Keith Jones v. Producers Service Corporation

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 14, 2019
Docket2:17-cv-01086
StatusUnknown

This text of Keith Jones v. Producers Service Corporation (Keith Jones v. Producers Service Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith Jones v. Producers Service Corporation, (S.D. Ohio 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

JESUS CASAREZ, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, Case No, 2:17-cv-1086 Plaintiff, JUDGE EDMUND A. SARGUS, JR. Magistrate Judge Kimberly A. Jolson v. PRODUCERS SERVICE CORPORATION, Defendant. OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff Jesus Casarez’s, Individually and on Behalf of All Others Similarly Situated, (“Plaintiff”) Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 52) and Contingent Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (ECF No. 54), Defendant Producers Service Corporation’s (“Defendant”) Response in Opposition (ECF No. 63), Plaintiff's Reply in Support (ECF No. 65), and Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 62), Plaintiff's Response in Opposition (ECF No. 64), and Defendant’s Reply in Support (ECF No. 66). For the reasons that follow, Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is GRANTED in part and HELD IN ABEYANCE in part (ECF No. 52), Plaintiff's Contingent Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED as moct (ECF No. 54), and Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED (ECF No. 62). I. BACKGROUND This action arises out of alleged violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) 29 U.S.C. §§ 201 et seq., the Ohio Minimum Fair Wage Standards Act (“OMFWSA”), Ohio

Revised Code §§ 4111.01, 4111.03, and 411 1.19, and the Ohio Prompt Pay Act (“OPPA”), Ohio Revised Code § 4113.15. Plaintiff brings this action both individually and on behalf of all others similarly situated as a collective action pursuant to Section 16(b) of the FLSA and as a class action pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23. (Compl. { 17, ECF No. 1.) On May 25, 2018 the Court granted Plaintiffs Motion for Conditional Certification of Collective Action and named the class “[a]ll current and former employees of Defendant who were employed as non- management oilfield operations employees for Defendant at any time since December 14, 2014.” (ECF No. 18.) Plaintiff alleges Defendant does not pay its non-management oilfield operations employces overtime wages as required by the FLSA, OMFWSA, and OPPA. (Compl. § 4.) Defendant is a for-profit limited liability company providing products and services in the oil and gas industry throughout the United States. (Parks Dep. at 13:9-13, ECF No. 60.) Defendant employed Plaintiff as an oilfield equipment operator, a non-management oilfield operations position. (/d, at 14:10-21.) Non-management oilfield equipment operators provide the manual labor needed for pumping and fracking oil wells on site including loading, assembling, operating, and disassembling the equipment involved. (/d. at 15:7-24.) A. Plaintiff's Schedule Defendant’s work for its customers requires fracking operations to run 24-hours per day. (id. at 21:13-22:1.) Defendant’s employees work 12-hour shifts and stay in camps or hotels while working. (Jd. at 20:18-22:8.) Defendant allows its employees to choose to work either (1) fourteen days on and then seven days off: or (2) seven days on and then four days off, followed by seven days on and then three days off. (/d. at 17:25-18:17.) Defendant offers these two schedules “to give [employees] some options as far as their ability to be at home versus being out for two solid weeks.” (dat 18:12-17.) The total labor is the same whether the

employee chooses the first or second schedule. (id, at 19:24-20:5.) Plaintiff and the other non- managerial oilfield operations employees regularly work more than forty hours per week. (See é.g., Pl.’s Br. Supp. Pl.’s Mot. Summ. J. Regarding Belo Contract, Ex. E [hereinafter Pl.’s Mot. Summ. J.], ECF No. 53.) At times, they also work less than forty hours per week. (Id.) In their depositions, Defendant’s non-managerial oilfield operations employees provided a variety of reasons as to why their schedules fluctuated above and below forty hours per week. Several employees agreed that their work hours varied each week due to the amount of work available at the time. (Foster Dep. at 66:22-67:1, ECF No. 58; Nathaniel Jones Dep. at 97:9— 98:4, ECF No. 59.) For example, counsel for Defendant asked Nathaniel Jones, who in the past was 4 non-managerial oilfield operations employee for Defendant, “i]s it fair to say that how many hours you worked in a given week over the course of your employment was just determined by the work . . . [hJow much work there was to do?” (Nathaniel Jones Dep. at 97:9- 14.) He responded, “[y]es.” (/d.) Counsel for Defendant also asked Nathaniel J ones, however, if he agreed that “because of the fluctuations in the market and the industry, [he] did [not] necessarily know how much work there was going to be to do .. . week to week, month to month.” To this question Nathaniel Jones responded: “[w]e would know. We had a projected outline. They would tell us we [have] got four jobs for December . . . so we had a short outlook on how much work we had.” (Nathaniel Jones Dep. at 98:5-17.) Similarly, Defense counsel asked Keith Jones, a non-managerial oilfield operations employee for Defendant, what he knew about the up and down of the oilfield in comparison to how much work he had. (Keith Jones Dep. 22:1-2, ECF No. 61 .) Keith Jones responded that “part of it is working extra hard when we [are] understaffed due to the wide range of fluctuation. One day we may have nothing to do, but the next time we [are] having to work an extreme

amount of hours under extreme circumstances.” (id. at 22:8-12.) Importantly, however, he testified later that an increase in hours in a given week was because they “were scheduled more work that week than [the] next week . . . it was scheduling on the management|’s] part.” (Ud. at 51:11-13.) Thus, due to several different factors, the schedules varied from week to week, but Plaintiff, and those on whose behalf he brings this suit, did have advance notice of the hours they would be working. (Nathaniel Jones Dep. at 98:5—17; Keith Jones Dep. 22:8-12. 51:11-13.) B. Plaintiff’s Compensation Plaintiff, and those employees on behalf of which he brings this suit, are paid a base pay, stage pay, and quarterly bonuses. ! 1. Base Pay Plaintiff, and those on behalf of whom he brings this action, are paid a specific amount, for most employees $1,538.00, bi-weekly, as laid out by the document given to employees labeled “Terms of Agreement” (“Terms of Agreement”). (Def.’s Resp. Opp’n Pl.’s Mot. Conditional Certification, Ex. A, ECF No. 15.) The Terms of Agreement refers to this payment schedule as the “Belo bi-weekly pay schedule.” Ud.) Further, the Terms of Agreement states there will be “additional overtime after 60 hours.” (/d.) This specific amount paid bi-weekly, referred to as base pay, is the pay the worker is entitled to for working forty hours a week at their regular wage and twenty more hours a week at one and one-half times their regular wage. For example, for employees with a base pay of $1,538.00 bi-weekly, this amount represents being paid $10.99 per hour for the first forty hours a week, and then $16.38 per hour for the remaining twenty hours. (Parks Dep. at 24:5—11.) Employees receive this base pay regardless of how

' In the Defendant's briefing they also mention a third type of payment, year-end bonuses. (Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. at 13.) The parties, however, do not appear to argue that year-end bonuses effect the Belo contract or have any other 7 this case. As such, the Court will only address base pay, stage pay and quarterly bonuses, the payments in

many hours they worked that week. (Leeper Decl. 1 17, ECF No. 60-1 .) 2. Stage Pay In addition to base pay, employees receive stage pay. (Def.’s Resp. Opp’n Pl.’s Mot. Conditional Certification, Ex. A; Casarez Dep.

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Keith Jones v. Producers Service Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-jones-v-producers-service-corporation-ohsd-2019.