Giannini v. Standard Oil Co.

130 F. Supp. 740, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3423
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Indiana
DecidedMarch 3, 1955
DocketCiv. A. No. 496
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 130 F. Supp. 740 (Giannini v. Standard Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giannini v. Standard Oil Co., 130 F. Supp. 740, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3423 (N.D. Ind. 1955).

Opinion

SWYGERT, Chief Judge.

This opinion shall be deemed the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law.

[742]*742There are forty-five plaintiffs in this action, seeking compensation from the defendant, Standard Oil Company, for the overtime hours they worked at various times between April, 1942 and December, 1945. Their claims are based on the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq.

After a motion by the defendant for summary judgment was denied, counsel for all parties agreed to select from the named plaintiffs those claims which were somewhat representative of all the plaintiffs and to try these cases first. The four plaintiffs so selected and whose eases have been tried are John Dann, Edward A. Westbay, William C. Berg, and Marion D. Reed. They will be referred to hereafter as the plaintiffs.

The defendant operates oil refineries at Whiting, Indiana, Wood River, Illinois, and other points, for the production of petroleum products. These products are shipped in interstate commerce. The largest of defendant’s refineries, the Whiting refinery, maintains an Engineering Department which is responsible for the operation and maintenance of this refinery. Within the Engineering Department there is an Engineering Inspection Department handling the inspection work of the Engineering Department, and it was here that the plaintiffs were employed during the period for which they have made claim.

The work of the plaintiffs in this Department was that of inspecting defendant’s plant facilities, and was directed toward the maintenance, safety and operational efficiency of these various facilities. The plaintiffs’ maintenance inspection work involved testing and inspecting equipment in use. During certain portions of the period considered herein the plaintiffs also did inspection work in connection with new construction. Generally, the methods and the tools used were the same whether the inspection involved the maintenance of equipment in use or the inspection of new construction. The plaintiffs worked on towers, vessels, pumps, exchangers, line work, and other equipment of various units of the defendant. Besides the work on this unit equipment the plaintiffs also worked on agitators, separators (tanks), vessels, such as salvage vessels, and pipes. The plaintiffs’ inspection work was performed by means of visual examinations, calipers, hammers, x-ray examinations, wire brushes, knives, etc.

The equipment in operation was primarily inspected to determine whether there was corrosion, whereas the new equipment was checked to determine whether it was being built or fabricated in accordance with certain plans and specifications.

The work of one plaintiff, Dann, during the period under consideration, was largely that of testing certain areas for the existence of toxic gases. By means of a gas test instrument, a bottle of lead acetate and a piece of filter paper, Dann would check for petroleum vapors and hydrogen sulfide, record his findings on a piece of paper and hand this over to the proper party.

Except for Dann, some of the work performed by the plaintiffs was on new construction away from the Whiting refinery. Westbay did some inspection work on welds of new equipment at defendant’s refinery at Wood River, Illinois. Reed, Berg, and Westbay spent a great deal of time doing inspection work on new equipment at various contractors’ factories outside Indiana. This new equipment was destined for one of the defendant’s refineries either at Wood River or Whiting.

An illustration of the manner in which one of the plaintiffs, Westbay, performed his maintenance inspection work affords a descriptive insight into this phase of all of the plaintiffs’ work. One of the types of maintenance work performed by Westbay was called tank work. He would begin with a “tank” form given him by the defendant which listed all the parts of the tank, and which outlined every phase of the inspection that was to be made on a particular tank. For example, the form might start off with [743]*743the bottom of the tank, stating the minimum thickness of the bottom and then it would say “condition”. Westbay would inspect the bottom looking for corrosion by entering the tank and visually inspecting the bottom. Then he would hammer test it by hitting the bottom with a hammer. He could sometimes determine from the sound or the ease with which the bottom was dented if the body was thin. Then he would have holes drilled in the bottom and insert a caliper within these holes to measure the thickness of the bottom plate, and this measurement he would record. Next, he would, if so indicated on the form, inspect the shell, the roof plates and so on, inspecting all the parts of the tank indicated on the form. The thickness of all these parts would be recorded on the form, and later copied onto another paper which would be given to his superior. On the bottom of the form there would be a space where recommendations might be made; if, for example, there were large holes in the roof of the tank Westbay could recommend that it be scrapped. The Engineering Design Department would look the form over and decide what should be done with the tank.

Although there were many variations of the maintenance inspection work performed by the plaintiffs, this example serves to illustrate the nature of these day-to-day activities of Westbay, Berg and Reed, and at least to some extent, of Dann. As to the inspection work connected with the new equipment, this was primarily a matter of examining the new equipment in the same general manner as the equipment in operation was examined, and determining whether it measured up to the specifications contained in blueprints, designs and plans given the plaintiffs by the defendant.

I — Coverage

The plaintiffs’ claim for overtime compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act has been attacked at the threshold by the defendant’s assertion that these plaintiffs are not entitled to the protection of the act.

Title 29 of the U.S.C.A. § 208(a) specifies two instances where employees are covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act: (1) where employees are engaged in commerce, or; (2) where employees are engaged in the production of goods for commerce. The defendant admits that the plaintiffs were engaged in the production of goods for commerce while performing their duties as inspectors in maintaining the operations of the Whiting refinery. It denies that they were so engaged, however, during the time when the plaintiffs were working on the inspection of new equipment in connection with certain construction projects undertaken by the defendant at its Whiting and Wood River refineries. Each of the plaintiffs worked to some extent in connection with one or more of these projects. The parties have stipulated that if it is deemed necessary, the defendant will segregate the time spent by the plaintiffs on these assignments.

The number and type of these construction projects have been stipulated by the parties. The following is a list of the specific units which are involved:

Stipulated Unit No. Completed
1. Fluid Cracking Unit #600, Whiting 10/3/46
2. Fluid Cracking Unit #500, Whiting 3/25/45
3. Vapor Recovery Unit #100, Whiting 9/6/46
4. Vapor Recovery Unit #200, Whiting 3/18/48
5. Hydroformer & Toluene Extraction Plant, Whiting 9/1/43
6.

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Bluebook (online)
130 F. Supp. 740, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giannini-v-standard-oil-co-innd-1955.