Martin J. Walsh v. Timberline S. LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 2022
Docket20-1529
StatusUnpublished

This text of Martin J. Walsh v. Timberline S. LLC (Martin J. Walsh v. Timberline S. LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin J. Walsh v. Timberline S. LLC, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0111n.06

No. 20-1529

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED MARTIN J. WALSH, Secretary of Labor, ) Mar 09, 2022 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN TIMBERLINE SOUTH, LLC, a Michigan limited ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN liability company; JIM PAYNE, an individual, ) ) Defendants-Appellants. ) ) )

Before: SUTTON, Chief Judge; WHITE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Defendants Timberline South, LLC, and its

director, Jim Payne, return to this court for a second time appealing the district court’s grant of

summary judgment against them. In the prior appeal, we affirmed the district court’s liability

determination but concluded that it erred in finding that ordinary commute time and bona fide meal

periods qualify as compensable hours subject to the FLSA’s overtime requirements. We

accordingly vacated the damages award. On remand, the district court found that Defendants failed

to establish the amount of commute and bona fide meal time included in their records and therefore

reissued judgment in favor of the Secretary of Labor in the same amount as before. On appeal,

Defendants argue that the district court was required to reopen discovery or hold an evidentiary

hearing on damages, that the district court erred by including commute and meal time in the

damages award, and that the Secretary failed to meet his burden to prove damages because each No. 20-1529, Walsh v. Timberline South, LLC, et al.

of the Secretary’s calculations of overtime contained errors and inconsistences. Because there is

a genuine dispute of material fact regarding hours-worked for some employees, we AFFIRM IN

PART and REVERSE IN PART and REMAND for further proceedings.

I.

We previously set forth the background of this case and explained, as relevant here, the

numerous rounds of briefing on damages. See Sec’y of Lab. v. Timberline S., LLC, 925 F.3d 838

(6th Cir. 2019) (Timberline I). To recap, three rounds of briefing occurred before the district court

first granted summary judgment in favor of the Secretary on damages. Wage and Hour Investigator

Jeffrey Wrona of the Department of Labor (DOL) estimated in the Secretary’s original summary

judgment briefing that Timberline owed unpaid overtime of $468,595.08 for fifty employees.

Wrona explained that he primarily relied on Timberline’s payroll records to compute unpaid

overtime. However, because Timberline lacked records for the number of hours worked by some

employees, Wrona had to “reconstruct the hours worked per week based upon employee

interviews” or other methods for those employees. R. 18-17, PID 1738-39. Defendants argued,

in part, that the Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947, 29 U.S.C. § 254(a), required a reduction for time

spent on meals and in traveling from the employees’ homes to their workplaces, for which the

employees were compensated. Defendants also submitted their own estimate of overtime owed

(assuming the applicability of numerous exemptions and deductions later found not to apply),

estimating unpaid overtime of $11,199.26. After the original summary judgment briefing, the

district court rejected Defendants’ argument that the Portal-to-Portal Act prohibited inclusion of

ordinary commute time and bona fide meal periods in the amount owed because Defendants had

an established custom or practice of compensating for such time.

-2- No. 20-1529, Walsh v. Timberline South, LLC, et al.

The district court, however, ordered supplemental briefing to clarify whether Wrona relied

on employee interviews for the calculation of overtime due for hourly employees. And with

respect to non-hourly employees, the district court ordered supplemental briefing to clarify

inconsistencies in the record and to provide requested information in a specific format.

In the Secretary’s first supplemental brief, he calculated revised unpaid overtime to be

$454,684.73 for the fifty employees. The Secretary explained that forty-three out of the fifty

employees were paid an hourly rate for their entire employment, and because Defendants kept

records of their hours worked, “[c]omputing overtime for these employees is a simple case of

arithmetic based upon Defendants’ own records.” R.38, PID 3725-26. The Secretary further

explained that he

computed back wages for the remaining 7 employees for whom Defendants failed to keep some or all time records by either: (1) averaging the number of hours similarly situated employees worked per week or (2) averaging the number of hours individual employees worked each workweek based upon time records previously kept for each employee prior to Defendants changing the employee compensation to non-hourly and ceased keeping the required records.

Id. at PID 3726. The Secretary also presented data showing how he arrived at the calculated unpaid

overtime.

Defendants countered, in part, that the calculations performed by the Secretary for the non-

hourly employees lacked credibility because the calculations guessed at hours worked and pay

rate, contained errors, and led to absurd results because Defendants presented evidence that their

employees were paid significantly more than the industry average. Defendants submitted

timecards from seven employees that showed discrepancies between the hours listed in the

timecards and the hours-worked data used by the Secretary, which was taken from Defendants’

payroll journals. And they filed affidavits from five employees wherein each one stated that he

“was paid for driving to and from the worksite, but [he] did not have an agreement or understanding

-3- No. 20-1529, Walsh v. Timberline South, LLC, et al.

that this time would be included in any calculation of overtime”; that “[o]n most days,” the

employee “drove about one hour to the jobsite, and one hour home, and took a half-hour lunch

when [he] could fit it in”; and that the employee included “drive time and lunch time in total

hours.” R. 41-12, PID 4167-71.

The district court noted certain discrepancies that required additional briefing but also

rejected Defendants’ arguments that the data was inflated and that industry-aggregate data should

be used instead. The district court further noted that Defendants were critiquing the Secretary’s

“methodology largely by cherry picking particular workweeks with unusually high gross wages or

unusually low gross wages” and were essentially attacking “the statistical concept of an average.”

R. 43, PID 4187–88. As to the timecards, the district court reasoned that the Secretary was not at

fault for relying on the payroll journals rather than the timecards.

In the Secretary’s second supplemental brief, he recalculated unpaid overtime to be

$445,533.49, which reflected a change of unpaid overtime for three non-hourly employees and

one hourly employee. Defendants responded by arguing that the Secretary’s third attempt still

contained errors, which they said evidenced a total lack of credibility in the Secretary’s

calculations, and thus the district court should award no damages or use the industry-aggregate

data to determine unpaid overtime. Defendants further noted that the Secretary claimed to make

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Martin J. Walsh v. Timberline S. LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-j-walsh-v-timberline-s-llc-ca6-2022.