Sawyer v. United States

138 Ct. Cl. 152, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 63, 1957 WL 8278
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 3, 1957
DocketNo. 209-55; No. 210-56
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 138 Ct. Cl. 152 (Sawyer v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. United States, 138 Ct. Cl. 152, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 63, 1957 WL 8278 (cc 1957).

Opinion

Opinion

per curiam;

This case1 was referred by the court, pursuant to Rule 45 (c), to C. Murray Bernhardt, a trial commissioner of the court, with directions to make findings of fact, and to [153]*153make recommendations as to the legal conclusions which the court should reach as a result of the findings and applicable statutes and legal principles. The report of the commissioner was made before the court’s decision in the case of Harold Gaetke, et al., v. United States, 136 C. Cls. 756.

On the authority of our opinion in the Gaethe case, supra, we adopt and approve the trial commissioner’s findings of fact and the conclusion of law which he has recommended.

The petitions are dismissed.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The plaintiffs are citizens of the United States and residents of North Carolina.

2. For various periods since May 25, 1949, the plaintiffs have been employed by the defendant in the combined capacity of guards-firefighters at the Oteen Veterans Hospital, a facility of the Veterans Administration.

3. The plaintiffs seek to recover overtime compensation for the respective periods of their employments within the six-year period prior to the commencement of their suits, pursuant to the provisions of section 201 of the Federal Employees Pay Act of 1945 (59 Stat. 295), as amended, and extra night pay differential pursuant to the provisions of section 301 of that statute. The Sawyer petition was filed May 25, 1955. The Burgess petition was filed May 15,1956.

4. The Oteen Veterans Hospital is located at Oteen in the State of North Carolina. A division of this facility known as the Oteen Hospital, Swannanoa Division, is located at Swannanoa, six miles east of Oteen. Both hospitals are under the joint administration of a manager. There exists in the Office of the Manager an Engineering Division, headed by a chief in charge of engineering maintenance and operation of both hospitals. Within the Engineering Division there are two protective sections solely concerned with guard duties and fire protection, each headed by a protective section chief, one section for Oteen and one for Swannanoa.

5. a.’ The Oteen Hospital proper comprises an area of approximately 160 acres, 80 acres of which are enclosed by a cyclone link fence 6 feet high and about 2% miles in length. Within this enclosure are the hospital quarters consisting of [154]*15462 permanent, semifireproof buildings. There are two pedestrian and two traffic gates through which persons and goods enter or leave this enclosed area. Doctors’ and nurses’ quarters, a reservoir, and various service facilities are located on the hospital grounds outside the fence.

b. The Oteen Hospital is a self-contained and substantially integrated institution maintaining its own repair and service facilities, such as a garage for 30 vehicles and machine shop, plumbing, radio, paint, and carpentry shops, storage yards and buildings, cafeteria, laundry, and flower nursery. It serves the medical needs of 700 to 800 tuberculosis and lung patients at all times. Seven to eight hundred medical and other employees work there.

6. a. The Swannanoa Division of Oteen Veterans Hospital is devoted to the practice of general medicine. Prior to its acquisition by the Veterans Administration it was an Army medical facility known as the Moore General Hospital. It normally maintains 450 to 500 patients and a staff, medical and otherwise, of about 500 persons. Swannanoa Hospital consists of approximately 200 buildings of wood-frame and of nonfireproof construction. With the exception of two or three buildings which are two stories high, all the others are of the one-story type. The greater part of the grounds is fenced in. One pedestrian gate and one vehicular traffic gate provide ingress and egress to and from the enclosed area.

b. While neither division of the Oteen Hospital is designed for the care of psychiatric patients, mentally ill patients are cared for in these hospitals on a temporary or incidental basis.

7. a. Prior to 1947, the positions of guard and firefighter were separate ones at the Oteen Hospital. The guards worked an eight-hour day, with some rotation of shifts arranged by agreement between the guards, but the record does not disclose the number of eight-hour days worked each week. The firefighters, who had a higher pay scale than the guards, were on duty 60 to 72 hours a week, and were compensated under the so-called “two-thirds rule,” that is, two-thirds of each on-duty hour was treated as an hour of work for pay purposes.

[155]*155b. The Veterans Administration issued Circular No. 9, dated December 29, 1945, Section III of which contained revised regulations on the subject of compensatory time and overtime pay reading, in pertinent part, as follows:

1. The basic workweek of the V. A. is 40 hours a week for service rendered 8 hours a day, Monday through Friday. The administrative work week is 44 hours a week, with overtime pay based on service on Saturday. Service in excess of 40 hours a week but not exceeding 48 hours a week is compensable at regular overtime rates. Overtime pay will be paid for service rendered in excess of 48 hours a week, unless compensatory time is requested.
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7. Effective immediately, any civilian employee confined to quarters on or off the station, or required to be at his post of duty beyond his normal tour of duty, as to be available for emergency call, will be paid overtime pay or allowed compensatory time off for time thus spent, except for that time allowed for sleep and meals. Generally speaking, for instance, a nurse who is designated as a member of a surgical team will be confined to quarters for only about four hours, the remainder of the time being allotted for sleep and meals. Furthermore, if sleep and/or meals are interrupted by an emergency call, the employee will be paid overtime pay or allowed compensatory time for the actual emergency service rendered in addition to compensation for time confined to quarters awaiting call.

c. On April 19, 1947, the Veterans Administration issued Technical Bulletin TB5-33,2 providing, in pertinent part, as follows:

1. Purpose. This technical bulletin is intended to provide for adequate fire protection at isolated stations remote from municipal fire departments.
2. Policy, a. It is the policy of the VA to have adequate fire fighting and protective utility personnel available for protection against fire at isolated stations at all times.
[156]*156b. The Deputy Administrator, or the manager of the station subject to approval of the Deputy Administrator, will accordingly be responsible for determining whether or not the accessibility of the station to municipal fire fighting units, the construction of the buildings at the station, and similar factors warrant maintenance of a round-the-clock fire fighting force at the station. (Adequate fire protection cannot be furnished at any station remote from municipal fire departments on a single eight-hour shift basis.)
c. The tour of duty for VA fire fighting personnel will be 24 hours on duty followed by 24 hours off duty.

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Related

Anders v. United States
162 Ct. Cl. 719 (Court of Claims, 1963)
Ahearn v. United States
151 Ct. Cl. 21 (Court of Claims, 1960)
Bean v. United States
175 F. Supp. 166 (Court of Claims, 1959)
Collins v. United States
141 Ct. Cl. 573 (Court of Claims, 1958)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 Ct. Cl. 152, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 63, 1957 WL 8278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-united-states-cc-1957.