George P. Schultz, Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor v. Jack Smith's Automatic Transmission Service, Inc., a Corporation

422 F.2d 104, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10760, 19 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 376
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 10, 1970
Docket13321_1
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 422 F.2d 104 (George P. Schultz, Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor v. Jack Smith's Automatic Transmission Service, Inc., a Corporation) 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
George P. Schultz, Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor v. Jack Smith's Automatic Transmission Service, Inc., a Corporation, 422 F.2d 104, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10760, 19 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 376 (4th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Circuit Judge:

The Secretary of Labor, appellant here, brought an action in the District Court under § 16(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act 1 to recover minimum wages allegedly due one employee and unpaid overtime compensation allegedly due another employee of the appellee, Jack Smith’s Automatic Transmission Service, Inc. The appellee claims that it is a “retail or service establishment,” hence exempted by § 13(a) (2) from the Act’s coverage. 2

The District Court agreed with appellee’s contention and the Secretary of Labor has appealed, asserting that appellee’s business is not retailing or servicing but manufacturing or processing, and therefore not within the exemptive provision of § 13(a) (2).

Appellee maintains garages in Spartanburg and Greenville, South Carolina, and in Asheville, North Carolina, where it repairs and replaces transmissions in automobiles for individual car owners. As found by the District Judge, about 20% of the repaired transmissions were returned to the automobiles from which they were taken, but in about 80% of the cars, appellee actually replaced the worn or damaged transmissions with others it had reconditioned in its shop. It maintained a ready stock of these reconditioned transmissions so that it could expeditiously replace the worn or damaged transmissions.

Appellee obtained its transmission “cores,” upon which the rebuilding process took place, from junkyards and wrecking companies, at sales or auctions *106 of defective new transmissions by automobile manufacturers, and from the old transmissions of previous customers’ cars. The rebuilding process consisted of replacing all bad or defective parts. This process was by no means a minor one, for it entailed a considerable amount of time as evidenced by one witness who testified that in an average day a mechanic could rebuild only two transmissions.

I

First we must consider the appellee’s challenge to the court’s jurisdiction. Section 16(c), which provides the jurisdictional basis for the Secretary’s action, contains a qualifying proviso upon which the appellee relies. The section authorizes the Secretary to bring an action to recover

the payment of the unpaid minimum wages or the unpaid overtime compensation owing to any employee * -K *
Provided, That this authority to sue shall not be used by the Secretary of Labor in any case involving an issue of law which has not been settled finally by the courts, and in any such case no court shall have jurisdiction over such action or proceeding initiated or brought by the Secretary of Labor if it does involve any issue of law not so finally settled. 3

While it is undeniably true that the courts have never decided the precise question whether the business of rebuilding and replacing transmissions is covered or exempted by the Act, the issue of law raised here can hardly be deemed novel or unsettled. The courts in some of the earliest decisions under the Act have had occasion to deal with the exemption provision in relation to very similar reconditioning operations and have held them not exempt from coverage of the Act. In our own circuit there have been two factually similar cases. Walling v. Roland Electric Co., 146 F.2d 745 (4th Cir. 1945), aff’d, 326 U.S. 657, 66 S.Ct. 413, 90 L.Ed. 383 (1946) (reconditioning second-hand motors) ; Guess v. Montague, 140 F.2d 500 (4th Cir. 1943) (reconditioning secondhand machinery). 4 In each of these cases the court concluded that the reconditioning operations constituted manufacturing or processing and were covered by the Act.

This court, in another factual area, recognized that an issue of law is not to be regarded as unsettled merely because the case at bar does not identically repeat the facts in the adjudicated case. It is enough that a rule has been established and the new case falls within the rule. Mitchell v. Emala & Associates, Inc., 274 F.2d 781, 782-783 (4th Cir. 1960). The court went on to say that “such insistence would virtually nullify the salutary provision for the recovery of unpaid compensation without expense to the claimant.” As Judge Brown felicitously declared in Wirtz v. Atlantic States Construction Co., 357 F. 2d 442, 448 (5th Cir. 1966), “[a] novel case is not contrived by urging incidental factual variations * * Also see, Mitchell v. Independent Ice & Storage Co., 294 F.2d 186, 189 (5th Cir. 1961); Austford v. Goldberg, 292 F.2d 234, 238-239 (8th Cir. 1961); Mitchell v. C & P Shoe Corp., 286 F.2d 109 (5th Cir. 1960).

These decisions are in accord with the legislative history of section 16(c), that the sole reason for the proviso was to preclude the Secretary “from pioneering new law or bringing test cases under the provisions of § 16(c). It is not intended, however, to preclude the administrator from initiating, or the court from taking jurisdiction, on the basis of existing legal precedence [sic] under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as *107 amended * * 95 Cong.Rec. 14,-879 (1949).

The basic issue presented in this case, whether the business in which appellee is engaged constituted manufacturing or processing, had “been settled with reasonable finality,” Mitchell v. Emala & Associates, Inc., supra. The “incidental factual variations” between the reconditioning of transmissions and, for example, reconditioning second-hand machinery, Walling v. Roland Electric Co., supra; Guess v. Montague, supra, does not make this area of the law unsettled. The statute does not require a carbon copy of an earlier case. The principle having been well established in these cases, the factual differences between them and the one now under consideration do not warrant distinction. 5 For the courts to require identical factual situations before permitting an action under § 16(c) would restrict the Fair Labor Standards Act to an absurd degree. We cannot ascribe to Congress an intent to severely hobbling its remedial purpose.

II

The appellee represents itself to us as a service station garage. It says it differs from other businesses of that kind only in that it specializes in one part of the automobile, its transmission. We cannot assent to this proposition.

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422 F.2d 104, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 10760, 19 Wage & Hour Cas. (BNA) 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-p-schultz-secretary-of-labor-united-states-department-of-labor-v-ca4-1970.