Claude Eaton v. Robert Blackman

450 F.2d 70, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 7435, 20 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 295
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 1971
Docket20608
StatusPublished

This text of 450 F.2d 70 (Claude Eaton v. Robert Blackman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Claude Eaton v. Robert Blackman, 450 F.2d 70, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 7435, 20 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 295 (8th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Senior Circuit Judge.

Appellant Blackman owns and operates a service station and a cafe, known as “Blackman’s Old Military Truck Stop”, located on the highway outside Corning, Arkansas. The station is engaged in selling diesel fuel, gasoline, oil, grease, tires and other accessories at retail, and in performing incidental motor-vehicle services such as tire-repairing, etc. Eight former employees, whose work consisted in doing these service-station tasks, recovered judgments under the Fair Labor Standards Act against appellant, on a jury trial, for minimum-wage and overtime balances alleged to be due them under the provisions of 29 U.S.C. §§ 206 and 207.

Appellees had been paid a weekly wage of only $65.00, for six days work, of twelve hours each. The wage balances which would thus be owing to them for the period involved, if the business was subject to the Fair Labor Standards Act, were stipulated. The court left the issue of coverage under the Act to the jury’s determination, as a question of whether the business was one which constituted, under 29 U.S.C. § 203 (s), “a gasoline service establishment whose annual gross volume of sales is not less than $250,000 (exclusive of excise taxes at the retail level which are separately stated)”.

As proof of coverage, appellees relied upon the sworn answers which had been made by appellant to some interrogatories propounded to him in discovery. Thus, to the interrogatory “State the volume of Blackman’s Old Military Truck Stop in dollars for calendar year 1966, 1967, 1968”, appellant had answered, “Gross sales — 1966—$282,782.83; 1967 —$347,192.72; 1968 — $298,591.85”. To the interrogatory “State the total dol *72 lars volume of sales for Blackman’s Old Military Truck Stop exclusive of excise taxes at the retail level which are separately stated”, he had replied, “Our records do not enable us to answer this question and we have no way of breaking this down”. To the interrogatory “For the calendar years 1966, 1967 and 1968, state the proportion of sales of Black-man’s Old Military Truck Stop as follows: (a) Diesel Fuel (b) Gasoline, oil and grease (e) Tires, batteries and accessories, labor”, he had similarly stated, “Records are not kept of these transactions separately”.

At the trial, appellant testified that the gross receipts of the service station, including all taxes collected on the sales, had been $247,344.36 for 1966; $294,-531.34 for 1967, and $272,963.49 for 1968, but that with exclusion made of federal and state excise taxes and local sales taxes, the station’s gross volume of sales had amounted to $154,387.21 for 1966, to $192,336.33 for 1967, and to $179,218.53 for 1968. He said, in explanation of the discrepancies between his interrogatory answers and his testimony, that “I think the first interrogatories we didn’t really know what the people were after”; that “I made a mistake in figuring them up”; that “I think the first questions, when we first answered them, they were misunderstood”; and that “we didn’t know how to write it correctly”.

This general testimony was hardly explanation of such sufficiency, unequivo-calness, and absoluteness, as would cause the interrogatory answers to be left without any probative capacity. Thus, if the interrogatory answers and appellant’s testimony had constituted all the evidence at the trial on whether the service station’s gross volume of sales, exclusive of excise taxes at the retail level which were separately stated, had amounted to $250,000, the court clearly would be entitled to leave the question of coverage under § 203 (s) to the jury as a determination of the amount of the station’s gross-sales volume. And it would be readily understandable how the jury, on the wages which appellant had been paying, would choose to accept the sales amounts of his interrogatory answers as against his testimonial figures and explanation, as a basis for subjecting him to the application of the Act.

But it is contended that other evidence was adduced of such force and character as legally to make the interrogatory answers insufficient to entitle the jury to find that Blackman’s Old Military Truck Stop had an annual gross volume of sales, exclusive of the excise taxes which it collected and made returns of, in the amount of $250,000 or more for any of the years involved.

This evidence consisted of records of the service station’s business, brought into the court room and shown to have been made in regular course by a certified public accountant, engaged in that general business, from “daily check-out sheets” of the station. The check-out sheets contained the meter readings for the pumps, showing both the gallon total and the dollar total of each day’s fuel sales. It was the accountant’s duty to make such records for appellant of the amounts of the gross revenues and of the portions thereof that represented excise taxes on the fuels, collected by appellant from the purchasers at the time of the sales and subjected by him to excise tax returns and payment to the federal and state governments. The excise taxes were included in the amount paid by the purchaser and notice of this fact was given to him by a sign placed upon each pump, both gasoline and diesel fuel, stating that “This price includes all excise taxes”.

The accountant had made summaries of the records prepared by him, from which he testified. These summaries showed that the amounts of the excise taxes which had been so collected, made the subject of excise tax returns, and paid by him to the federal and state governments were $92,957.15 for 1966; $102,195.01 for 1967; and $93,744.96 for 1968. Appellees made no attempt to impugn the correctness of these amounts, nor to dispute the fact that they had been made the subject of official return and payment by appellant as excise taxes *73 on the gasoline and diesel fuel sold by him. In this situation the jury could not brush the excise taxes aside and refuse to take them into account in determining whether appellant had done such a $250,-000 gasoline-service-establishment business as was necessary to bring him within the operation of the Act.

Even using the gross sales figures of appellant’s interrogatory answers as against those of his oral testimony, 1 the gross volume of appellant’s sales or revenues, less the excise taxes competently and unimpeachedly shown to have been collected and paid over on the motor fuels sold by him, would be left as only $189,825.68 for the year 1966; $244,997.-71 for the year 1967; and $204,846.89 for the year 1968. This would not bring appellant’s business within the $250,000 sales-volume requirement of § 203 (s), but would leave him exempt from the Act as to the years here involved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Imposition of tax
26 U.S.C. § 4041
Imposition of tax
26 U.S.C. § 4081
Definitions
29 U.S.C. § 203(s)
Minimum wage
29 U.S.C. § 206
§ 207
29 U.S.C. § 207

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
450 F.2d 70, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 7435, 20 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/claude-eaton-v-robert-blackman-ca8-1971.