Fleming v. Swift & Co.

41 F. Supp. 825, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2541
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 3, 1941
DocketCivil Action 1387
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 41 F. Supp. 825 (Fleming v. Swift & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleming v. Swift & Co., 41 F. Supp. 825, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2541 (N.D. Ill. 1941).

Opinion

IGOE, District Judge.

Motions and suggestions having been made by the respective parties hereto for amendment of the order of this Court entered on September 19, 1941, and objections having been made by the defendant to the motions of the plaintiff and by the plaintiff to the motions of the defendant, and argument having been had thereon, it is hereby ordered that the order of September 19, 1941, be amended by striking out the findings of fact and conclusions of law which appear therein and by inserting in lieu thereof revised findings of fact and conclusions of law which read as follows:

Findings of Fact

The Court finds as a fact that:

1. The defendant is an Illinois corporation having a place of business, hereinafter referred to as the defendant’s Chicago plant, located at Chicago, Illinois, within the jurisdiction of this Court, and having, directly and through subsidiaries, other places of business elsewhere throughout the United States, and in some foreign countries.

The defendant is engaged principally in acquiring and slaughtering livestock and in the processing, manufacturing, selling *828 and distributing of meat, meat products and by-products from livestock. It and its subsidiaries are also engaged in many other businesses and have numerous producing plants and distributing branches through the United States.

2. The violations in this case are concerned solely with the defendant’s plant at Chicago, which consists of numerous buildings and located at the Union Stockyards. The plant occupies approximately one-half of the total area of the stockyards. Most of the activities listed are carried on by the defendant in its Chicago plant at the Union Stockyards. This plant is served by a number of railroads which run into, the stockyards and by numerous switch tracks which run into many of the buildings which the defendant owns and controls. It is also serviced by a large number of motor trucks, many of which are owned or leased by the defendant.

3. The bulk of the sales made from the Chicago plant of the defendant were made to points outside the State of Illinois within the United States and to foreign countries and goods were sold by the defendant into interstate commerce during each week of the period in question in the case. The total purchases by the defendant at the Chicago plant from its branch plants and other units and from outside sources were likewise considerable, and almost all of these purchases were made from outside the State of Illinois.

4. The defendant did not compensate employees at its Chicago plant for work done in excess of forty-four (44) hours a week for the period from October 24, 1938, to October 24, 1939, and for work done in excess of forty-two (42) hours a week for the period from October 24, 1939, to the filing of this law suit on February 19, 1940, at the rate of one and one-half times the regular rate of pay for such overtime work; and did not compensate such employees for such overtime work because it claims that it was entitled to take an exemption as to these employees for such overtime work under sec. 7(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act 1938, 29 U.S.C.A. § 207(c). The employees who did not so receive overtime compensation were working in all of the operating departments of the defendant at its Chicago plant. It is admitted by the defendant that these employees were engaged in interstate commerce, or the production of goods for interstate commerce, during each week of the period in question, that is, from October 24, 1938, to February 19, 1940.

5. The terms “handling,” “slaughtering,” and “dressing” are words which are commonly used to describe certain operations in the meat packing industry and have a definite and well-accepted meaning in trade usage in the industry. The defendant, in its operations, uses the terms “handling,” “slaughtering” and “dressing” in accordance with this trade usage.

6. The term “handling” as customarily used in the meat packing industry refers to those operations that start when the packing plant takes possession of livestock and includes all the operations down to the slaughtering of the livestock.

7. The term “slaughtering” as customarily used in the meat packing industry constitutes the whole killing operation and ends when animal life is extinct.

8. The term “dressing” as customarily used in the meat packing industry refers to the freeing of the carcass of hair, scurf, toenails, the evisceration of the carcass, the cleaning and separation of the warm fancy meats and the placing of these in the coolers. Likewise, all the operations performed upon the carcasses after slaughtering and until they go to the coolers, are included. The cleaning of casings is considered as “dressing”, as is the grading of casings, if the grading takes place prior to salting. The removal of hides, pelts, bones, fats, blood and other materials from the dressing floor is also considered as “dressing” in the meat packing industry.

9. The following departments of the defendant at its Chicago plant are engaged in “handling,” “slaughtering,” and “dressing” as those terms are commonly used and accepted in the meat packing industry and by the defendant: Hog dressing, pork warm fancy meats, hog casing cleaning, fat hog casing, north beef dressing, north beef washing, north beef casing cleaning, north beef warm fancy meats, north sheep casing cleaning, east sheep casing cleaning, north sheep warm fancy meats, sheep casing cleaning, east sheep dressing, east sheep warm fancy meats, north sheep dressing and Saniseal. The remaining departments of the defendant are not engaged in “handling,” “slaughtering,” or “dressing” as those terms are so commonly used and accepted in the meat packing industry and by the defendant.

*829 10. The receipts of each of the four species of livestock slaughtered at the defendant’s Chicago plant fluctuate widely throughout the year at public and private markets. In the case of each such species of livestock there are usually one or two seasons during the year when the receipts are particularly heavy, that is, reach a peak. In addition there are short, sharp fluctuations in receipts within such broad seasonal swings in receipts. Seasonal fluctuations in the receipts of various species of livestock are caused by natural factors, such as the times when young animals are produced and the periods of time which are required to grow them to marketable size, the prices of feeds used in fattening animals for market, and the condition of grazing lands and pastures. Other fluctuations, and particularly the short, sharp fluctuations which occur throughout the year, are caused by a variety of factors which induce the livestock producers to send their livestock to market at particular times. Weather conditions and reports of market prices are among such factors. With the development of trucking facilities livestock producers within trucking distance of livestock markets may change their minds from day to day as to whether or not they will send their livestock to market.

The seasons during which the periods of seasonal peak receipts occur may be forecast, since they occur with a fair degree of regularity. It is not possible, however, to forecast the week, or in some years even the month when such peak receipts will occur.

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Bluebook (online)
41 F. Supp. 825, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-swift-co-ilnd-1941.