Wingert v. Yellow Freight Systems, Inc.

13 P.3d 677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 5, 2001
Docket45794-2-I
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 13 P.3d 677 (Wingert v. Yellow Freight Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wingert v. Yellow Freight Systems, Inc., 13 P.3d 677 (Wash. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

13 P.3d 677 (2000)

Roger A. WINGERT, David Mauldin, Russell A. Childs, Terence Swannack, Rick Wallace, Trever Vardeur, Jason C. Varieor, Joseph Leach, Michael J. Kelly, Scott Mills, Marvin Posick, Mark Johanneck, Lonnie Pappas, Eric R. Staley, Robert Ostler, Randy Everett, Richard Oughton, Dave L. Allen, Tarry Rohr, Richard P. Somes, Kyle Jones, Keith McDonel, Ralph Sweet, Matt Carroll, Troy D. Cates, Wendell Crosby, Chuck Deaver, Joseph Loran, Kirby L. Soike, Gary Doehring, Daniel G. Fisher, Stephen T. Leighton, Richard A. Biel, Grover W. Smith, Rick Storlie, Rick Wallace, John Eugene Baker, Billy Duryee, Max D. McMahan, Robert L. Ray, Wallace R. Morgan, Keith Blaine, Gary D. Bolen, William Taft Case, Ralph Hubbard, Aaron J. Fortune, John E. Roufs, James Freyberg, Leslie Curt Holloway, Robert W. Jutte, Dennis M. Murdock, Doug Murray, Roger Hamblin, Robert A. Newman, Sr., Lawrence R. Baker, Bryan Hott, Mark Johnson, Ronald D. Reno, Kelly G. Burke, David L. Cook, Dean A. Ambler, William L. West, Jr., Robert Rucker, Jerry Townsend, Fred Sheppard, Eric C. Stone, Dan Purcell, Norman J. Roth, Ross D. Johnson, Michael J. Stout, Paul F. Mix, Gary D. Neuman, Jeffrey M. Read, Robert Murphy, Andrew Graden, Joel D. Johanneck, Nels F. Stromberg, Archer G. Martinson, Albert N. Peterson, John A. Rice, Thomas Schwendeman, Mark Hutton, Dean W. Talkington, M. Berger, Edward Murphy, Robert White, Stephen G. Pryor, Hermann Maag, Richard A. Nash, Jack F. O'Neal, Jan Mulhorn, and Raymond E. Ling, Appellants,
v.
YELLOW FREIGHT SYSTEMS, INC., A Washington State Corporation, Respondents.

No. 45794-2-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

December 4, 2000.
As Amended January 5, 2001.

*679 Dmitri Iglitzen, Schwerin Campbell Barnard, Seattle for Appellants.

J. Markham Marshall, Seattle, for Respondents.

*678 BAKER, J.

Employees of Yellow Freight Systems, Inc. brought suit alleging failure of Yellow Freight to provide paid 10-minute rest periods during "overtime" hours in violation of Washington Administrative Code (WAC) XXX-XXX-XXX, and seeking lost wages pursuant to RCW 49.52.070. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the employer. Because the plain language of WAC 296-126-093 clearly provides for a paid 10 minute rest period at least every three hours, we hold that Yellow Freight's failure to provide these breaks gives rise to a wage claim under RCW 49.52.020. We reverse.

I

Yellow Freight Systems, Inc. employs workers at its Seattle terminal to stage freight, load, move, and unload truck trailers, drive trucks, and perform other labor. The employees are covered under a collective bargaining agreement. Yellow Freight employees commonly work longer than their regular 8-hour workday, for which they receive overtime compensation. If they work two hours of overtime or less at the end of their regular shift, they receive no rest period from the time their regular afternoon break ends at 2:45 until they are excused for the day, often at 6:30, a period of nearly four hours of uninterrupted physical labor.

Employees of Yellow Freight filed suit claiming that they are entitled to a break at least every three hours they work, thus entitling them to a paid 10-minute rest period during the overtime hours they work. They sought lost wages for each 10-minute period of work the company received from them when they should allegedly have been on break. Both parties brought motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Yellow Freight. The employees appeal.

II

At issue is whether WAC 296-126-092(4), which prohibits employers from working its employees more than three hours without a paid 10 minute rest period, applies to both regular and overtime hours worked; and if so, are employees deprived of those rest periods entitled to recover damages for lost wages. We are also asked to decide if the parties' collective bargaining agreement (CBA) supercedes the statute, or in the alternative, if the plaintiffs are limited to remedies under their CBA.

We first address the application of WAC 296-196-092(4) to overtime hours worked by employees. WAC 296-196-092 states in its entirety:

Meal periods—Rest periods.

(1) Employees shall be allowed a meal period of at least 30 minutes which commences no less than two hours nor more than five hours from the beginning of the shift. Meal periods shall be on the employer's time when the employee is required by the employer to remain on duty *680 on the premises or at a prescribed work site in the interest of the employer.

(2) No employee shall be required to work more than five consecutive hours without a meal period.
(3) Employees working three or more hours longer than a normal work day shall be allowed at least one 30-minute meal period prior to or during the overtime period.
(4) Employees shall be allowed a rest period of not less than 10 minutes, on the employer's time, for each 4 hours of working time. Rest periods shall be scheduled as near as possible to the midpoint of the work period. No employee shall be required to work more than three hours without a rest period. (Emphasis added).
(5) Where the nature of the work allows employees to take intermittent rest periods equivalent to 10 minutes for each 4 hours worked, scheduled rest periods are not required.

The employees contend that subsection (4) is clear on its face: employers may not lawfully require employees to work longer than three consecutive hours without providing a rest period, regardless of whether the hours worked are regular hours, overtime hours, or a combination of the two.

Yellow Freight argues that the regulation is inherently contradictory and thus ambiguous. A statute is ambiguous if it is susceptible to more than one meaning or reasonable interpretation.[1] Yellow Freight claims that it need only provide one rest period for each four hours its employees work. It argues that the first and third sentences of subsection (4) may be harmonized if the 3-hour limit applies only to straight time hours worked, not to overtime hours. To support its argument, Yellow Freight analogizes WAC 296-126-092's treatment of rest periods to its meal period provisions. Subsections (1) and (2) prescribe similar guidelines for meal breaks as for rest periods, but then subsection (3) modifies the previous sections by specifying when meal periods should be provided during overtime hours. Yellow Freight concludes that because the WAC fails to explicitly address rest periods during overtime hours, none are required.[2]

We reject Yellow Freight's argument. A court need not construe unambiguous statutes, but instead should assume that the Legislature means exactly what it says.[3] Plain words do not require construction.[4] WAC 296-126-092(4) is not ambiguous when read as a whole, particularly in light of the definition of "hours worked" in WAC 296-126-002(8). Subsection (8) defines "hours worked" as "all hours during which the employee is authorized or required by the employer to be on duty on the employer's premises or at a prescribed work place." This definition does not distinguish between regular hours and overtime hours.

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