Tobin v. Cherry River Boom & Lumber Co.

102 F. Supp. 763, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4792
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. West Virginia
DecidedJanuary 8, 1952
DocketCiv. A. No. 1170
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 102 F. Supp. 763 (Tobin v. Cherry River Boom & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tobin v. Cherry River Boom & Lumber Co., 102 F. Supp. 763, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4792 (S.D.W. Va. 1952).

Opinion

MOORE, Chief Judge.

Plaintiff has brought this action praying for an injunction against defendant because of alleged violations of certain provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq.

Defendant, as its name implies, is in the lumber and timber business, and carries on extensive operations in southern West Virginia near the town of Richwood. There are approximately 450 persons on its payroll, besides several so-called “contractors” (who plaintiff contends are really employees and not independent contractors within the meaning of the Act), and fifty-odd men employed by the contractors. Defendant transports in interstate commerce substantial quantities of its lumber and timber products, and it is not disputed that it is engaged in interstate commerce.

For the past nine years defendant’s operations have been checked from time to time by inspectors from the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor, and as a result of each such inspection defendant complied with such recommendations with reference to its method of doing business as were made by the respective inspectors.

The present litigation involves defendant’s relations with the so-called “contractors,” its piece-work timber cutters, and the [765]*765operators of its woods camps or boarding houses. The facts with reference to each of these classes of workers as shown by the evidence, in which there was little contradiction, may be summarized briefly as follows :

1. The so-called woods contractors. For more than 25 years a considerable part of defendant’s timber cutting, logging, skidding, and production of ties and mine timbers has been done as a result of written contracts between defendant and various persons who are compensated at specific rates per 1,000 log feet as set out in the respective contracts. The work performed in this way is and has been an integrated part of defendant’s total production. These contracts are virtually all in the same form. Among other provisions the contracts contain a statement of the work to be done, where it is to be done, the approximate quality and time of performance, and the price to .be paid for each 1,000 log feet. It is provided that if the contractor shall, in the judgment of defendant, fail, neglect or refuse to perform the contract, defendant may take it over and complete it at the cost of the contractor.

Most of the contractors have operated under successive contracts with defendant for several years. With one exception, none have contracts with any lumber company other than defendant. Generally speaking, the various contractors, at the time they begin work under their respective contracts, do not have already assembled either a crew of workmen or an outfit of equipment. However, they 'furnish their own equipment and employ their own workmen, who range in number from one to eleven men. The equipment consists generally of horses, harness, axes, saws, cant hooks and miscellaneous supplies, most of which are bought on credit from defendant. Those persons whose contracts provide for skidding timber are required to construct at their own expense such roads, skidways and docks as are necessary for the purpose of bringing the timber from the woods and delivering it in ponds provided for that purpose by defendant. Some of the men holding contracts occasionally work alone, and most of the contractors employ not more than five men at one time. Some of the contractors own very little equipment,' in some cases hardly more than a team of horses and some saws and axes.

Each contractor supervises the work done under his contract and buys his supplies wherever he sees fit. Defendant exercises little supervision of the contractors other than to designate the particular area of timber to be cut within the contract boundary; to require that the contractor cut all merchantable trees in the area; to direct that portions o'f the work be slowed down or speeded up according to defendant’s needs; to require trees to be cut so as not to waste timber in stumpage; and to prescribe maximum hours for contractors’ piece-rate employees, so as to prevent complaint. from piece-rate employees hired directly by defendant.

Defendant’s personnel manager acts as payroll clerk for all the woods contractors, makes social security and workmen’s compensation records for them, compiles all reports incident thereto, and makes various deductions.

Many of the woods contractors have long been continuously indebted to defendant for advances of cash or credit. They meet their operating costs mostly by securing advances from defendant. These advances are covered in part by timber in various stages of delivery and not. yet measured; but some of the contractors go further and further into debt with defendant as their work progresses.

On one occasion a contractor, Albert Green, was injured to the extent that he .was forced to spend a long period of time in a hospital. Defendant took over his contract, assigned one of its foremen to operate it, and gave Green credit for the proceeds of the operation, charging him with the cost thereof. After his recovery Green continued to work as a woods contractor.

None of the woods contractors undertook to harmonize their own maximum hours or minimum compensation with the provisions of the Wage and Hour Law; and in some cases some of their employees were paid less than the 75$ per hour minimum wage, and also sometimes worked overtime hours [766]*766without being paid therefor at the overtime rate.

In elections held for the purpose of designating the 'bargaining agent with which defendant should be required to make labor contracts, that is, the union to be certified, defendant recognized employees of woods contractors as being eligible to vote, and after certification required the contractors’ employees to belong to the union certified.

2. Piece-rate employees. Defendant employs a few (six to twelve) piece-rate timber cutters.' These men are paid for their work on the basis of a certain rate per 1,000 log feet. They are at liberty to live where they see fit and to use whatever means of transportation to and from work they please; but they generally stay at defendant’s log camps and ride defendant’s motor trucks and log trains to and from work along with the hourly-rate employees. These hourly-rate employees usually work a 48-hour week, but they are regularly paid for the overtime at the overtime rate, and their work is not in controversy in this litigation. Prior to the beginning of the trial of this case (which started on June 7, 1951, but was interrupted for the space of more than three months because of other court engagements) no accurate records were kept by defendant’s supervisory employees showing the hours worked by the piece-rate timber cutters. About the middle of June, 1951, as a result of the hearing thus far advanced, defendant adopted a policy of having the piece-rate men keep their own time, instructing them that they should not work more than 40 hours per week.

The hourly-rate workers were given credit for the time spent in going to and from work, but the piece workers were not; and there is no evidence that there was ever any custom or agreement to pay them for this travel time. In some instances workers receiving piece-rate pay put in more than 40 hours per week and were not paid for the overtime at the overtime rate.

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Bluebook (online)
102 F. Supp. 763, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tobin-v-cherry-river-boom-lumber-co-wvsd-1952.