Atlantic Co. v. Weaver

150 F.2d 843, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3311
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 1945
DocketNo. 5360
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 F.2d 843 (Atlantic Co. v. Weaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Co. v. Weaver, 150 F.2d 843, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3311 (4th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

NORTHCOTT, Circuit Judge.

The appellees, Johnny Weaver, Charlie Hardin, B. Butler, R. N. Brown and Roosevelt Hall, herein referred to as the plaintiffs, brought suit in the District Court of the United States for the Western District of South Carolina against the appellant, Atlantic Company, a corporation, herein referred to as the defendant, seeking to recover alleged unpaid minimum wages and unpaid overtime compensation, liquidated damages, and attorney’s fees under Section 16(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 216(b).

A trial was had before the Judge without jury at Spartanburg, South Carolina, in June, 1944. In November, 1944, the judge below filed his findings of fact and conclusions of law and filed an order for judgment in favor of the plaintiffs herein against the defendant, Atlantic Company, as follows:

“Robert N. Brown.............. $5,066.90

Johnny Weaver .............. 2,082.26

Charlie Hardin............... 3,194.86

Roosevelt Hall............... 1,127.00

Belinda Butler ‘............... 3,509.44

and also the sum of $1,000 attorney’s fee, and the unpaid costs in the case having been taxed in the sum of $33.20.”

From this action of the court below this appeal was brought.

The defendant is a Georgia corporation operating a number of plants in the States of Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, Florida and Tennessee. It owns and operates some eighty to eighty-five plants in said States. Between October, 1938, and April, 1942, it was, among other activities, operating five breweries located at Charlotte, North Carolina, Norfolk, Virginia, Orlando, Florida, Atlanta, Georgia, and Chattanooga, Tennessee. All of its plants were under the supervision of the Atlanta office which compiled and computed all of the records of the company’s business throughout the territory where it operated.

One of defendant’s plants, known as plant number 64, was located at Chester, South Carolina. The Chester branch consisted of two separate and distinct plants under the supervision and control of one local manager.

The plaintiffs allege that for a certain period of time beginning October 24, 1938, they were employed by the defendant and worked in the Chester plant and that they worked hours in excess of the maximum prescribed by the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq., and were paid a less wage than the minimum prescribed in said Act.

At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence the defendant moved for judgment in its favor, which motion was denied. At the conclusion of all of the evidence defendant again moved for judgment in its favor, which motion was taken under advisement by the court.

[845]*845The findings of fact of the judge below are extensive and in minute detail. They may be summarized as follows:

That the extensive operations of the defendant company were all controlled from the Atlanta office; that the Chester, South Carolina, plant, where the plaintiffs worked, was engaged in the distribution of defendant’s beer and ale, the beer deliveries to the Chester plant were made by an independent contractor from the brewery of the defendant at Charlotte, North Carolina, the beer being hauled in large beer trucks; that these trucks arrived at the Chester plant every week and sometimes twice a week; that whenever the trucks arrived at the Chester plant the five plaintiffs were called upon to help unload the truck and reload them with the empty beer cases and bottles.

The judge below further found that at the Chester plant was located a cold storage plant continuously operated for hire and for use by the public, and regularly used, among other customers, by agents of packing plants outside the State and also by other beer and yeast companies; that there was also a storage room for ice manufactured at Chester Plant No. 2; that in addition to the beer and ale business, the ice business and the cold storage business, the company carried on the business of selling refrigerators, and, the construction, placing and maintenance of signs and symbols advertising its products, principally its beer and ale; and that all of the plaintiff-employees were “indiscriminately required to, and did, regularly and constantly, perform services essential to the carrying on of all the various kinds of defendant’s businesses”.

That the entire process, involved in defendant’s beer business, “including manufacture, transportation, temporary unloading, distribution at wholesale and collection of the purchase price, and the return of the empty bottles to the Charlotte brewery was one constant, continuous integrated action, at all times under the supervision and control of the Home Office in Atlanta. The payroll checks for payment of wages to its local employees were drawn by Atlanta and sent to Chester”. That the various kinds of business carried on by the defendant at its Chester plant were both interstate and intrastate in nature, with the plaintiff-employees required continuously to “switch from job to job at the order and direction of defendant”; that the defendant was regularly, continuously and substantially engaged in the icing and re-icing of refrigerator cars, engaged in interstate commerce; that every day in the year, except Sunday, during the period here involved, the defendant sold and delivered from its Chester branch to the C. & N. W. Railway the ice used by it on its passenger trains and that the Chester plant regularly sold and delivered to the Southern Railway ice for use on its passenger trains engaged in interstate commerce, and for the use of its office employees, likewise engaged in interstate commerce; that ice was regularly and continuously sold to the Seaboard Air Line Railway in blocks, wholesale, for the use of its passenger trains engaged in interstate commerce; and that ice was likewise sold and distributed locally in and about Chester.

With regard to the labor performed by the plaintiffs, while employees of the defendant company, the judge below found that each and all of them were at various times called upon to perform and that they did perform work in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Act; that the amount of work performed in interstate commerce by each employee was a substantial part of the work that he did; that the defendant company kept no record of any kind of the hours worked by any one of the plaintiffs nor did the defendant keep any accurate record to show the number of hours of a work-day any one of the plaintiff-employees was working at any particular kind of the various businesses being carried on at the Chester plants; and that “no dependence can be put in the accuracy of the allocations shown by defendant’s records”.

The judge below concluded his findings of fact as follows:

“It appears by the greater weight of the evidence that each of the five plaintiffs regularly worked on interstate, as well as intrastate, business; that there was no separation by defendant of that part of its business subject to the Act, from that part of its business not subject to the Act, but that to a large extent the two classes of business were commingled in defendant’s operations and defendant made no attempt to distinguish between the two when making payment of wages to these plaintiffs.

“The defendant has shown no facts which would justify the conclusion that any one [846]

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Bluebook (online)
150 F.2d 843, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-co-v-weaver-ca4-1945.