Jacobs v. Peavy-Wilson Lumber Co.

33 F. Supp. 206, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3050
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedMay 14, 1940
Docket213
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 F. Supp. 206 (Jacobs v. Peavy-Wilson Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Peavy-Wilson Lumber Co., 33 F. Supp. 206, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3050 (W.D. La. 1940).

Opinion

PORTERIE, District Judge.

On December 13, 1939, plaintiff filed his complaint -in this court seeking to enjoin defendant from violating the provisions of Sections 15(a) (1) and 15(a) (2) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (Act of June 25, 1938, c. 676, 52 Stat. 1060, U. S.C., Title 29, Sec. 201, et seq., 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq.).

Defendant is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Louisiana, and maintaining its principal office in this state. Its manufacturing plant and main sales office are located at Holopaw, Osceola County, Florida, where it owns and operates a large sawmill and planing mill, a lumber yard and various timber lands, and is engaged in the general lumber manufacturing business. It employs approximately four hundred employees and ships a substantial portion of its manufactured lumber in interstate commerce.

The Act (Section 6) requires the payment of a minimum wage (twenty-five cents an hour during the first year after October 24, 1938, and thirty cents for the next six years) to all employees engaged in interstate commerce or in the production of goods for interstate commerce. It prohibits the shipment in interstate commerce of goods produced in violation of the Act, Section 15(a) (1), and makes unlawful the failure to pay the minimum wage to persons engaged in interstate commerce *208 or the production of goods therefor. Section 15(a) (2).

The Act defines “wage” to include the “reasonable cost, as determined by the Administrator,” to the employer of furnishing employees with “board, lodging, or other facilities, if such board, lodging, or other facilities are customarily furnished by such employer to his employees”. Section 3(m).

On October 20, 1938, the Administrator of the Wage and Hour Division, acting under and pursuant to the authority conferred upon him by Section 3(m) of the Act, issued certain regulations fixing the method of determining the reasonable cost of furnishing the above-mentioned facilities (Regulations, Part 531). The regulations provide that the reasonable cost of company houses rented to the employee and of any other capital investments used in furnishing board, lodging, or other facilities, is to be the cost of operation and maintenance, including depreciation due to wear and tear, plus a reasonable allowance (not more than 5% per cent.) for interest on the depreciated amount of capital invested. It is further provided that reasonable cost shall in no case exceed the fair rental value of the property, and shall not include a profit to the employer.

Defendant has filed motions which incorporate (1) a motion to strike the allegations of the complaint relating to the regulations issued pursuant to Section 3(m) of the Act; (2) a motion to dismiss the complaint, and (3) a motion for a bill of particulars.

The motion to strike is made on the ground that the allegations in question are immaterial for the reasons that: (1) Section 3(m) of the Act, for many reasons, is not applicable to the deductions described in the complaint; (2) if Section 3(m) is held applicable, it is unconstitutional; and (3) there has been no valid determination of reasonable cost by the administrator pursuant to Section 3(m) of the Act.

The motion to dismiss is based, primarily, on the claim that the pertinent provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act are unconstitutional; or, secondarily, on the claim that the administration of the Act, in many ways, is unconstitutional.

The motion for a bill of particulars requests that plaintiffs supply, among other things, the names of the employees from whose wages illegal deductions are claimed to have been made; the names of the employees engaged in the production of goods for interstate commerce; the amounts of wages paid to each of them, and the dates of such payments; the particular amounts of the illegal deductions; and other data similar in character.

It is necessary, though it adds to the length of this opinion, to quote the most important articles of the petition of the plaintiff. A reading of them will disclose very few facts alleged, but many conclusions urged. This gives trouble in ruling on the motion to dismiss, because, with this generality of conclusion, the mind is left free to enter into scores of factual contingencies. The elaboration of these contingencies has taken eighty pages in the briefs of plaintiff and two hundred eighty-eight pages in the briefs of defendant. No criticism is here implied of the defendant’s counsel, for their objections are well and legally deduced. The objections are numerous, and, because of the paucity of facts in the plaintiff’s petition, the defendant is enabled to conjecture at will as to suppositional facts. But for the one fact alleged — the giving of scrip in payment of wages, discounted at 10% for cash, bringing the wage below the minimum —the court should dismiss the petition.

Here are the articles:

“V. That in connection with its business of manufacturing and producing lumber the defendant, commencing with the workweek beginning October 24, 1938, the effective date of the Act, and continuing to the date hereof, paid to many of its employees while engaged in -the production of goods for interstate commerce and in processes and occupations necessary to such production, certain cash wages and deducted therefrom certain charges for the furnishing of homes as living quarters for said employees, for medicines and drugs, and for clothing, groceries, foodstuffs, meats, and other commodities, all of which were customarily furnished by said defendant to said employees.”
“VII. That the amounts deducted by the defendant for such services, facilities, and commodities were far in excess of the reasonable cost of furnishing the same to said employees within the meaning of the Act and the regulations above set forth and were grossly excessive, exorbitant, oppressive and unreasonable and included in such charges' a substantial profit to said defendant, and such grossly excessive, exorbitant, oppressive and unreasonable *209 charges and deductions were calculated to and actually did result in the payment to said employees while so engaged in the production of goods for interstate commerce and in processes and occupations necessary to such production of wages of less than 25 cents an hour for the period commencing on October 24, 1938, and continuing to October 23, 1939, and less than 30 cents an hour for the period from October 24, 1939, down to date, in violation of Sections 6 and 15(a) (2) of the Act.
“VIII. That during the workweeks beginning October 24, 1938, the effective date of the Act, and continuing to June 1, 1939, the defendant issued scrip to many of its employees while engaged in producing goods for interstate commerce, and in processes and occupations necessary to such production, in lieu of cash wages, which scrip coupons were discounted directly by said defendant at 90 percent of its face value and at 90 percent of the amount due to said employees as wages.
“IX.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. Supp. 206, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-peavy-wilson-lumber-co-lawd-1940.