No. 71-2339.United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
May 16, 1973.
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George W. Hart, Atlanta, Ga., for defendants-appellants.
Roger J. Martinson, U.S. Dept. of Labor, Beverley R. Worrell, Regional Sol., Atlanta, Ga., Peter G. Nash, Bessie Margolin, Carin Ann Clauss, LeRoy M. Jahn, Attys., U.S. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D.C., for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Georgia.
Before JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge, and BELL and SIMPSON, Circuit Judges.
JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:
[1] The Secretary of Labor sought an injunction under § 17 of the Fair Labor Standards Act (29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq.) to interdict continuing violation of the Act’s minimum wage, overtime, and record keeping requirements[1] by these multicorporate employers. The District Court found (i) that the Employers, taken together, constituted an “enterprise” within the meaning of § 3(r)[2] of the Act, and (ii) that the enterprise was and is “engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce” within the meaning of § 3(s)(1)[3] of thePage 1029
Act, and (iii) that three of the four named employers failed to qualify for the exemption to coverage under FLSA contained in § 13(a)(2).[4] With these findings, and (iv) the finding that the goods sold — propane gas — had not lost its identity as goods which have moved in interstate commerce, the District Court ordered the payment of $19,442 in back wages to named employees of the three non-exempt employers and enjoined future violations of the Act.
[2] Accepting (i) above but challenging (ii), (iii) and (iv), all of which are essential to the District Court’s decision, the Employers ask us to reverse. Finding the decision of the District Court to be without error we affirm.[5] [3] The Employers — Greene’s Propane Gas Service, Inc., [the Thomaston store], Greene’s Propane Gas Service, Inc., of Perry,[6] Greene’s Propane Gas Service, Inc. of Macon, and Greene’s Propane Gas Service, Inc. of Albany — are retailers of propane gas and related gas appliances in the state of Georgia. Harvey R. Greene is the majority shareholder in each of these four corporate employers, the defendants here. But the Greene complex does not stop with these employers. The four employer stores buy their propane gas from Greene’s Transport Company, Inc. They lease the tank trucks with which they make deliveries from Greene’s Equipment Company (a corporation) and store the gas delivered by Greene’s Transport in tanks leased from Greene’s storage companies (four other corporations). Gas originating in Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi is shipped to Georgia by pipeline and is purchased by Greene’s Transport Company at Pipeline Terminal Facilities in Milner and Albany, Georgia. Greene’s Transport receives the gas at the terminal facilities. [4] It is understandable that Employers do not challenge the holding below that they — together with the rest of the occupants of the veritable corporate cornucopia of legal entities which Mr. GreenePage 1030
controls[7] — constitute an “enterprise”. The main thrust of employers’ non-coverage argument has nearly as little vitality.
[5] Employers contend that “enterprise” coverage, added to the FLSA in 1961 by amendment, depends on individual employees being “engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce”. They assert that all the 1961 amendments — namely § 203(s) and its subdivisions — did was to extend coverage to all the employees of an enterprise some of whose employees were “engaged in interstate commerce”. Employers cite much of the legislative history in support of this proposition.[8][6] What Requisite Interstate Involvement?
[7] Even if we faced this argument on a question of first impression we could not ignore the apparently plain language of § 203(s) which states that “enterprise engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce” includes “employees’ handling, selling, or otherwise working on goods that have been
moved in or produced for commerce by any person”. (Emphasis added). The tense is in the past. There is no requirement of continuity in the present. If the legislative history were compelling — and it is not[9] — we might still be forced to hold that what Congress has enacted, even though something different from what it thought it enacted, would still be applicable since the language of the statute is so plain.[10]
But we face no such prospects, for our opinion in Schultz v. Kip’s Big Boy, Inc., 5 Cir., 1970, 431 F.2d 530, 533 is dispositive. There the Court held that “the legislation was designed to regulate enterprises dealing in articles acquired intrastate after travel in interstate commerce”[11] (emphasis in original) and
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the Court said that given (as is true in this case) the stipulation of enterprise sales in excess of $1,000,000 “the only test is that `goods amounting to $250,000 a year’ must be purchased or received for resale and have moved across state lines at sometime in the flow of commerce to the retailer,
2 U.S. Code Cong. and Admin.News, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 1961, p. 1645″.[12] (Emphasis in original). We think that further discussion on this point is unwarranted.
[8] Which Gas?
[9] Having lost in its frontal assault against the holding that the employees were covered by FLSA Employers attempt a flanking maneuver by asserting that the goods in which they deal are not the goods which have traveled in interstate commerce. That is, they argue that the propane gas loses its out-of-state identity because it is dehydrated and filtered free of accumulated debris at the time it leaves the pipeline to go into storage tanks at the pipeline terminal. The transformation — if removing the dirt and water that entered the pipeline during transit were not enough — is completed when a chemical odorizer called petrocapitane is — as required by law in the state of Georgia — inserted into the propane at the rate of one and one-half pounds for every ten thousand gallons of liquid propane. This odorizer allows the consumer to detect a leak in his propane system which would otherwise go unnoticed because propane is odorless.
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[12] The argument is a nice try, but it doesn’t work either molecularly or juridically. The gas is the gas.[13] Who An Establishment?
[14] Having failed to exclude themselves from inclusion Employers, by a reverse twist, attempt to include themselves in an exclusion — § 13(a)(2).[16] This Section exempts from coverage those “establishments” which though they are included in a covered enterprise, have an annual dollar volume of sales less than $250,000. That is, an establishment which is part of an enterprise will be exempt from coverage if that establishment does less than the quarter million dollars sales outflow figure, even though the remainder of the enterprise is covered under FLSA. Employers stipulated that the annual dollar volume of sales for each of the Thomaston, Albany, and Macon Corporations was in excess of $250,000. Nonetheless they claim the exemption on the basis that each of the separate route trucks operating from these stores is a separate establishment[17] and that therefore the deliveries made by the route trucks operating out of each respective store cannot be counted in the three stores. On such a conclusion none of the three would have sales exceeding the statutory minimum requirement.
(r) “Enterprise” means the related activities performed (either through unified operation or common control) by any person or persons for a common business purpose, and includes all such activities whether performed in one or more establishments or by one or more corporate or other organizational units including departments of an establishment operated through leasing arrangements * * *.”
29 U.S.C.A. § 203(r).
(s) “Enterprise engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce” means any of the following in the activities of which employees are so engaged, including employees handling, selling, or otherwise working on goods that have been moved in or produced for commerce by any person:
(1) any such enterprise which has one or more retail or service establishments if the annual gross volume of sales of such enterprise is not less than $1,000,000, exclusive of excise taxes at the retail level which are separately stated and if such enterprise purchases or receives goods for resale that move or have moved across State lines (not in deliveries from the reselling establishment) which amount in total annual volume to $250,000 or more; * * *”
29 U.S.C.A. § 203(s)(1). See Judge Moore’s opinion for this Court in Brennan v. Wilson Building, Inc., 5 Cir., 1973, 478 F.2d 1090
(1973).
The Fair Labor Standards Amendments of 1966 (80 Stat. 830, 831) further extended the Act’s “enterprise coverage” by reducing the dollar volume requirement and deleting the $250,000 “inflow” test of § 3(s)(1). These amendments do not affect the coverage issue involved here, since the Secretary is claiming the higher wage and stricter overtime standards prescribed in §§ 6 and 7 for employees brought under the Act by the 1961 Amendments, and has proved his case under those standards.
“§ 13(a) The provisions of sections 6 and 7 shall not apply with respect to —
(1) any employee employed in a bona fide executive, administrative, or professional capacity * * *, or in the capacity of outside salesman (as such terms are defined and delimited from time to time by regulations of the Secretary * * *); or
(2) any employee employed by any retail or service establishment * * *, if more than 50 per centum of such establishment’s annual dollar volume of sales of goods or services is made within the State in which the establishment is located, and such establishment is not in an enterprise described in section 3(s) or such establishment has an annual dollar volume of sales which is less than $250,000 (exclusive of excise taxes at the retail level which are separately stated) * * *.”
29 U.S.C.A. § 213(a). The Employers claim the exception under § 13(a)(1) only for their routemen but claimed the exemption under § 13(a)(2) for all their employees. Greene’s Propane Gas Service, Inc. of Perry came within the exception under § 13(a)(2).
(N.D.Ala. 1964)] is not determinative of this question.” And see Shultz v. Mack Farland Sons Roofing Co., 5 Cir., 1969, 413 F.2d 1296.
court. Also, the Second Circuit quoted with approval from the Labor Department’s Interpretative Bulletin on enterprise coverage as follows:
“It is immaterial * * * that the goods may have `come to rest’ within the meaning of the term `in commerce’ as interpreted in other respects, before they are handled, sold, or otherwise worked on by the employees in the enterprise. * * * Thus, employees will be considered to be `handling, selling, or otherwise working on goods that have been moved in * * * commerce’ where they are engaged in the described activities on `goods’ that have moved across State lines at any time in the course of business, such as from the manufacturer to the distributor * * *.” 29 C.F.R. § 779.242 (1968) [408 F.2d at 629].
This Court has recently stated that “Although courts are not bound by interpretative bulletins, they provide us with guidance simply because they reflect the position of those most experienced with the application of the Act,” Brennan v. Great American Discount and Credit Co., Inc., 5 Cir., 1973, 477 F.2d 292.
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