Defendant, MGM Grand Detroit, LLC, appeals by leave granted the trial court’s order denying its motion for summary disposition of plaintiffs’ claim for unpaid overtime under the Minimum Wage Law of 1964 (mwl), MCL 408.381
et seq.
Under MCL 408.394, if application of the “minimum wage provisions” of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (flsa), 29 USC 201
et seq.,
results in “a lower minimum wage” than that provided by the mwl, the mwl is applicable. In this сase, the hourly minimum wage rate and overtime
I. PLAINTIFFS’ ALLEGATIONS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiffs are, or were at one time, full-time slot machine floor supervisоrs at the Detroit MGM Grand Casino. They were required to arrive at work fifteen minutes before each eight-hour shift and remain at work at least twenty to thirty minutes after each shift. From August 1999 tо early 2000, defendant paid plaintiffs their regular rate of pay for time worked over forty hours a week. In early 2000, defendant stopped paying plaintiffs for hours worked over forty hours a week. Also, plaintiffs were required to attend training sessions without being paid.
Plaintiffs 1 filed a complaint asserting that defendant violated the MWL 2 by failing to pay overtime compensation at the rate of IV2 times their regular rate of pay. Defendant moved for summary disposition based on the applicability provision of the MWL, MCL 408.394. 3 Defendant argued that it is governed by the FLSA, that the FLSA and the MWL provided the same minimum hourly wage rate during the time of the alleged violations, and that it was therefore entitled to summary disposition. The parties agree that defendant is governed by the FLSA. However, the trial court denied defendant’s motion, finding that because the FLSA had a shorter statutory limitations period than that pro vided under the mwl, application of “federal minimum wage provisions would result in a lower minimum wage than provided [by the mwl].” Defendant filed an application for leave to appeal, which this Court granted.
n. ANALYSIS
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
This Court rеviews de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition.
Dressel v Ameribank,
B. ANALYSIS
This Court long ago established that the mwl parallels the flsa.
Saginaw Firefighters Ass’n v City of
Saginaw,
The primаry goal of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature.
Gladych v New Family Homes, Inc,
The trial court apparently 5 found the phrase “a lower minimum wage” in MCL 408.394 ambiguous because of its interaction with other statutes. In apрlying MCL 408.394, the trial court read it together with MCL 408.384a(6), which provides:
For purposes of administration and enforcement, an amount owing to an employee which is withheld in violation оf this section shall be considered to be unpaid minimum wages under this act.
From the phrase “unpaid minimum wages” in MCL 408.384a(6), the trial court, like the United States District Court for the Western District of Miсhigan in its unpublished decision in
Zimmer v Bergstrom, Quinn & Oole,
We conclude that the trial court erroneously interpreted MCL 408.394. MCL 408.394 provides, in relevant part:
This act does not apply to an employer who is subject to the minimum wage provisions of the fair labor standards act of 1938,... 29 U.S.C. 201 to 216 and 217 to 219,[ 6 ] unless application of those federal minimum wage provisions would result in a lоwer minimum wage than provided in this act.
The MWL does not apply “unless application of those federal minimum wage provisions would result in a lower minimum wage than provided in this act.” MCL 408.394 (emphasis added). “[T]hose federal minimum wage provisions” plainly refers to the expressly identified provisions that are enumerated in the previous phrase. In reaching its result, the trial court determined that application оf the flsa statute of limitations, 29 USC 255, would result in a lower minimum wage than that provided by the mwl. However, 29 USC 255 is not one of those federal minimum wage provisions” expressly identified by the Michigan Legislature that should be applied to determine whether the FLSA results in a lower minimum wage than that provided by the mwl. Therefore, the flsa statute of limitations is irrelevant to whether the mwl is aрplicable, and the trial court improperly denied defendant summary disposition.
III. conclusion
The Michigan Legislature specifically precluded application of the mwl to employers subject to the FLSA, 39 USC 201 et seq., unless application of “29 U.S.C. 201 to 216 and 217 to 219” results in a lower minimum wage than provided under the mwl. Defendant is an employer subject to the FLSA and aрplication of the above referenced provisions to the present case does not result in a lower minimum wage. Defendant is entitled to summary disposition.
Reversed.
Notes
Plaintiffs have also asserted class action allegations as representatives of all similarly situated employees. There is no indication from the lower court reсord that the class has been certified.
Plaintiffs’ complaint also alleges violations of the wages and fringe benefits act, MCL 408.471 et seq.
The flsa contains a parallel prоvision, 29 USC 218(a), which provides that “[n]o provision of this Act or of any order thereunder shall excuse noncompliance with any Federal or State law or municipal ordinance establishing a minimum wage higher than the minimum wage established under this Act. . . .”
Notably, the flsa provides a three-year statute of limitations for claims involving a willful violation of the act. 29 USC 255(a). Plaintiffs do not claim and we do not address whether there were willful violations of the FLSA.
In reaching its conclusion, the trial court expressly adopted the reasoning found in an unpublished opinion,
Zimmer v Bergstrom, Quinn & Oole,
We note that the Legislature did not include two provisions, 29 USC 216a (repealed) and 29 USC 216b, that are within this series of nineteen consecutivе flsa “minimum wage provisions.” These provisions concern liability for overtime work performed before 1949. See 29 USC 216a (repealed) and 29 USC 216b. Given the particularity with which these provisions were not included, we find that their absence supports the position that the Legislature intended that only expressly identified flsa provisions be considered “minimum wage provisions” under MCL 408.394.
