DEPALMA v. THE SCOTTS COMPANY, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJune 10, 2019
Docket2:13-cv-07740
StatusUnknown

This text of DEPALMA v. THE SCOTTS COMPANY, LLC (DEPALMA v. THE SCOTTS COMPANY, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DEPALMA v. THE SCOTTS COMPANY, LLC, (D.N.J. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW JERSEY

□□□ Civ. No. 13-7740 (KM) (JAD) Plaintiffs, v. OPINION THE SCOTTS COMPANY, LLC, Defendant.

KEVIN MCNULTY, U.S.D.J.: Now before this Court are motions for summary judgment by both sides in this FLSA collective action. Defendant The Scotts Company, LLC (“Scotts”) seeks an order that the administrative exemption from FLSA coverage applies to the plaintiff sales managers. Plaintiffs seek an order that the executive and administrative exemptions do not apply to the plaintiff sales managers. For the reasons explained herein, I will deny both parties’ motions for summary judgment on the FLSA employee-exemption issues. Scotts also seeks a ruling that the FWW methodology is appropriate for the calculation of damages. That portion of its motion, considered as a motion in limine, is granted. I. Background! a. Facts Scotts has proffered a statement of some 1500 material facts, some of them many paragraphs or even pages long. (DSOF (asserting 776 alleged material facts); DR, pp. 98-270 (asserting 766 additional, allegedly material

1 For ease of reference, certain key items from the record will be abbreviated as follows: “PSOF” = Plaintiffs’ Statement of Undisputed Material Facts [DE 179] “DR” = Defendant’s Response to PSOF [DE 183] “DSOF” = Defendant’s Statement of Undisputed Material Facts [DE 175] “PR” = Plaintiffs’ Response to PSOF [DE 186]

facts)). Plaintiffs have asserted some 60 material facts. (PSOF; DE 187). 2 These submissions pose dozens of disputes of fact, some material and some clearly not. I provide a broad background and highlight just a few of the material disputes that stand in the way of summary fudgment for either side. Scotts is a multi-national lawn and garden supply company headquartered in Marysville, Ohio. (DSOF, PR 4 40). Scotts sells its products to retailers throughout the United States. (DSOF, PR | 44). Those retailer- customers range from large home centers, such as Lowe’s, Home Depot, and Wal-Mart, to independent and local hardware stores, such as Ace Hardware. Scotts’ business development team negotiates and executes the sale of Scotts products to the various retailers. (/d.). Scotts’ field sales organization is divided into regions, which are divided into districts, which are further divided into territories. (PSOF, DR J 12; see also DSOF, PR { 45-48). Before 2016, there were five regions; in 2016-17 there were four. (DSOF, PR 44 46-47). Each district has its own District Market Manager (“DMM”). (DSOF, PR 44 48-49). Scotts currently has 27 districts in the United States. (DSOF, PR { 50). Each district is divided into from 8 to 12 territories. (DSOF, PR 4 51, 52) Each contains, e.g., Lowe’s and Home Depot stores. (DSOF, PR { 53).3 The number of retail stores in each territory ranges from 7 to 26. (DSOF, PR J 54). In each territory are Sales Managers, a category that includes the plaintiffs to this action.* (DSOF, PR 4 57, 58; see also PSOF, DR { 13). The

The parties are reminded that “purpose behind [the L. Civ. R. 56.1] statement is to clarify the issues for the Court, not to increase the burden before it.” Durkin v. Wabash Nat., Civ. No. 10-2013, 2013 WL 1314744, at *6 (D.N.J. Mar. 28, 2013) (Rodriguez, J.) (citing L. Civ. R. 56.1, Comment 2d.). To put it another way, the function of such a statement is to assist the court in drafting an opinion, not to awe the opposition. 3 Prior to 2016, the territories included Wal-Mart stores. (DSOF, PR 55). An employee’s “job title alone is insufficient to establish the exempt status of an employee. The exempt or nonexempt status of any particular employee must be determined on the basis of whether the employee's salary and duties meet the requirements of the regulations in this part.” 29 C.F.R. § 541.2. With that in mind, I

parties dispute whether the Sales Managers actually perform managerial functions within their assigned territories. (See e.g., id.). Each Sales Manager reports to a DMM. (DSOF, PR q 68). Plaintiffs assert that Sales Managers spend the majority of their time doing merchandising work, which Scotts disputes. (PSOF, DR { 17). The parties also dispute the amount of discretion granted to Sales Managers. (See, e.g., PSOF, DR {J 23-27 (disputing Sales Managers’ control over product placement in stores); PSOF, DR { 21 (disputing whether Sales Managers choose merchandise or have management authority)). M&Cs are the employees beneath Sales Managers. (DSOF, PR { 59). M&Cs are responsible for merchandising Scotts’ products in retail stores by placing them on designated shelves, building and constructing product displays, and maintaining, organizing, cleaning, and replenishing shelf space. (DSOF, PR 7 40). The parties dispute whether the M&Cs’ responsibility for merchandising is shared with Sales Managers. (Id.). Plaintiffs characterizes M&Cs as seasonal and part-time employees; Scotts asserts that some M&Cs work full-time. (PSOF, DR { 2). The parties dispute whether M&Cs log most of their hours during a busy spring season. (PSOF, DR 7 3). It remains unclear how many how many M&Cs work for the company during and after the purported peak season. (PSOF, DR { 3). The parties dispute how much time Sales Managers spent supervising M&Cs. (DSOF, PR { 59). Plaintiffs rely on spreadsheets allegedly containing the names and hours of every M&C who worked with each Plaintiff. (PSOF { 6). Using the spreadsheets and payroll data provided by Scotts (see Lesser Decl. DE 181 18-20), Plaintiffs have created a summary chart of the time Plaintiffs spent supervising two or more M&Cs. (/d.; Summary Chart, Ex. 16, DE 181-16; see also PSOF, DR 4 7-9). Plaintiffs’ counsel, Seth R. Lesser, has provided a declaration in support of the summary chart, explaining it as follows:

note that the commonplace understanding of the title Sales Manager, t.e., one who manages salespersons, does not seem to fit.

[The chart] [s}ummarize[es] Plaintiffs’ review of the M&C hour and payroll data produced by the defendant . . . Plaintiffs studied the data across a full six-year period from 2011-2016. Plaintiff identified the total number of two-week pay periods worked by any of the Discovery Opt-ins (as well as the pre-notice plaintiffs), plus all the hours by any co-working M&C recorded during those same pay periods. Plaintiffs found that, on average across the full six years, the 25 SMs included in the review directed the work of two- or-more employees only 44% of the time (i.e., in only 44% of the over 2500 two-week pay periods that the SMs worked did the M&Cs under their direction collectively log 160 or more hours). As well, across the six years, no individual SM directed the work of two-or-more employees more than 65% of the time, and the majority of SMs directed the work of two-or-more other employees less than 50% of the time. (DE 181 20) {referring to Chart, Ex. 16, DE 181-16)). Scotts takes issue with the Plaintiffs’ use of the summary charts and Lesser Declaration. (See e.g., PSOF, DR 7-9). In Section II.b.i.1l.a, infra, I conclude that Plaintiffs may rely on summary charts. Nevertheless, the amount of time Plaintiff Sale Managers spent directing the work of two or more employees remains a disputed issue of fact. (PSOF, DR J{8-9). b. Procedural history I write for the parties and therefore assume familiarity with the procedural history, including my (DE 66, 120, 217) and Judge Dickson’s (DE 107) previous opinions. On December 20, 2013, Plaintiffs Depalma and Leszczynski, through their counsel, filed a “Class Action Complaint and Demand for a Jury Trial.” (DE 1). On February 4, 2014, Depalma and Leszczynski filed their “First Amended Collective Action Complaint and Demand for Jury Trial.” (DE 5). In April 2014, after the retirement of Judge Cavanaugh, this case was reassigned to me. (DE 25).

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DEPALMA v. THE SCOTTS COMPANY, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/depalma-v-the-scotts-company-llc-njd-2019.