Plaintiffs-appellants, all current or former police officers of defendant Dodge City, appeal
We review summary judgment determinations de novo, applying the same standard used by the district court under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). James v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
The district court expressly relied on our opinion in Lamon to reject plaintiffs’ FLSA claim: “Contrary to plaintiffs’ argument, the City’s adoption of a § 207(k) plan is not a sham. Lamon,
Although “there is nothing improper about a state or local-government employer adopting the subsection (k) framework in order to take advantage of that subsection’s provisions,” Lamon,
A number of courts have held that a government employer’s allegedly FLSA-defeating wage adjustment, resulting, as here, in a pay system that is itself in compliance with the Act,
This case ... does not present an issue of whether the Act barred the [allegedly sham] calculation of the regular rate [of pay], because here Congress delayed application of the Act until April 16, 1986, ten months after the calculation took place.... Because the calculation occurred prior to the Act’s effective date, [plaintiffs] cannot argue the Act governs those calculations.
[Plaintiffs] also argue that even if the calculations made by the City were not invalid because the Act was not yet in effect, ... the resulting system implemented based on the calculations became invalid as soon as it was covered by the Act. Although [plaintiffs] cite cases in which creative calculations ... were invalidated, even if the resulting system appeared to comply with the FLSA, all of these cases ... involved calculations of the regular rate occurring after the application of the Act. Neither the Supreme Court nor our circuit has held that calculations occurring prior to the Act tainted the otherwise valid system employed under the Act. Rather, the Supreme Court has found that the calculations themselves, and not the systems produced from the calculations, were the source of the violation of the FLSA. That is, if [sham] calculations occur after the Act, ... the calculations, as opposed to the [resulting] system, violate the Act. In this ease, however, the calculations simply were not covered by the Act in June 1985. We can find no authority for finding an otherwise valid system invalid because it was based on calculations made prior to the Act. Wethington,
Plaintiffs argue that the City violates their FLSA rights anew with each paycheck. See Brief of Appellants at 46-49. Under the analysis adopted herein, such a “continuing violation” theory is plainly inapposite:
For there to be a continuing violation, there must be at least a violation. The plaintiffs’ argument assumes that the City’s calculation of the regular hourly rate, which was lawful in ... 1985, somehow became unlawful after April 15, 1986- We cannot use a continuing violation theory to make a discrete lawful act unlawful upon a change in the applicable law.
York,
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of this appeal. See Fed.R.App.P. 34(a); 10th Cir.R. 34.1.9. The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.
. This interlocutory order became final and ap-pealable after plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their remaining claims and the district court denied their motion to alter or amend judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e).
. The parties stipulated that in-shift meal periods and pre-shift squad meetings were "hours worked” under the FLSA. See Appendix (App.) Vol. I at 50.
. We note that, notwithstanding the insidious motive plaintiffs espy in the surrounding circumstances, there is nothing improper in the fact that the City continues to pay its police officers an overtime wage higher than the FLSA formula would require, based on their regular (170-hour) pay. See Lamon,
.We consider only whether plaintiffs have substantiated a claim under § 207. Plaintiffs specifically disavowed “any claim that defendant violated ... Section 8 of the FLSA Amendments of 1985,” App. Vol. I at 51, which, unlike § 207, expressly applies to one category of wrongful conduct (retaliatory discrimination) engaged in by government employers before April 15, 1986,
