 355-356, 893 P.2d at 783-784 (footnote omitted).
First, the Master Agreement does allow the Hotels to “collect ‘porterage’ from hotel guests on behalf of the Bellhelp.” Second, the majority’s reliance on Williams as supporting the proposition that nothing in chapter 387 prohibits an arrangement whereby porterage would be transmitted to the Bell-help as an addendum to their paid wages is misplaced.
In Williams, after passage of the FLSA, two railroad terminal companies informed redcaps that they would be guaranteed the minimum wage and that tips from travelers would be included in determining the amount the railroads would pay. The Supreme Court examined the contention of the redcaps that the railroads were statutorily required to pay them the minimum wage exclusive of any tips they received. In holding that the tips were actually compensation paid to redcaps and therefore includable as wages, the Williams Court stated:
Where ... an arrangement is made by which the employee agrees to turn over the tips to the employer [to be paid as wages to its employees], in the absence of statutory interference, no reason is perceived for its invalidity. The employer ... may take the compensation paid by travelers for the service, whether paid as a fixed charge or as a tip.
Id. at 397-98, 62 S.Ct. at 666-67 (emphasis added, internal citations and footnote omitted).
It is important to note that, at the time Williams was decided, the term “wages” in the FLSA “ha[d] no fixed meaning either including or excluding gratuities.” Id. at 407, 62 S.Ct. at 671. Both Williams and Hayden were decided prior to an amendment explicitly excluding tips from minimum wage calculations, and, although the majority would have us believe otherwise, neither case allowed a party to circumvent the clear direction of a statute by way of an agreement. The majority claims that “the ability to contractually designate ownership of gratuities is consistent with currently applicable regulations,” Majority opinion at 356 n. 8, 893 P.2d at 784 n. 8, and cites the following language found in title 29, section 531.52 of the Code of Federal Regulations: “In the absence of any agreement to the contrary between the recipient and a third party, a tip becomes the property of the person in recognition of whose service it is presented by the customer.” Majority opinion at 356 n. 8, 893 P.2d at 784 n. 8 (emphasis added by majority). I note, however, that the aforementioned sentence is preceded by the following language:
A tip is a sum presented by a customer as a gift or gratuity in recognition of some service performed for [the customer]. It is to be distinguished from a charge, if any, made for the service. Whether a tip is to be given, and its amount, are matters determined solely by the customer, and generally [the customer] has the right to *366determine who shall be the recipient of [the] gratuity.
29 C.F.R. § 531.52 (emphasis added). Clearly, the aforementioned language differentiates between gifts presented voluntarily by a customer and pre-determined service charges. The fact that the Code of Federal Regulations treats tips in a particular manner has no bearing on the clear mandate of Hawaii’s minimum wage statute, which does not in any manner exclude service charges, such as porterage, from the definition of wage. Therefore, under the circumstances of this case, the parties are not free to redefine the service charge or porterage as a gratuity, in contradiction of HRS § 387-4.5, which provides that “[n]o provision of [chapter 387] may in any way be contravened or set aside by private agreement.” Moreover, even if the parties herein were free to contract, as the majority suggests they could pursuant to HRS § 387-13 (to bargain collectively to establish a minimum wage in excess of that prescribed by law), they did not do so, and the Master Agreement clearly does not contain any agreement that porterage payments are to be excluded as gratuities from the definition of “wages.”
Additionally, the fact that porterage “shall be considered the exclusive property of the bargaining unit employees and are payable only to the appropriate bargaining unit employees,” Master Agreement, § 38.5(A)(1), has no relevance to whether porterage payments are gratuities. In any business, certain monies may be earmarked as belonging to a landlord, utility company, employee or other creditor. A designation of ownership of porterage, which is passed through the employer to the Bellhelp, does not change the fact that such amounts are not discretionary or voluntary payments by the guests. For example, as the Supreme Court in Williams stated:
To interpret “pay wages”[7] as limited to money passing from the terminal to the redcap [thereby excluding tips to the red caps] would let construction of an important statute turn on a narrow technicality. It, of course, can make no practical difference whether the redcaps first turn in their tips and then receive their minimum wage or are charged with the tips received up to the minimum wage per hour.
Id. at 407, 62 S.Ct. at 671. Here, there is no practical difference as to whom the parties designate as the owner of the porterage because such fees are not voluntary or discretionary and, thus, not gratuities. More importantly, “wages” under HRS § 387-1, unlike the FLSA prior to its amendment, has a fixed meaning—it excludes tips and gratuities, but does not exclude service charges or porterage.
D. Hawaii’s Tip Credit Allowance Is Irrelevant
The majority’s reliance on the amount of Hawaii’s tip credit allowance is irrelevant to the case before us. In 1966, the FLSA was amended to provide a tip credit to employers. As a result, in certain cases, employers could count a certain percentage of the tips received by their employees when making up the minimum wage requirements. In 1969, Hawaii established a tip credit. Although the amount of federal tip credit allowed has fluctuated over time, Hawaii’s tip credit allowance has remained at twenty cents, despite the subsequent increases in Hawaii’s minimum wage. The majority concludes that Hawaii’s relatively small tip credit allowance somehow evinces a legislative intent regarding the assignment of porterage. The majority interprets Hawaii’s minimal tip credit allowance as standing for the proposition that employers in Hawaii are expected to meet their minimum wage requirements with their “own money.” As previously noted, the Master Agreement’s provision of “exclusive property” does not transform porterage into a gratuity.
The fact that the legislature has chosen to address tips in a particular manner has no bearing on its treatment of service charges. The majority has presented no persuasive nexus between the two distinct categories nor have they presented any persuasive evi*367dence of legislative intent that the two distinct categories were meant to be tied together so torturously. The majority concedes that porterage is not a tip and, by suggesting that porterage may fall into the category of “gratuities of any kind,” the majority essentially creates a third category, namely, “compulsory gratuities,” Which is an oxymoron.
E. No Genuine Issues of Material Fact Exist
The Bellhelp assert that summary judgment should not be granted as there remains a material issue of fact regarding whether porterage is a gratuity in trade usage. It is well settled that summary judgment is appropriate “when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Ross v. Stouffer Hotel Co. (Hawai'i), Ltd., 76 Hawai'i 454, 457, 879 P.2d 1037, 1040 (1994). Here, the Bellhelp had the opportunity but failed to make a sufficient showing to defeat summary judgment; consequently, their appeal must fail. See Rumbaoa v. J. Rudnick & Sons, Inc., 863 F.Supp. 1193, 1195 (D.Haw.1994) (“At least some significant probative evidence tending to support the complaint must be produced.”); Hall v. State, 7 Haw.App. 274, 284, 756 P.2d 1048, 1055 (1988) (summary-judgment is appropriate when party fails to make a sufficient showing), cert. denied, sub nom., Hall v. Hawai'i, 488 U.S. 803, 109 S.Ct. 33, 102 L.Ed.2d 13 (1988); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 2552-53, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986).
Because there is no question that, under the circumstances of this case, porterage fees are not gratuities within the meaning of HRS § 387-1, I would affirm the trial court’s ruling that, as a matter of law, porterage can be used by the Hotels to satisfy their obligation to pay the minimum wage established by HRS § 387-2.
. As noted by the majority, the Master Agreement provides that "[a]U tours and groups where baggage is handled by Bellhelp as a group movement shall be guaranteed!] a porterage. ... Effective March 1, 1992 the porterage amount shall be Two dollars ($2.00) per person for each check-in and Two dollars ($2.00) per person for each check-out.” Master Agreement, § 38.7(A).
. The Arizona statute in question provided in pertinent part that " '[w]ages' means all remuneration for services from whatever source, including commissions and bonuses and the cash value of all remuneration in any medium other than cash.” A.R.S. § 23-622 (1947). Although this statute is broader than HRS § 387-1, the Beaman court's analysis of the distinction between tips/gratuities and service charges remains highly relevant.
. Although the majority limits their reliance on St. Paul Hilton, I note that St. Paul Hilton, is clearly distinguishable from the present case. The sole issue before the court in that case was whether the service charge for banquets, as distinguished from tips paid by an individual diner, was deductible from the gross receipts of a sale. The Minnesota Supreme Court affirmed the tax court's decision that the state sales tax may not be imposed upon the mandatory service charge, which the hotel adds to the price of its banquet meals. The court noted that the governing statute expressly excluded the tax being applied to the amount of service charges if such charges were separately stated on the bill, which St. Paul had done in that case. The fact that the court in St. Paul Hilton indicated that it discerned no distinction between service charges and tips for "sales tax” purposes has no relevance to the instant case. In fact, the Minnesota Supreme Court acknowledged that “no part of the service charge goes to the hotel-employer as operating revenue.” 298 Minn. at 203, 214 N.W.2d at 352. "The apportioned sums are paid to the employees as a supplement to their regular fixed wages. We may assume this practice of dual compensation is not unknown to those who negotiate employment agreements for ‘tip employees’ as one segment of the personnel of a major hotel or restaurant.” Id.
. See majority opinion at 358 n. 13, 893 P.2d at 786 n. 13.
. I note that, although the majority frames the dispositive issue as referred to above, it then renders its conclusion and holding inconsistent with the issue as framed. The majority concludes that "porterage may be considered in the nature of ‘gratuities’ for the purposes of HRS § 387-1 and HRS § 387-2.” Majority opinion at 357, 893 P.2d at 785 (emphasis added). Subsequently, the majority holds that “the Hotels are not entitled to summary judgment because the Bellhelp have raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether ‘porterage’ is a ‘gratuity of any kind.”' Majority opinion at 359, 893 P.2d at 787 (emphasis added). Whether the majority means to imply that the issue in this case is somehow broader than the statement of issue in its final holding, I will not speculate but merely agree that the issue here is whether porterage is a gratuity of any kind under HRS § 387-1.
. The majority's reliance on DiTullio, see majority opinion at 357, 893 P.2d at 785 n. 12, in support of its statement that "the ‘extrinsic evidence' provided by the Bellhelp is admissible” is misplaced. Here, the parties' intent as to the terms at issue, that is, “porterage” and "gratuity”, are unambiguously defined in the current Master Agreement. However, unlike the instant case, DiTullio involved terms wholly ambiguous and undefined by the parties. In DiTullio, the term "stockholder,” which denoted a class of insured persons in a corporate liability insurance policy was ambiguous because the corporation had no "stockholders.” The term "executive officer,” which also denoted a class of insureds, was ambiguous because that term was not defined in the insurance policy, the corporation’s charter, or the by-laws. Under these facts, the Intermediate Court of Appeals properly held that extrinsic evidence was admissible to explain the intent of the parties with respect to the use of the' ambiguous terms "stockholder” and "executive officer,” thus raising genuine issues of material fact.
7. The phrase "pay wages” is found in section 6 of the FLSA, which provides in pertinent part: "Every employer shall pay to each of the employees ... wages at the following rates....” (Emphasis added.)