Reis v. Knight's Airport Limousine Service, Inc.

33 Mass. L. Rptr. 39
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 2, 2014
DocketNo. WOCV201401558C
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Mass. L. Rptr. 39 (Reis v. Knight's Airport Limousine Service, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reis v. Knight's Airport Limousine Service, Inc., 33 Mass. L. Rptr. 39 (Mass. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Gordon, Robert B., J.

Plaintiff Thomas S. Reis has brought a multi-count Class Action Complaint (the “Complaint”) against defendants Knight’s Airport Limousine Service, Inc. (“Knight’s” or the “Company”) and each of its President and Treasurer. The central allegation of the Complaint is that Knight’s habitually faded to pay due overtime wages to Reis and the putative class of Limousine Drivers he would represent, in violation of Massachusetts wage and hour laws. Presented for decision is the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Counts I-IV of the Complaint. The motion is premised principally on the contention that plaintiff and his would-be class members are employees of a “common carrier” and, as such, are statutorily exempt from the overtime rights forming the basis of these claims. Following a hearing and for the reasons which follow, the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss is ALLOWED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Taking the allegations of the Complaint as true, and drawing all reasonable inferences therefrom in favor of the plaintiff, as the Court must when reviewing a Motion to Dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), see Iannacchino v. Ford Motor Co., 451 Mass. 623, 636 (2008), reveals the following pertinent facts.

Knight’s is a Massachusetts corporation which provides limousine, van and other transportation services throughout the Commonwealth. Michael F. Hogan is the Company’s President, Thomas R. Hogan its Treasurer. Plaintiff was employed by Knight’s as a Limousine Driver, in which capacity he at various times worked more than 40 hours in a week without receiving at least 1 times his regular rate of pay for the hours worked in excess of 40.

Knight’s provides a variety of transportation services, for which it deploys a fleet of vehicles that include limousines, vans and town cars of diverse dimensions. The majority of these vehicles weigh less than 10,000 pounds and carry fewer than eight passengers. Knight’s enters into individual transportation agreements with customers, pursuant to which it picks up passengers at pre-designated locations and drives them to pre-determined destinations. Pick-up and drop-off points vary by agreement, and Limousine Drivers neither follow fixed routes nor collect riders indiscriminately during their contracted transports.

Knight’s is licensed as a “common carrier” under Mass. G.L.c. 159A, Sec. 11A, and as such is authorized to provide both charter services for groups of ten or more and carriage transport for passengers along established routes between fixed termini.1 Plaintiff and the class of Limousine Drivers he proposes to represent did not principally perform such services. Plaintiffs primary duty, rather, was to operate commercial vehicles carrying fewer than eight passengers, and to shuttle such passengers to and from pre-des-ignated locations in accordance with individual customer agreements. The Complaint seeks overtime compensation only for class members’ limousine services of this unregulated variety.

DISCUSSION

Counts I through IV of the Complaint each source to a single allegation. Namely, plaintiff maintains that he and similarly situated Limousine Drivers are entitled to overtime compensation for hours worked in excess of 40 in a week. Counts I, II and III allege that, in failing to pay such overtime, Knight’s and its executive officers violated the Massachusetts Overtime Statute, G.L.c. 151, Sec. 1A (Count I), its interpretive regulations under 455 C.M.R. 2.02(3) (Count II), and the Massachusetts Payment of Wages Act, G.L.c. 149, Sec. 148 (Count HI). Count IV relatedly alleges that, by failing to pay overtime compensation to which the plaintiff was entitled, the defendants breached an implied agreement to pay him his due wages.2

At the outset, the Court sees no reason to preserve Count II (Violation of Overtime Regulations) for trial. This claim appears to be entirely derivative (and du-plicative) of the statutory causes of action asserted in Counts I and III. It requires the same elemental proof, and affords nothing in the way of remedies that does not already avail under the pleaded statutes. At the same time, the Court is unaware of any private right of action that attaches to breach of wage regulations promulgated by the Department of Labor Standards independent of the state statutes which these regulations interpret. See Buck v. American Airlines, Inc., 476 F.3d 29, 33 (1st Cir. 2007) (“Regulations alone cannot create private rights of action; the source of the right must be a statute”). Although plaintiff rightly points out that 455 C.M.R. 2.07 states that any violation of 455 C.M.R. 2.00 et seq. will subject an employer to the [41]*41remedies available under Mass. G.L.c. 151, that is precisely the point. A regulatory violation may furnish the substantive basis for a claim under a wage statute like Chapter 151; but it will not give rise to an independent cause of action jurther to a claim under the statute itself. Having already pleaded an overtime claim pursuant to Chapter 151 in Count I of the Complaint, the plaintiff may not pyramid an identical overtime claim on top of it premised on a violation of interpretive regulations issued under that same statute. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss as to Count II, therefore, is ALLOWED.

Counts I and III of the Complaint embody the essential thrust of plaintiffs lawsuit, and it is to these wage and hour claims that the defendants’ principal affirmative defense is addressed. The defendants’ Rule 12 motion asserts that Counts I and HI fail as a matter of law, because Limousine Drivers like the plaintiff are statutorily exempt from overtime eligibility. Plaintiff puts forward a contrary construction of the subject exemption, and the issue presented is purely one of law.

Mass. G.L.c. 151, Sec. 1A provides in relevant part as follows:

Except as otherwise provided in this section, no employer in the commonwealth shall employ any employee in an occupation, as defined in section two, for a work week longer than forty hours, unless such employee receives compensation for his employment in excess of forty hours at a rate not less than one and one half times the regular rate at which he is employed . . .
This section shall not be applicable to any employee who is employed:—
(11) by an employer licensed and regulated pursuant to chapter one hundred and fifty-nine A.

Mass. G.L.c. 151, Sec. 1A(11). The defendants argue that, inasmuch as Knight’s is a “common carrier” licensed to provide charter and carriage transport services under Chapter 159A, all those “employed by” it are exempt from overtime eligibility in accordance with Subsection 11.

It is true that Knight’s is a common carrier licensed to provide charter and carriage transportation under Mass. G.L.c. 159A. In a plain-language sense, therefore, plaintiff and his fellow Limousine Drivers are “employed ... by an employer licensed and regulated pursuant to [Chapter 159A],” and would thus appear to qualify for the overtime exemption of G.L.c. 151, Sec. 1A(11). At the same time, however, it is equally true that Knight’s Limousine Drivers do not work in an area of the Company’s transportation business falling within the scope of Chapter 159A’s coverage. The most applicable provisions of Mass. G.L.c. 159A state in pertinent part as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
33 Mass. L. Rptr. 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reis-v-knights-airport-limousine-service-inc-masssuperct-2014.