Mitchell v. Kickapoo Prairie Broadcasting Company

182 F. Supp. 578, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3838
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 28, 1960
Docket1594, 1597
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 182 F. Supp. 578 (Mitchell v. Kickapoo Prairie Broadcasting Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Kickapoo Prairie Broadcasting Company, 182 F. Supp. 578, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3838 (W.D. Mo. 1960).

Opinion

R. JASPER SMITH, District Judge.

In case No. 1594, the Secretary of Labor seeks to recover minimum and overtime wages due Hazel O. Waltman, a former employee of defendants, pursuant to the provisions of Section 16(c) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended, Sections 201-219 of Title 29 U.S.C.A., hereinafter called the Act. In case No. 1597, the Secretary seeks to enjoin the defendant corporations and Roger H. Taylor from violating the provisions of Sections 15(a) (2) and (5) of the Act relative to overtime wages and record keeping. Since the evidence in case No. 1594 was considered pertinent in case No. 1597, the two actions were consolidated for trial

Defendants concede that their operations and their employees are under the Act and that they are subject to its provisions. It is also apparent with some very limited exceptions that no dispute exists between the parties as to the applicable principles of law involved. These cases therefore must be determined almost entirely upon their facts.

During the period of the alleged violations, from March 3, 1956, to the date of plaintiff’s complaint on March 7, 1958, Kickapoo Prairie Broadcasting Company was engaged in the operation of Radio Stations under the call letters KLRS at Mountain Grove, Missouri, and KICK at Springfield, Missouri. In November or December of 1958, after the original complaint was filed, Kickapoo sold and transferred the Radio Station KLRS at Mountain Grove, Missouri, with its physical properties and assets, to KLRS Broadcasting Company, another Missouri corporation. The latter corporation was operating Station KLRS at the time of trial. The individual defendant, Roger H. Taylor, owned one-third of the stock of Kickapoo Prairie Broadcasting Company and was the secretary-treasurer of that concern during the years 1956 through 1958. He also owned one-third of the stock of the new corporation, KLRS Broadcasting Company, and was its secretary-treasurer.

Neosho Broadcasting Company was engaged in radio broadcasting at Neosho, Missouri, under the call letters KBTN. Mr. Taylor was the secretary-treasurer of that concern and owned stock during the years in question. At the pre-trial conference on March 19, 1959, it was noted that sale of this station to parties stranger to this action had been approved by the Federal Communications Commission and that transfer of ownership was then in progress.

Primarily, the controversy centers about the operation of Stations KLRS at Mountain Grove, Missouri, and KBTN at Neosho, Missouri. Except as hereinafter noted, no complaint is made by plaintiff concerning the operations of KICK at Springfield, Missouri. Defend *581 ant Roger H. Taylor, together with two other individuals, Floyd W. Jones and Lester Strauss, owned the three corporations. In the initial phases of their operations it was agreed that the three principal stockholders and officers would rotate the supervision of payroll practices and operation of the stations at Neosho and Mountain Grove. This practice continued for a short time. However, in the latter part of 1956, Mr. Taylor assumed general control of the payroll practices of the two stations, and either approved or issued the payroll checks from that time forward.

During the period in question, time clocks were used for a very short time, but after protests and objections on the part of the various employees, they were removed. A system of time records was instituted by which each individual employee kept track of and made out his own time records. After the weekly time records were complete, the employee certified in writing on the time sheet that the record was accurate. It was then delivered to the Station Manager, who himself certified that the time record was accurate. After this it was forwarded to Mr. Taylor or to a Mrs. Martha Gibson whose offices were at Station KICK in Springfield, where the checks were prepared. Finally the checks with the time information were sent to Mr. Taylor’s office for his approval and signature.

I

For consideration first is the claim of Mrs. Hazel 0. Waltman. Mrs. Waltman, whose alleged overtime activity is the subject of case No. 1594, was first employed in March, 1956. She was employed on a regular full time basis on August 23, 1956, and continued in such a status until February, 1958.

There was testimony by Mrs. Waltman and by other former employees that she and they had worked in excess of the hours shown on their time cards for which they were not paid overtime. There was other testimony that they were informed not to report overtime but that nothing was said about not working overtime. All this testimony is sharply disputed. John Billingsley, Station Manager at Mountain Grove, and other witnesses testified that the various employees were instructed to “set their own hours” to the end that broadcasting services could be furnished within the hours the station was on the air, and, at the same time, avoid as much as possible working in excess of hours scheduled for the various employees.

Plaintiff and Mrs. Waltman place principal reliance on three day books or daily memoranda prepared by Mrs. Walt-man and alleged by her to be a complete and accurate record of the hours worked by her from August, 1956, to February, 1958.

I have examined these time books carefully. Although it is alleged that they were kept on a daily basis, it is perfectly apparent from examining them that they were not so kept. Obviously, substantial blocks of them, covering weeks at a time, were completed at one sitting, and were not kept on a daily basis at all. Even if the other evidence in this claim was not contradictory and of questionable basis, there would be no way of approximating or estimating the exact number of hours claimed to have been worked by her.

These documents, taken in connection with the generally unsatisfactory and unimpressive testimony of Mrs. Waltman herself, force the conclusion that plaintiff has failed to sustain the burden of persuasion that exists in a proceeding of this character.

II

Only one complaint of consequence is made on the operation of Station KICK in Springfield. It relates to only one employee, Nova Nash. He was employed as News Editor from September, 1956, to July, 1957. He was paid a weekly salary of $90 without overtime payments, and no time record was kept on him.

Defendants contend that Nash was exempt as a professional employee under Title 29 U.S.C.A. § 213(a) (1). Plaintiff for the first time in its briefs *582 objects to consideration of the exempt status of Nash for the reason that it was not affirmatively pleaded in defendants’ answers. It undoubtedly is true that this defensive matter normally is required to be pleaded and proved by defendants. However, counsel for defendants announced in opening statements as to Nova Nash that the defense would be that he was an exempt employee. Extensive evidence both direct and on cross-examination was introduced in the trial without objection. Within long established rules of procedure in this and other courts, plaintiff must be deemed to have waived the objection. The pleadings are considered amended to conform to the proof. Rule 15(b), F.R.Civ.P., 28 U.S.C.A.

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182 F. Supp. 578, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-kickapoo-prairie-broadcasting-company-mowd-1960.