Christopher Kieninger v. Crown Equipment Corporation

CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2019
Docket2017AP000631
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher Kieninger v. Crown Equipment Corporation (Christopher Kieninger v. Crown Equipment Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher Kieninger v. Crown Equipment Corporation, (Wis. 2019).

Opinion

2019 WI 27

SUPREME COURT OF WISCONSIN CASE NO.: 2017AP631 COMPLETE TITLE: Christopher Kieninger and Dewayne Meek, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Crown Equipment Corporation d/b/a Crown Lift Trucks, LLC, Defendant-Respondent-Petitioner.

REVIEW OF DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS Reported at 380 Wis. 2d 282, 913 N.W.2d 234 (2018 – unpublished)

OPINION FILED: March 20, 2019 SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS: ORAL ARGUMENT: October 12, 2018

SOURCE OF APPEAL: COURT: Circuit COUNTY: Dane JUDGE: Ellen K. Berz

JUSTICES: CONCURRED: DISSENTED: NOT PARTICIPATING:

ATTORNEYS:

For the defendant-respondent-petitioner, there were briefs filed by David J.B. Froiland, Christine Bestor Townsend, and Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak, & Stewart, P.C., Milwaukee, with whom on the briefs were Lynn M. Stathas, Malinda J. Eskra, and Reinhart Boerner Van Deuren S.C., Madison. There was an oral argument by David J.B. Froiland.

For the plaintiffs-appellants, there was a brief filed by Kurt C. Kobelt and Law Offices of Kurt C. Kobelt, Middleton. There was an oral argument by Kurt C. Kobelt. 2019 WI 27 NOTICE This opinion is subject to further editing and modification. The final version will appear in the bound volume of the official reports. No. 2017AP631 (L.C. No. 2014CV2791)

STATE OF WISCONSIN : IN SUPREME COURT

Christopher Kieninger and Dewayne Meek,

Plaintiffs-Appellants, FILED v. MAR 20, 2019 Crown Equipment Corporation d/b/a Crown Lift Sheila T. Reiff Trucks, LLC, Clerk of Supreme Court

Defendant-Respondent-Petitioner.

REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals. Reversed.

¶1 DANIEL KELLY, J. Messrs. Christopher Kieninger and Dewayne Meek tell us that Wisconsin's statutes and regulations

require their employer to pay them for the time they spend driving a company-provided vehicle between their homes and their assigned jobsites.1 Because our laws do not impose such an obligation, we reverse the court of appeals.

1This is a review of an unpublished decision of the court of appeals, Kieninger v. Crown Equipment Corp., No. 2017AP631, unpublished slip op. (Wis. Ct. App. Jan. 18, 2018), which reversed the judgment of the Dane County Circuit Court, the Honorable Ellen K. Berz presiding. No. 2017AP631

I. BACKGROUND ¶2 Crown manufactures industrial equipment, including forklifts. It employs field service technicians ("Technicians") throughout Wisconsin to service that equipment. Technicians travel to customers' locations in Crown's vans, which are stocked with the tools, equipment, and supplies necessary to their work.2 Crown's dispatchers and the Technicians collaboratively schedule the service calls to, in part, minimize travel time and maximize time spent serving the customers. Technicians typically are able to choose which service calls will be the first and last of the day. ¶3 Technicians have the choice of commuting between work

and home in either their personal vehicles or the company's vans. A Technician choosing the former drives his personal vehicle to his assigned branch prior to the beginning of his shift. There, he picks up the company van and makes his appointed rounds. At the end of his shift, he takes the van back to his branch location, and drives his personal vehicle home. If he chooses the latter option, he drives the company van home after the last service call of the shift, and the next day drives it directly to the first scheduled service call.

2Crown has four branch locations in Wisconsin: Milwaukee, Green Bay, La Crosse, and Madison. Each Technician is assigned to a branch, and serves customers within that branch's area. However, there are circumstances, not relevant to this case, in which a Technician may be required to serve a customer outside of his assigned branch's area.

2 No. 2017AP631

Technicians who commute in a company van usually arrange the first and last appointments so they are as close to home as possible. ¶4 Crown pays its Technicians for all of the time they spend traveling between jobsites as well as between jobsites and Crown facilities. It does not pay them for commute time between home and work when using their personal vehicles. Commute time in a Crown-provided van is handled differently. Historically, Crown paid for time spent commuting in a company van between home and the first or last service call, except for the first 30 minutes of each. That policy changed in September 2013. ¶5 The new policy still allows a Technician to commute in

one of Crown's vans. It provides that "[h]ourly Technicians who drive a company vehicle in the course of employment with Crown may be given the option to park the vehicle at home between shifts." With respect to compensation for travel between home and work, however, the Commute Travel Time Guidelines (the "Guidelines") now say the following:

Commute Travel at the Beginning of the Work Day

A technician will begin clocking compensated time when one of the following has occurred: 1. The technician has arrived at the customer guard shack or customer's parking space. 2. The technician has arrived at the branch. 3. The technician arrives at location for the vehicle to be serviced. 4. Forty five (45) minutes of commute travel has elapsed. Commute travel greater than 45 minutes at the beginning of the work day will be compensated.

3 No. 2017AP631

Commute Travel at the End of the Work Day

The work day ends when all work related activities have been completed. This includes properly placing all tools and other items in the vehicle, completing all forms and paperwork, and communicating with dispatch as necessary. Commute time begins when the technician has left the last work location. A technician's commute from the assigned work area to home is not compensated. ¶6 Messrs. Kieninger and Meek are two of Crown's Technicians. They both opted to commute between home and work in Crown's vans, and each signed a copy of the Guidelines. Nevertheless, they believe that the entire time spent commuting between home and work in a company van is "an integral part of their jobs" for which they must be paid. ¶7 Mr. Kieninger filed a complaint with the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development (the "DWD") claiming entitlement to unpaid wages based on his commute time in a company van. The DWD dismissed the claim. Mr. Kieninger reprised his claim in a complaint filed in the Dane County Circuit Court, in which he proposed to represent a class comprising all similarly-situated Crown Technicians. He amended his complaint to add Mr. Meek as a named party, and the circuit court subsequently certified the class pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 803.08 (2013-14).3 The parties filed competing motions for summary judgment on the question of whether commute time in a company-provided vehicle is compensable. They each assured the

3 All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2017-18 edition unless otherwise specified.

4 No. 2017AP631

circuit court that the case presented no genuine issue as to any material fact. ¶8 The circuit court granted Crown's motion. It reasoned that it must interpret Wisconsin's labor laws consistently with federal labor laws. Because it concluded that the federal Employee Commuting Flexibility Act (the "ECFA")4 definitively answered the question, it adopted a conforming interpretation of Wisconsin's labor regulations and dismissed the complaint. Messrs. Kieninger and Meek——we will refer to them collectively as "Mr. Kieninger" unless the context requires otherwise—— appealed. ¶9 The court of appeals disagreed with the circuit

court's use of the ECFA to develop an interpretation of Wisconsin's regulations.

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