Kalloo ex rel. Ulimited Mechanical Co. of NY, Inc. v. Unlimited Mechanical Co. of NY, Inc.

977 F. Supp. 2d 187, 2013 WL 5574774, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147487
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedOctober 10, 2013
DocketNo. 11-CV-6215 (NG)(RLM)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 977 F. Supp. 2d 187 (Kalloo ex rel. Ulimited Mechanical Co. of NY, Inc. v. Unlimited Mechanical Co. of NY, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kalloo ex rel. Ulimited Mechanical Co. of NY, Inc. v. Unlimited Mechanical Co. of NY, Inc., 977 F. Supp. 2d 187, 2013 WL 5574774, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147487 (E.D.N.Y. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

GERSHON, District Judge:

Plaintiffs Kevin Kalloo, Shahrazz Mohammad, and Clement Albertie sue defendants Unlimited Mechanical Co. of New York, Inc. (“Unlimited Mechanical”) and Nicholas Bournias for violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. § 201 et seq., and the New York Labor Law (“NYLL”), § 190 et seq. Specifically, plaintiffs allege that defendants failed to pay them appropriate overtime compensation for hours worked under the FLSA and NYLL. Plaintiffs also allege that defendants failed to pay compensable travel time under the statutes, and that defendants, in violation of the NYLL, failed to pay Mr. Kalloo for his last two weeks of work at Unlimited Mechanical. Defendants bring counterclaims against Mr. Albertie for unjust enrichment, and against Mr. Kalloo for interference with contractual or business relations.

A bench trial was held on September 18, 20, and 23, 2013.1 Plaintiffs testified on their own behalves, along with Izabela Gardocka, a paralegal who prepared documents summarizing plaintiffs’ timesheets and reflecting their damages’ requests. Plaintiffs also called defendant Nicholas Bournias, who was examined by defense counsel solely as to his testimony on plaintiffs’ case. As stated on the record, defense counsel limited his examination of Mr. Bournias to cross-examination on the testimony elicited by plaintiffs. Michael Mavromoustakos, Fidel Martinez, Manuel Pena, Mauricio Nolasco, and Maria Askordalakis, all current employees of Unlimited Mechanical, testified in the defense case, and Waldo Hatch and Robert Miller testified on the counterclaims.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The court’s Findings of Fact pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)(1) are set forth below and also in the later sections of this Opinion. These findings are drawn from witness testimony at trial, my careful observation of the witnesses’ demeanor and candor, the parties’ trial [192]*192exhibits, and the stipulated facts read into the record at trial.

A. Unlimited Mechanical and Mr. Bournias

Unlimited Mechanical, which is located in Long Island City, provides installation, servicing, and maintenance for HVAC systems. Mr. Bournias, Unlimited Mechanical’s president, owns fifty percent of the company, and Michael Mavromoustakos, its vice-president, owns the other half.

Mr. Bournias oversaw the work of Unlimited Mechanical, directed its employees on a daily basis, set workers’ schedules, determined rates of pay, visited job sites, made deliveries, and performed most of the hiring and firing. He supervised the three plaintiffs, monitored their hours worked, reviewed their payroll, and told them when and where to work. Mr. Bournias signed workers’ paychecks and approved their overtime hours. Mr. Mavromoustakos focused on “running the sheet metal shop, estimating, helping run the construction jobs and whatever else the company need[ed].... ” Trial Tr. 395.

Unlimited Mechanical employed the plaintiffs. (The dispute as to whether Mr. Kalloo was an employee or independent contractor is discussed below.) Plaintiffs were directed to wear Unlimited Mechanical shirts, sweaters, and hats when they were on the job, and Unlimited Mechanical provided them with equipment, trucks, and materials to do their work.

B. The Payment of Straight Time and Overtime

A standard workday at Unlimited Mechanical was eight hours plus a thirty minute unpaid lunch break. Payments for these hours (ie., the first forty hours of a work week, or “straight time”) were made by check. Unlimited Mechanical rarely “allowed” for overtime (ie., work in excess of forty hours per week), and customers rarely paid for it. When plaintiffs were paid for working more than forty hours in a week, the overtime payments were made in cash, and defendants kept no written record of the cash payments.

Unlimited Mechanical required employees to fill out their own timesheets, which they would then submit to the company in order to receive their paychecks. The timesheets contained columns for each day of the week. Each day contained boxes for an employee to enter the date, “time in,” “time out,” overtime hours, and total hours.2 The timesheets also contained lines for the total regular hours for the week and the total overtime hours for the week, the employee’s signature, and the manager’s signature. After entering their information, employees would submit the time-sheets to Mr. Bournias for his approval. Mr. Bournias would review the time sheets and make adjustments.

These adjustments were made in Mr. Bournias’s sole discretion: employees had no opportunity to review the adjustments, which were made after they submitted their timesheets, and Mr. Bournias sometimes based his adjustments on his impression that plaintiffs had wasted time on the job or had made a mistake in entering their time. Moreover, Unlimited Mechanical kept no records to compare against the employees’ entries. The sole evidence of a “record” was a reference to a blotter on Mr. Bournias’s desk, which was never produced in this case, that tracked only vacation and sick days.

[193]*193Mr. Bournias, and not Ms. Askordalakis, the company’s bookkeeper and Mr. Bournias’s sister, calculated the overtime. He would then give her a slip of paper with the amount of additional cash owed to an employee, but the paper did not contain the number of overtime hours that the employee had worked. The bookkeeper would discard the paper as soon as she was finished with it. Neither Mr. Bournias nor Unlimited Mechanical withheld taxes from these cash overtime payments, or paid withholding taxes to the Internal Revenue Service or New York State. Mr. Bournias testified that Unlimited Mechanical paid overtime wages at a time and a half rate, but acknowledged that Unlimited Mechanical had no records to corroborate the assertion.

Based upon all of the evidence, including the evidence discussed below, I conclude that Unlimited Mechanical failed to pay plaintiffs the full amount of their earned overtime wages, when wages for overtime hours were paid at all. Mr. Bournias’s and Mr. Mavromoustakos’s testimony to the contrary is not credited. Insofar as current employees testified that they themselves received time and a half pay when working overtime, this testimony was not persuasive with respect to the payments that the plaintiffs received.

C. Clement Albertie

Mr. Albertie seeks damages under the NYLL for overtime work he performed, as reflected on the “time in” and “time out” entries on his timesheet, for which he was not compensated with overtime wages. He also seeks damages under the NYLL for uncompensated travel time back to Unlimited Mechanical’s shop at the end of the work day; depending on the number of hours he worked in the week, he asserts he was entitled to either straight time or overtime wages.

Mr, Albertie is an HVAC mechanic with approximately fourteen years of experience in installing, servicing, maintenance, and ductwork. Unlimited Mechanical employed Mr. Albertie between March 24, 2007 and August 24, 2008, and he was paid $24 per hour.

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977 F. Supp. 2d 187, 2013 WL 5574774, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 147487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kalloo-ex-rel-ulimited-mechanical-co-of-ny-inc-v-unlimited-mechanical-nyed-2013.