Mitchell v. Reynolds

125 F. Supp. 337, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2665
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedNovember 12, 1954
DocketCiv. No. 628
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 125 F. Supp. 337 (Mitchell v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Reynolds, 125 F. Supp. 337, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2665 (W.D. Ark. 1954).

Opinion

JOHN E. MILLER, District Judge.

On April 21, 1954, plaintiff filed his complaint against defendants seeking to [338]*338enjoin them from allegedly violating the overtime, record keeping, and shipping provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq.

The defendants on June 23, 1954, filed their answer in which they denied violating the Act. Thereafter, plaintiff served upon defendants certain interrogatories and requests for admissions, which in due time were answered by defendants.

Upon the issues thus joined the case was tried to the Court, without a jury, on October 27, 1954, and at the conclusion of the trial the Court, having considered the pleadings, ore tenus testimony of the witnesses, interrogatories and request for admissions and responses thereto, exhibits, and contentions of the parties, orally announced its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and in accordance therewith the Court now makes and files herein its formal findings of fact and conclusions of law, separately stated.

Findings of Fact

1.

The plaintiff is the Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor. The individual defendants are citizens and residents of the Western District of Arkansas, El Dorado Division, and are doing business as a partnership under the name of J. W. Reynolds Lumber Company.

2.

Prior to 1954, Investigators of the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor had investigated defendants’ business several times. On at least one of these occasions it was discovered that defendants were not in full compliance with the Fair Labor Standards Act, and defendants were required to make additional payments to some of their employees, apparently for unpaid overtime compensation. However, in each of these investigations defendants cooperated fully with the Investigators and made an honest effort to meet the requirements of the Act.

In fact, defendants were so desirous of complying with the Act that they employed John F. Stroud, a former Investigator of the Wage and Hour Division, to check their books periodically and assist them in complying with the Act. Mr. Stroud first began working for defendants in July of 1950, and at that time he ascertained that defendants’ books were apparently being kept properly, but noticed that certain employees were turning in the same number of hours each week.

Due to the nature of the work, it was not feasible for the defendants’ supervisory personnel to keep an accurate record of the number of hours worked each week by each employee, and beginning in July, 1950, certain employees were given individual time cards upon which they were to record the number of hours they worked each day and each week. Most of these employees had been working for defendants for a number of years, and were trusted with the keeping of their own hours. At the time the cards were given to the employees Stroud instructed them to keep an accurate record of the actual number of hours they worked each week, and J. L. Toland, defendants’ bookkeeper and office manager, typed the following notation upon the backs of the employees’ first time cards:

“In line with your talk to Mr. Stroud in regard to your working hours, please fill in the exact number of hours you have worked and at the end of each pay period please turn in your time card and pick up a new card for the next period. J. L. Toland.”

Subsequent to that time, and up until April of 1954, Stroud, Toland and N. B. Rutledge, Manager of the Company, each instructed the employees from time to time that they should keep an accurate record of the actual number of hours worked each week. However, some of the employees did not keep an accurate record of the number of hours they worked, but instead recorded the same number of hours every week or every two weeks. There were two reasons for the employees’ failure to keep accurate records of the number of hours worked. [339]*339First, they thought it was unnecessary and was too much trouble, and second, they wanted to be assured of the same amount of pay each pay period, even though some weeks they might not work the required number of hours they thought necessary to entitle them to receive the same amount of pay for each pay period.

3..

In January and February of 1954, Charles F. Routon, Jr., an Investigator of the Wage and Hour Division, made an investigation of defendants’ business. He discovered that several of the employees were not recording the actual number of hours they worked each week, and also learned that one of the persons defendants had classified as an executive or administrative employee did not meet the necessary requirements for such an exemption. As a result of this investigation, and the fact that prior investigations of defendants’ business had revealed some violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act, plaintiff instituted the present action seeking to enjoin any further violations of the Act by defendants.

In the meantime defendants, having been informed by Investigator Routon of the violation by certain employees in failing to keep a record of the actual hours worked, again discussed the matter with the particular employees and demanded of them that they record the actual number of hours they worked. Since April, 1954, all of defendants’ employees, with the exception of Chester C. Jones, have been keeping accurate records of the actual number of hours they work each week.

4.

Specifically, prior to April, 1954, the following employees failed to record the actual number of hours they worked each week: H. G. Alston, saw filer, D. C. Brian, charged with duty of maintaining planer equipment, Jim Crawford, sawyer and charged with duty of maintaining saw mill equipment, Chester C. Jones, woods supervisor, also having other duties in connection with timber, Dave Purser, saw filer, and T. R. Sturgis, lumber checker. Subsequent to April, 1954, all of the employees except Jones have kept and recorded the actual number of hours they worked each week.

5.

Both prior to and after April, 1954, defendants’ books were properly kept insofar as the office records were concerned. That is, if the employees had turned in the actual number of hours worked, the office records would have been accurate and the employees would have received proper overtime compensation. But, the failure of the named employees to record the actual number of hours worked by them resulted in them receiving a slightly different amount of overtime pay than they would have received if the hours had been properly recorded. However, since April of this year all the records have been properly kept and overtime pay has been correctly determined, except on Chester C. Jones who was carried as an administrative employee.

6.

The defendants employed and are now employing approximately 100 employees in and about their place of business in Smackover, Arkansas, in the production of rough and finished pine and hardwood lumber. Substantially all of the goods produced by these employees have been, and are being, produced for interstate commerce, and have been, and are being, shipped, delivered, transported, offered for transportation and sold in interstate commerce.

7.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 F. Supp. 337, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-reynolds-arwd-1954.