Collins and his fellow plaintiffs — truck drivers employed by Heritage Wine Cellars, a wholesale importer and distributor of wine — sued Heritage and its chief executive officer under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 201 et seq. The Act requires employers to pay overtime (one-and-a-half times the hourly wage) to employees who work more than 40 hours a week, 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1), which the plaintiffs sometimes did; yet until 2007 they were not paid overtime.
The plaintiffs transport wine from a warehouse in the Chicago area, owned by Heritage, to retail stores in Chicago and elsewhere in Illinois. To get the wine to the warehouse from the states and foreign countries in which it’s produced (none of it is produced in Illinois), Heritage hires truck companies and other carriers. They are independent contractors. Neither they nor their employees are employed by Heritage, unlike the plaintiffs. But Heritage controls the wine and directs its movements on the entire journey from the state or country of origin of the wine to the retail stores in Illinois to which the plaintiffs transport the wine from the warehouse.
The principal question is whether the portion of the transportation that is entirely within Illinois is nevertheless interstate commerce within the meaning of
An employer subject to the Secretary’s jurisdiction is required to register with the Department of Transportation. 49 C.F.R. § 385.301. Heritage, for reasons unexplained — for it claims to be subject to that jurisdiction, as otherwise it could not claim the exemption for truckers engaged in interstate commerce — has not registered. But it points out that the exemption depends on the Secretary’s
“power
to establish qualifications and maximum hours of service” (emphasis added) and not on whether the power has been exercised. See
Bilyou v. Dutchess Beer Distributors, Inc.,
If Heritage bought wine from a vineyard in Indiana, made a contract to sell it to a retail store in Chicago, shipped the wine by rail to a freight yard in Chicago, and from there truck drivers employed by it just to transport wine from the freight yard to the store did so, it would be subject to the exemption even though the drivers had not crossed a state line themselves. E.g.,
id.
at 224-25;
Klitzke v. Steiner Corp.,
But suppose instead that Heritage shipped its wine to a wholesale distributor in a Chicago suburb, title passed to the distributor when the wine arrived at the distributor’s warehouse, and the distributor contracted to sell the wine to retail stores and delivered it to them in his own trucks. The carriage of the wine from the warehouse to the stores would be classified as an intrastate shipment under the Motor Carrier Act even though the property shipped had originated outside the state. See
McLeod v. Threlkeld,
Congress could still regulate such a shipment if it wanted to. Such intrastate shipments have a cumulatively substantial effect on interstate commerce.
North Alabama Express, Inc. v. ICC,
This case falls in between our two examples but closer to the first. About a fourth of the wine that Heritage ships to its warehouse in Illinois has been ordered in advance by the retail stores. That wine stays in the warehouse only briefly because Heritage has an order in hand. The fact that the wine pauses in its Heritage-controlled journey to the retail outlet is of no greater consequence than the unloading and reloading of the shipped goods in our first example. The other three-fourths of the wine sits in the warehouse until Heritage has found a buyer. But it appears that most of that wine turns over approximately every month, having been purchased and shipped by Heritage on the basis of its estimates of customer demand. And none of the wine undergoes any alteration on its trip from the vineyard to a retail store in Illinois. So far as appears, there is no processing (or even any deliberate aging of the wine in the warehouse), no addition of additives, no incorporation into another product, not even relabeling as a private-label (house-brand) product. When the wine arrives at the warehouse, it is taken off the shrink-wrapped pallets on which it is delivered and shelved in the warehouse, period.
It seems to us that when a shipper transports his product across state lines for sale by him to customers in the destination state, and the product undergoes no alteration during its journey to the shipper’s customer, and interruptions in the journey that occur in the destination state are no more than the normal stops or stages that are common in interstate sales, such as temporary warehousing, the entire journey should be regarded as having taken place in interstate commerce within the meaning of the Motor Carrier Act’s exemption from the Fair Labor Standards Act. We’ll defend this conclusion, but we first note that although it is consistent with the results in most cases, see
Merchants Fast Motor Lines, Inc. v. ICC,
The Interstate Commerce Commission had offered an alternative elaboration of “fixed and persisting intent” in a 1992 policy statement, ICC Policy Statement, Motor Carrier Interstate Transportation — From Out-of-State Through Warehouses to Points in Same State, 57 Fed. Reg. 19812 (May 8, 1992). The statement lists seven criteria that the Commission thought favored characterizing an intrastate journey as part of interstate commerce and ten more criteria that it believed did not detract from that characterization. So for example the fact that the warehouse was owned by the shipper was said to support characterizing the intrastate journey as part of interstate commerce but the fact that the warehouse was not owned by the shipper was said not to detract from that characterization. Are those two criteria or one? We don’t know; and we can’t see the relevance of whether the warehouse is owned, leased, shared, or for that matter stolen, given that the object of the statutory exemption is to shift regulation of truckers’ hours from the Labor Department to the Department of Transportation if the truckers participate in interstate transportation, and what has that to do with where title to the warehouse resides? And no weighting of the criteria is suggested.
At least four of the criteria listed, however, make sense, and they are sufficient to enable us to dispose of this case without getting deeper into the regulation and the policy statement. The four are that (1) the shipper, although it doesn’t have to have lined up its ultimate customers when the product arrives at the warehouse, “bases its determination of the total volume to be shipped through the warehouse on projections of customer demand that have some factual basis”; (2) “no processing or substantial product modification of substance occurs at the warehouse”; (3) “while in the warehouse, the merchandise is subject to the shipper’s control and direction as to the subsequent transportation”; and (4) “the shipper or consignee must bear the ultimate payment for transportation charges even if the warehouse or
Antiquarians will note at least a faint resemblance between our suggested approach and the “original package” doctrine of
Low v. Austin,
The Court had earlier rejected the use of the “original package” doctrine to decide whether shipments are in interstate commerce,
Sonneborn Bros. v. Cureton,
Attempting to base decision on seventeen unweighted technical criteria to be applied by generalist judges who are not told what the relevance of any of the criteria is but have to figure it out for themselves is unlikely to improve the prospects for objectively deciding whether a particular intrastate shipment should be deemed to be “in commerce.” The multicriteria approach is likely to condemn the judges to wander forlornly in the untracked wilderness named “the totality of the circumstances,” a phrase found in many of the cases involving the Motor Carrier Act’s exemption for interstate transportation.
We end with the plaintiffs’ back-up argument for reversal. Between 2005 and 2008 the Motor Carrier Act limited the definition of “motor carriers” to carriers that provide transportation by (so far as bears on this case) a truck that weighs at least 10,001 pounds. 49 U.S.C. § 31132(1)(A). Some of the plaintiffs occasionally drove lighter trucks, and they argue that when they were doing that they were covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act. But to divide jurisdiction in this way would be contrary to the Supreme Court’s sensible decision in
Morris v. McComb,
AFFIRMED.
