19 N.W.2d 7 | Minn. | 1945
Plaintiffs were employed by defendant either as cook, cookee, or bull cook in its logging camps operated for the cutting, skidding, peeling, loading, and hauling of pulpwood and logs. The camp cook prepared all three meals, inclusive of lunches carried by the men to work and those eaten in camp between meals, cut the meat, did all the baking, took care of the food, and generally supervised the kitchen and all eating facilities. The cookees set and cleared *109 the tables, washed and put away the dishes and cooking utensils, and otherwise assisted the cook as needed. The bull cooks supplied wood and water for the entire camp, built fires in the bunkhouses, took care of the lamps, swept and scrubbed the bunkhouses, and performed other janitorial duties. In a few instances, as found by the court, a cook was independently employed and paid by certain shackers who were cutting pulpwood for defendant but who neither stayed nor ate any meals at defendant's camps.
The trial court, as part of its findings, found:
"7. That during all of the time these various plaintiffs worked for the defendant they were working under a contract between the employer and the union to which they belonged, which provided the rate of pay that they should receive per hour and the number of hours available to them to work. That the terms of the contract were known to all of the plaintiffs. That they were paid on the basis of the hours available, both straight time and overtime, and the rate of wages fixed in the contract was not in any case below the minimum to be paid according to the provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
"That except in rare instances they were able to perform their work in the hours available. That in all instances where they were unable to do their work in the hours available and brought that fact to the attention of the defendant, they were allowed additional hours to take care of the extra time put in.That a period of two or more hours each day was available tothe cooks, during which time they could do as they pleased andwere not required to be on duty or on call and could not besubject to rebuke or criticism if they were not available incase some emergency arose. That longer periods of time wereavailable to the cookees and bull-cooks when they were on theirown and could do as they pleased without fear of just criticismor rebuke." (Italics supplied.)
A careful examination of the record shows a sharp and definite conflict of testimony between that of the plaintiffs and their witnesses and that of the defendant's witnesses. Plaintiffs contend *110
that they actually worked more hours per day than the number of hours available under the union contract, and that they were not paid for this extra time. Defendant, in denying this contention, alleges that plaintiffs' work was all performed within the hours available, except in a few cases when the plaintiffs, upon request, were allowed necessary additional paid hours. Plaintiffs allege, however, that with a few exceptions it was useless to ask for additional paid hours, because defendant's representatives asserted that payment could be made only on the basis of the contract hours available regardless of the hours worked. Plaintiffs further contend that they were uncertain as to their rights until the decision in Hanson v. Lagerstrom (8 Cir.)
The union contract which had been in force for a considerable time and which had been negotiated between the plaintiffs' union and the Timber Producers Association, of which defendant is a member, established a sliding scale of hours to be made available *111 to each employe according to the number of men served, and this contract also provided a definite procedure for the settlement of grievances. There was considerable evidence that all employes were familiar with its provisions. Defendant has contended by testimony and argument that the contract was based on a mutual understanding and a recognition of the hours required to perform the work as determined by logging-camp experience and custom of many years' standing. This plaintiffs denied, by contending that the contract was merely a device for paying the men a sum equivalent to the former monthly wages (as paid before the plaintiffs were ruled to be under the Wage and Hour Act) "based on the hours of work made available and not the hours actually worked." The evidence as a whole stands in conflict and is reasonably subject to diverse inferences. A detailed analysis and restatement of the evidence will serve no useful purpose. As already indicated, the trial court's findings were expressly in favor of defendant's contention as to the number of hours plaintiffs were on duty.
1. Plaintiffs assert that the trial court, by the memorandum accompanying its findings, indicated that it had applied the wrong test in making its decision by assuming that plaintiffs were entitled to pay merely for hours spent in actual work and not for the additional hours when the plaintiffs, although not actually working, were required to be on the job and subject to call. Regardless of the interpretation placed on the language of the trial court's memorandum, it is well established by prior decisions of this court that a memorandum of a trial judge attached to his findings or order, even though expressly made a part of such findings or order, may not be used to impeach, contradict, overturn, or modify the positive and unambiguous terms of such findings or order.2 *112 Here, the trial court in its findings in clear and explicit language found that plaintiffs enjoyed two or more free hours each day when they were not on duty and not subject to call, which free time they could utilize as they pleased without fear of criticism or rebuke. We observe in passing, however, that a reading of both the findings and the memorandum, as a unit, indicates that Judge Freeman had in mind the correct rule and applied it in arriving at his decision.
2. The views of Judge Fesler, who heard the case but became incapacitated before he could make his findings and decision, are irrelevant and may not be considered upon review in determining whether the findings made by Judge Freeman are sustained by the evidence.
3. Waiting or free time, even though devoted to idleness and recreation, may constitute compensable working time under the provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act if the employes are required to be on actual duty and subject to call. Armour Co. v. Wantock,
We have carefully considered the decision of the United States Supreme Court handed down May 7, 1945, in Jewell Ridge Coal Corp. v. Local No. 6167, United Mine Workers of America,
4. Here, the trial court found that plaintiffs had not worked any hours in excess of those for which they had been fully paid, and specifically determined that plaintiffs enjoyed each day certain free or waiting time when they were not on duty and not subject to call. Are these findings sustained by the evidence? The findings of fact of a trial court are entitled to the same weight as the verdict of a jury and will not be reversed on appeal unless they are manifestly and palpably contrary to the evidence. Bang v. International Sisal Co.
5. The same rule applies here, where the findings were made by a judge other than the one who presided at the trial. Wunder v. Turner,
6. As a court of review it is not for us to usurp the function of the trial court by attempting to weigh the evidence as if trying the matter de novo (Rebne v. Rebne,
Affirmed.