Richard Thornton; Ronnie C. McShan; James E. Fingers; Donald R. Hall; Billy J. Jones, Appellees/Cross-Appellants, v. AIRTHERM PRODUCTS, INC., Appellant/Cross-Appellee. Charles T. WILSON; Caryless Vondran; Willie Ferell; Onixe Anderson; Dallas W. Watlington; Tommy Humphrey; Neartis Clark; Alvin Smith, Jr.; Tommie Outley; Billy Fleming; Lloyd A. Nichols; Gary R. Thomas; Alvin Smith; Jimmy L. Dooley; Kenneth Rogers; William Dawson; Samuel J. Cullum; Thomas Anthony; Corey Amos; Bobby Hedrick; Charles Busby; Larry Foster; Danny Doler; Percy Graham; Cora L. Jamison; Robert Thorn, Jr.; Jessie Hawkins; Curtis Bradley, Jr.; Donald Barger; Almos Andrews; Jesse Lee Ferrell; Eddie Lee Hodger; Leodis Seawood; Roy Lee Coleman; Larvan Hawkins; Steven Dearing; Tracy Hill; Jeffery Wright; John Brooks Jones; Clarence Treat; Saundra House; Kevin Lawrence; Aaron Barton; Odis L. Barton; Manuel Sanchez, Jr.; Stanley Barton; Evelyn Burgess; Bennie Wilson; Kristi McCain; Leo Deaviser; Ronald McFadden; Kendle Williams; Willie K. Ponder; George Robert Lawrence; Elmo Hilliard; Sammie Sinclair; Charlie L. Huckaba; Calvin Smith; Recorder Henderson; Huester Barton; Ruby Hall; Michael Stanley Norviel; Lewis E. Cook; Isacc Rogers; Carlton Hoggard; Robert Nelson; Lincoln Taylor, Jr.; Terry L. Gardner; Willie White; Walter L. Taylor; Barbara K. Dye; Troy Sparkmon; Paul Roger Clardy; Lester Taggart; Andy Anderson; Daron Sparkman; Lee A. Henderson; Jermaine Davis; Charles A. Hughes; Donald Strong; James Nobles; Floyd Stokes; Clyde V. Clark
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: Nov. 16, 2005. Filed: Feb. 3, 2006.
Rehearing Denied March 28, 2006.
437 F.3d 906
VI. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Pamela Dean Walker, Little Rock, Arkansas (James E. Nickels, North Little Rock, Arkansas, on the brief), for appellee.
Before MURPHY, BOWMAN, and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges.
BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.
Former employees of Airtherm Products, Inc. (API) sued API for failing to notify them of a plant closing as required by the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN Act),
I.
API formerly engaged in the business of manufacturing heating and air conditioning products. In 2000, ALLC‘s parent company, Mestek, Inc., which also manufactured heating and air conditioning products, became interested in purchasing API‘s business. When Mestek formed ALLC as a subsidiary for the purchase of API, Mestek decided to use the name Airtherm because that name had value in the heat-
On August 22, ALLC assured API in writing that ALLC would “hire a substantial number of [API‘s] current employees” such that “[t]he jobs of fewer than 50 people will be affected by termination.” Id. at 99. The letter also included an “Employment Application Schedule” to be posted for API‘s employees so they would know that ALLC would accept applications from the employees on Monday, August 28, and on Tuesday, August 29. Id. at 100. In an August 23 letter from API‘s attorney to the union representing some of API‘s employees, API stated that it was “in the process of being sold” to ALLC and notified the union that it was exercising its rights under the labor agreement‘s “Severance Allowance” clause “to close the plant, terminate the bargaining unit employees, and pay all eligible employees their severance pay.” Id. at 144. The letter also stated, “It is [API‘s] understanding that after any sale is concluded [ALLC] will begin taking applications for employment on Monday, August 28, 2000, at 8:30 a.m. It is hoped that all of [API]‘s current employees will make application for employment with [ALLC].” Id. at 145.
The sale closed on August 25, the same day API terminated the employment of its employees. By September 25, ALLC had hired “a substantial number of former [API] employees.”2 Wilson v. Airtherm Prods., Inc., No. 2:01 CV 00055-WRW, 2001 WL 34818807, at *2 (E.D.Ark. Sept.10, 2001). In March 2001, a number of API‘s former employees, including those hired by ALLC, sued API for failing to
II.
The WARN Act requires an employer to provide written notice to employees at least sixty days before a plant closing.
Critical to this case, however, is the WARN Act‘s exclusion of sales of businesses from what constitutes an employment loss:
In the case of a sale of part or all of an employer‘s business, the seller shall be responsible for providing notice for any plant closing ... up to and including the effective date of the sale. After the effective date of the sale of part or all of an employer‘s business, the purchaser shall be responsible for providing notice for any plant closing.... Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, any person who is an employee of the seller (other than a part-time employee) as of the effective date of the sale shall be considered an employee of the purchaser immediately after the effective date of the sale.
The plain language of the sale-of-business exclusion supports API‘s contention that the WARN Act did not require it to provide notice to its employees of a plant closing. Even though a seller of a business technically terminates the employment of its employees—it would be difficult to imagine a sale of a business as a going concern where the seller does not terminate the employment of its employees—the WARN Act does not focus on technical terminations. See
In addition to the WARN Act‘s plain language strongly suggesting that API, as the seller of a business, had no WARN Act responsibility to provide notice of a plant closing in the circumstances of this case, our Circuit‘s recent decision in Smullin also supports API‘s position. 420 F.3d at 836-41. Similar to what happened in this case, the seller in Smullin terminated the employment of its employees on a Friday, the day it sold its Arkansas manufacturing plant as a going concern to the buyer. Over the weekend, the buyer interviewed and hired forty-four of the plant‘s sixty-eight employees. On the following Monday, the plant continued operating under the buyer‘s ownership. The seller‘s former employees sued the seller for violating the WARN Act by terminating the employment of all sixty-eight employees without proper notification. The district court granted summary judgment to the seller, and the Circuit affirmed. Id. at 837.
Writing for the Court, Chief Judge Loken recognized that fewer than fifty employees suffered an employment loss because the buyer immediately hired all but twenty-four of the seller‘s employees. Thus, the Court concluded that “WARN Act notices were required only if the buyer‘s hiring must be ignored,” which forced the Court to consider § 2101(b)(1)‘s sale-of-business exclusion. Id. at 838. The plaintiffs argued that the sale-of-business exclusion did not apply “because the sale took the form of a sale of assets, and the plant‘s employees were terminated by [the seller] with no right to be rehired by the buyer.” Id. at 839. Rejecting this argument, the Court stated that the sale-of-business exclusion “clearly connotes any transaction that transfers all or part of the employer‘s overall operations as a going concern.” Id. Expounding on “this functional, common sense approach,” i.e., asking whether the sale of the business involves merely the sale of assets or whether it is a sale of a business as a going concern, the Court noted that this approach “is consistent with the purposes of the WARN Act because the buyer of a going concern is likely to retain a substantial proportion of the employees of the ongoing business.” Id. The Court further opined that “defining the exclusion in this generic fashion promotes compliance with the [WARN] Act because buyers and sellers know when a transaction is intended to transfer a going concern and can determine who must give the WARN Act notice if a covered employment loss is likely to occur.” Id.
Thus, the Court recognized that when a case involves simply a sale of assets, see, e.g., Burnsides v. MJ Optical, Inc., 128 F.3d 700, 702-03 (8th Cir.1997), cert. denied, 523 U.S. 1119, 118 S.Ct. 1797, 140 L.Ed.2d 938 (1998); Oil, Chem. & Atomic Workers Int‘l Union v. CIT Group/Capital Equip. Fin., Inc., 898 F.Supp. 451, 456-58 (S.D.Tex.1995), as opposed to the sale of a business as a going concern, the seller retains the WARN Act notice requirement because the seller is the party actually closing the plant that results in employment losses for fifty or more employees. Smullin, 420 F.3d at 839-40. Because the plant in Smullin was sold as a going concern, the sale fell within § 2101(b)‘s sale-of-business exclusion, so that any potential notice requirement fell on the buyer‘s shoulders, regardless of the seller‘s technical termination of its employees’ employment that occurred by reason of the sale itself. Id. at 841. Because the seller did not owe a duty under the WARN Act and because the buyer did not take any action that violated the WARN Act, the Court held that neither the buyer nor the seller violated the WARN Act. Id.
In this case, any potential WARN Act notification requirement belonged to ALLC, the buyer of API‘s business as a going concern. It is undisputed that API did not terminate its employees’ employment until August 25, 2000, the date of the sale. We also deem it obvious that API did not close its Arkansas manufacturing plant before August 25. Indeed, API had every reason to believe that the sale of its business would not result in a plant closing, as defined by the WARN Act, because ALLC gave every indication that it was buying API as a going concern. For example, Mestek, Inc., ALLC‘s parent company, formed ALLC to purchase API, thus keeping the Airtherm name for continuity of operations. In May 2000, ALLC agreed in the Purchase Agreement to hire all of API‘s employees. Until the Amended Purchase Agreement was executed four days before the sale closed, API absolutely had no reason to believe the sale of its business would result in a plant closing affecting fifty or more employees. When the Amended Purchase Agreement changed the section dealing with the hiring of all of API‘s employees, ALLC concomitantly promised API that ALLC would hire a substantial number of API‘s employees such that fewer than fifty employees would lose their jobs as a result of the sale of the business.
In the face of ALLC‘s assurances, why would API notify its employees of a plant closing? There is no good answer to that question. A simple reading of the WARN Act—with an eye toward its purpose—prescribes that no such notice was required. Indeed, if API had given WARN Act notice to its employees in the face of ALLC‘s assurances, one could imagine a situation in which no employee would remain by the time the closing date arrived. ALLC, as the buyer of API‘s business as a going concern, certainly would not be enthused by a vacant labor pool at the time of closing. Thus, the sale-of-business exclusion and our precedent dictate that ALLC became the employees’ employer for WARN Act purposes once the sale of API‘s business became final. Any WARN Act notice responsibilities fell on ALLC, and not on API.
The District Court asked, “[D]oes the ‘sale of business’ exception ap-
III.
For the reasons stated, we reverse the grant of summary judgment to the plaintiffs and remand to the District Court to enter judgment in API‘s favor.5
