This case presents the issue of whether police lieutenants and sergeants working for the state of Illinois were due overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The district court found they were not so entitled because they fall within the executive exemption of the FLSA. Defendants’ motion for summary judgment was granted. We affirm.
I. History
The Illinois Secretary of State (“SOS”) employs Plaintiffs as police officers (“Plaintiffs” or “Officers”). 1 They are not covered by a union contract and are classified as “Merit Compensation” employees. The Secretary pays them an annual salary through bi-monthly paychecks. They do not receive overtime pay for hours worked beyond their normal shifts.
Defendants are or were officials with SOS (“Defendants” or “SOS officials”). 2 George Ryan served as the Illinois Secretary of State from January 1991 through December 1998 (he is now Governor of Illinois). Giacomo Pecoraro was Director of the Police Department from 1991 through 1995. Tina Prose has served as the Director of the Department of Personnel since 1991. These individuals oversaw the disciplinary procedures to which SOS subjects police officers.
Plaintiffs contend that the policies and practices implemented by these three SOS officials subjected them to actual and potential salary deductions. They claim that prior to December 1993, but within the three year statute of limitations for willful violations of the FLSA, the policies and practices found in the Police Department’s Accident Policy and Physical Fitness Policy аnd the SOS’s pre-1993 Progressive Disciplinary Policy enabled the SOS officials to suspend Plaintiffs without pay, which to them constituted a salary deduction. They contend that these salary deductions negate their status as salary basis employees and, accordingly, entitles them to overtime pay. This result flows from the conclusion that if the officers cannot be classified as salary basis employees, the SOS officials cannot claim the officers qualify for the exemption. If not within the exemption, the officers should receive overtime pay under the FLSA.
The three policies and how the SOS officials enforced them form the core of this ease. The Police Department adopted its Accident Policy (“Accident Policy”) in August 1990. This policy governs the disciрlinary procedures regarding “chargeable accidents” for police officers of all ranks. Three levels of penalties exist under this policy. For the first offense within twenty-four months, an officer may be suspended from one to three days without pay or required to work one to three days without compensation. For the second offense within twenty-four months, an officer may be suspended without pay for two to five days or required to work the same number of days without compensation. For the third offense within twenty-four months, an officer’s amount of suspension or uncompensated work time may range from three to ten days. The penalties are not mandatory; rather the Accident Review Board recommends to the Director of Police the аppropriate amount of discipline based, in part, upon this list of suggested penalties.
The Police Department’s Physical Fitness Policy (“Fitness Policy”), which was in effect from June 1992
3
until October
The final policy relevant to this ease is the SOS Progressive Disciplinary Poliсy (“Disciplinary Policy”). This policy governs misconduct by all SOS employees, not only police officers. Under this policy, police officers could be suspended without pay. In 1993, SOS-amended the Disciplinary Policy to state that Merit Compensation employees can be suspended only in five-day or equivalent work week increments. The Personnel Director, Tina Prose, testified that SOS made the 1993 amendments to reflect a practice that had been in place since 1990. The Chief Labor Negotiator, William Rolando, confirmed Prose’s statement. In addition, Prose testified that the Disciplinary Policy trumps all other policies affecting Merit Compensation employees, including the Accident Policy and Fitness Policy of the Police Department. The SOS manual, however, does not specifically reflect this overarching nature of the Disciplinary Policy.
In applying these policies to specific employees, SOS adopted a mechanism to ensure it complies with the FLSA requirements. First, the Director of Police recommends a course of discipline. The Personnel Department, then, approves or denies the recommendation after the Technical Services Division of SOS’s Personnel Department reviews personnel actions specifically for FLSA compliance issues.
These safeguards are not fool-proof, however; SOS has subjected salary basis officers to disciplinary procedures that are inconsistent with the requirements of a salary basis employee. In 1989, SOS suspended Easterly for eighteen days — three full work weeks, plus a partial work week. In 1990, SOS suspended Juliano, a sergeant at the time, without pay for a five-day period that spanned two work weeks under the Disciplinary Policy. SOS has issued no other split-week suspension since that time. SOS issued unpaid suspension to four sergeants in 1991 under the Accident Policy. 4 No evidence suggests any SOS police officer with a rank of sergeant or higher has been suspended without pay under the Fitness Policy. As the district court noted, these five cases (Plaintiffs do not address Easterly’s 1989 suspension without pay) are the only instances of unpaid suspensions of police offices with the rank of sergeant or higher. The other plaintiffs do not allege to have been subjected tо unpaid suspensions, but rather allege that potentially being subjected to the improper salary deductions removes them from the status of salary basis employees. In November 1997, SOS notified the officers of the improper disciplinary actions and compensated them for the suspension or uncompensated work time.
SOS also failed to compensate Sergeant Serafini for the overtime he worked. Ser-afim’s situation differs from that of the other officers, however, because his claim rests not only upon his status as a salary basis employee, but also upon his supervisory role. Since April 1997 as part of a cooperative venture with the United States Secret Service, Serafini has been on a temporary assignment during which he
Plaintiffs sued SOS under the FLSA alleging that the Accident, Fitness, and Disciplinary Policies and SOS’s practices constituted salary deductions that made it impossible for the SOS officials to claim the officers were exempt from the overtime pay requirements because they fell within the statute’s executive exemption. After granting Defendants’ motion to dismiss the claims against the State of Illinois and Ryan and Pecoraro in their official capacities on Eleventh Amendment immunity grounds, the district court dismissed the officers’ claims and granted the SOS officials’ motion fоr summary judgment on the claims raised against them in their individual capacities. It concluded that the SOS policies did not satisfy the test set forth in
Auer v. Robbins,
With regard to Serafini’s claim, the district court found it moot because SOS had recognized its improрer denial of overtime pay and had agreed to compensate him. This decision places Serafini in the position of a non-prevailing party and makes him potentially liable for Defendants’ costs. The SOS officials filed a motion for bill of costs totaling $8,864.20 against all Plaintiffs, but later withdrew it voluntarily.
Plaintiffs argue on appeal that the district court should not have granted the SOS officials’ motion for summary judgment because SOS failed to establish that Plaintiffs meet the duties and salary tests for the executive exemption under FLSA. With respect to Serafini specifically, Plaintiffs claim that the district court should have granted their motion for summary judgment because he does not qualify for the exemption, as SOS has noted by its attempt to compensate him under the “window of cоrrection.” To find otherwise, the Plaintiffs charge, makes it impossible for Serafini to seek judicial redress if SOS fails to live up to its current promise to pay him the overtime it admits it owes him and subjects him to the possibility of having to pay the SOS officials’ attorneys’ fees and costs as well.
II. Analysis
This case raises two issues. First, whether the Eleventh Amendment bars the officers’ claims against the SOS officials. Second, whether the officers come within one of the statutory exemptions of the FLSA. Because we find that Plaintiffs come within the executive exemption of the FLSA and, thus, the SOS officials are not liable, we need not reach the Eleventh Amendment issue raised by the officers.
Cf. Illinois Health Care Ass’n v. Illinois Dept. of Pub. Health,
A. Standard of Review
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. See Tesch v. County of Green Lake,
B. The Officers’ FLSA Claims
All Plaintiffs (except Serafini) share similar claims against the SOS officials. They argue that the SOS officials cannot avoid their FLSA duty to pay them overtime because they are not salaried employees. In a related claim against the SOS officials, Serafini alleges not only that he too is not a salaried employee, but also that he cannot fall within the executive exemption because his duties since April 1997 do not come within the supervisory requirement of that exemption. Because of this difference we, like the district court, will consider his claims independently.
1. The Officers Come within the Executive Exemption
State and municipal employers must abide by the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. § 201
et seq.,
just as private employers do.
See Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth.,
The Secretary of Labor has the authority to define the scope of this section and the exemptions.
See
29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(1). Thus, the Secretary’s regulations have “the force and effect of law.”
Cf. Batterton v. Francis,
The SOS officials claim that the police officers are not entitled to overtime pay because they qualify for the executive exemption. Neither party disputes that the officers’ yearly salaries meet the requirements for the short test, so we focus our attention accordingly. In order to demonstrate that an employee comes within the short test of the executive exemption, the employer must show that: (1) the employee is compensated on a salary basis; (2) the employee’s primary duty consists of management responsibilities; and (3) the employee customarily and regularly supervises two or more other employees.
5
29
We can dispense with two of the three factors with brief discussion. The officers do not contest that they supervised two or more employees during the relevant time-frame and, therefore, meet the supervisory aspect of the short test. On appeal, they raise for the first time an issue regarding whether their duties are managerial in nature. “The well-established rule in this Circuit is that a plaintiff waives the right to argue an issue on appeal if she fails to raise the issue before a lower court.”
Robyns v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co.,
While it is true that the employer bears the burden of establishing that an employee meets each requirement of the exemption, this burden does not relieve the officers from their responsibility of raising the fact that the SOS officials failed to establish their burden before the district court. Before the district court, Plaintiffs did not dispute Defendants’ statements in Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment or those in Defendants’ Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment that the police officers supervised two to twenty-three subordinates and were responsible for “making assignments], determining how assignments will be carried out, setting work schedules, reporting directly to the next superior officers, attending management meetings, еtc.” Because Plaintiffs failed to contest these statements of fact in a timely manner before the district court, they waived their right to raise this issue before us.
The remaining thrust of Plaintiffs’ appeal is aimed at the district court’s determination that the officers were salaried employees under the executive exemption short test despite the Accident, Fitness, and Disciplinary Policies. Plaintiffs claim that the Accident, Fitness, and Disciplinary Policies created a significant likelihood that they would be subject to impermissible deductions in pay. They also argue that the five instances in which SOS improperly subjected employees to deductions in their pay as part of disciplinary actions demonstrate that SOS actually made impermissible deductions. Thus, they believe the district court incorrectly granted the motion for summary judgment.
The regulations explain that an employee is deemed to be on a salary basis:
if under his employment agreement he regularly receives each pay period on a weekly, or less frequent basis, a predetermined amount constituting all or part of his compensation, which amount is not subject to reduction because of variations in the quality or quantity of the work performed.
29 C.F.R. § 541.118(a). This requirement, commonly referred to as the “no-docking rule,” prohibits employers from deducting an employee’s pay based on partial day absences, violations of rules, and other indicators of the quantity or quality of an employee’s work.
See Bankston v. Illi
In
Auer v. Robbins,
the Supreme Court settled the conflict growing between the circuits regarding the legal standard by which courts should determine whether an employee is subject to impermissible pay deductions.
6
That standard is met ... if there is either an actual practice of making such deductions or an employment policy that creates a “significant likelihood” of such deductions. The Secretary’s approach rejects a wooden requirement of actual deductions, but in their absence it requires a clear and particularized policy — one which “effectively communicates” that deductions will be made in specified circumstances. This avoids the imposition of massive and unanticipated overtime liability ... in situations in which a vague or broadly worded policy is nominally applicable to a wide range of personnel but is not “significantly likely” to be invoked against salaried employees.
Id.
Our previous opinion in
Bankston
comports with the interpretation in
Auer
that the no-docking rule “does not require proof that a deduction actually has been made from an employee’s salary,”
a. The SOS Officials Did Not Create a Significant Likelihood of Improper Salary Deductions
We agree with the district court’s conclusion that Plaintiffs did not face a significant likelihood of pay deductions. The officers present a factual situation similar to that posed in
Auer,
in which the Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether St. Louis police sergeants and a police lieutenant were subject to disciplinary deductions so as to disqualify them from the executive exemption.
Id.
at 458-60,
[T]he manual does not “effectively communicate” that pay deductions are an anticipated form of punishment for employees in petitioners’ category, since it is perfectly possible to give full effect to every aspect of the manual without drawing any inference of that sort. If the statement of available penalties applied solely to petitioners, matters would be different; but since it applies both to petitioners and to employees who are unquestionably not paid on a salary basis, the expressed availability of disciplinary deductions may have reference only to the latter. No clear inference can be drawn as to the likelihood of a sanction’s being applied to employees such as petitioners.
Id.
at 462,
The policies upon which the officers rely similarly apply to salary basis and non-salary basis employees of the police department, in the case of the Accident and Fitness Policies, and of the SOS, in the case of the Disciplinary Policy. The officers do not demonstrate that SOS communicated through these policies, its employment manuals, or other forums that it would subject salary basis employees, such as the officers, to the relevant deductions in these policies. Thus, unlike the employees in
Ahern v. County of Nassau,
The manner in which SOS applied the policies also makes it significantly unlikely that salary basis employees would be subject to impermissible deductions. In addition to its broad application of the policy to all employees regardless of their salary status, SOS implemented a review practice to ensure that the policies would not impact salary basis employees in a way that would violate the FLSA. We agree with
b. The SOS Officials Did Not Engage in the Actual Practice of Improper Salary Deductions
Plaintiffs’ alternative charge that the SOS officials engaged in the actual practice of improper pay deductions with respect to some of the officers also falls short of the mark. They contend that the SOS issued five suspensions that were impermissible under the FLSA. The SOS does not deny that it issued the suspensions, but it also points out that it notified the officers of the improper disciplinary actions and told them that they would be compensated for the deductions. While it is true that the practice of actually suspending sergeants and lieutenants without pay for less than one week would raise an issue that could defeat a motion for summary judgment,
see Auer,
Plaintiffs argue that the undisputed actual incidents in which the SOS officials improperly deducted the pay of some sergeants and lieutenants as part of disciplinary actions demonstrate that the SOS officials engaged in the actual practice of making impermissible deductions. Like the district court, we find Plaintiffs’ argument unpersuasive. In
Auer,
the Supreme Court concluded that a one-time deduction under unusual circumstances did not remove an employee from exempt status.
Id.
Similarly, the Tenth Circuit concluded that two cases of improper deductions under unusual circumstances also did not remove an employee from exempt status.
See Carpenter,
Even if these five incidents rose to the level of frequent and, thus, constituted an actual practice by the SOS officials, the officers would still be exempt from the FLSA because the SOS officials availed themselves of the regulatory “window of correction.” The Secretary provided employers with a window of correction to permit them to retain the exempt status of their employees if they inadvertently made deductions inconsistent with the salary basis test. The regulations provide that when “a deduction not permitted by these interpretations is inadvertent, or is made for reasons other than lack of work, the exemption will not be considered to have been lost if the employer reimburses the employee for such deductions and promises to comply in the future.” 29 C.F.R. § 541.118(a)(6);
see also Auer,
Because the Accident, Fitness, and Disciplinary Policies do not create the significant likelihood that Plaintiffs would be subject to impermissible deductions and because SOS did not engage in the actual practice of imposing improper deductions, the SOS officials met their burden of establishing that Plaintiffs are employed on a salaried basis. And, because Plaintiffs concede they engaged in supervisory duties and wаived their right to dispute whether their duties are managerial in nature, we conclude that the SOS officials established that Plaintiffs come within the executive exemption and, therefore, are exempt from compensating them on an overtime basis.
2. Sergeant Serafini’s Claim Is Moot
SOS admits that Serafini does not come within the executive exemption of the FLSA because during his temporary assignment to work with the Secret Service, he did not supervise other employees. See 29 C.F.R. § 541.119. Defendants agreed to pay Serafini for past, present, and future hours of overtime worked as part of this assignment. The district court concluded that this agreement rendered Ser-afini’s claim against the SOS officials moot and granted the SOS officials’ motion for summary judgment on this ground.
A case is moot if no controversy exists bеtween the parties.
See Jordan v. Indiana High Sch. Athletic Ass’n, Inc.,
We believе the SOS officials sufficiently demonstrated that Serafini’s claim is moot. First, it has promised to pay Serafini for past, present, and future overtime hours worked in this temporary position. Second, the failure to comply with the FLSA arose under the unusual circumstances of an employee who in his normal job assignment is an exempt employee, but because of a special temporary assignment no longer qualifies for the exempt status. Third, the SOS officials, as we concluded with regard to the other Plaintiffs’ claims, do not engage in the actual practice or adhere to policies that create a significant likelihood that employees will be improperly classified as exempt employees. Serafini’s case is an isolated incidеnt that, when recognized by SOS, was corrected by compensating him in accordance with the FLSA. Therefore, we agree with the district court that Serafini’s claims are moot.
Serafini argues that we should reverse the district court’s decision because it would bar Serafini from future relief if SOS failed to live up to its promise under the doctrine of res
judicata.
We find no reason to conclude that a decision based upon the conclusion that a claim is moot creates a barrier for future litigation of the sort Serafini contemplates. A final judgment on the merits has the effect of precluding future relitigation of the same issues through the doctrine of
res judicata. See United States v. Munsingwear, Inc.,
Finally, in reaching its conclusion with regard to Serafini, the district court did not address the effect of this decision on Defendants’ abilities to recoup costs from Plaintiffs. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the prevailing party has the right to recover costs. Fed. R.Civ.P. 54(d). By granting the SOS officials’ motion for summary judgment, the district court placed the SOS officials in the position of the prevailing party. Defendants filed a motion for bill of costs, but voluntarily withdrew it. Even so, we want
III. Conclusion
In summary, with respect to the officers other than Sergeant Serafini, the SOS officials through its policies and practices did not subject the officers to impermissible pay deductions as part of the SOS disciplinary actions in a manner that would remove the officers’ exempt status under the FLSA. First, the policies did not create a substantial likelihood that the officers would be subject tо impermissible deductions. Second, even though five officers did receive suspensions that led to improper deductions, the SOS, upon realization of its mistake, rectified the situation by promising to compensate the specific employees, thus, availing themselves of the regulatory window of correction. These isolated incidents do not rise to the level of an actual practice. With respect to Serafini, the SOS acknowledged its mistake in failing to provide him with overtime compensation and promised to compensate him accordingly, thus, making his claim moot. Therefore, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision granting the SOS officials’ motion for summary judgment; further Serafini is not liable under Rule 54(d) for costs incurred by the SOS officials.
Notes
.Plaintiffs are: Sergeant Dennis DiGiore, Sergeant Robert Dufkis, Lieutenant Ken Easterly, Sergeant Joe Gabuzzi, Lieutenant William Johns, Sergeant Michael Juliano, Sergeant James Kazimour, Sergeant Dennis Serafini, Sergeant Marian Vrtik, and Lieutenant Bradley Warren.
. George Ryan and Giacomo Pecoraro were named in both their official and individual capacities. Plaintiffs later added Tina Prose in her individual capacity only.
. Other versions of this policy appear to have been in effect as early as 1989.
. SOS gave Sergeants DiGiore, Johns, and Kenton Manning (who is not a plaintiff in this case) the option of a one-day suspension or working an uncompensated shift because of a chargeable traffic accident in which they were involved. They chose to work an uncompensatеd shift. SOS issued an unpaid suspension for Lieutenant Raymond Wood (who is also not a plaintiff in this case) as well, but he retired before the suspension took effect.
. The regulations specifically provide that an employee who meets the criteria for the short test:
is deemed to meet all the requirements [of the long test] if the employee’s primary duty consists of the management of the enterprise in which employed or of a customarily recognized department or subdivision thereof and includes the customary and regular direction of the work of two or more other employees therein.
29 C.F.R. § 541.119(a).
. Before the Supreme Court’s decision in
Auer,
at least two circuits required that actual deductions had to occur to remove employees from their status as a salary basis employeе.
See McDonnell v. City of Omaha,
. These cases are additionally persuasive because they adhere to the Secretary's interpretation of the actual practice prong of this analysis. In the Secretary’s amicus brief to the Supreme Court in Auer, which the Court heavily relied upon in reaching its conclusions in that case, the Secretary stated:
[w]hen there is evidence that improper deductions have been taken with some frequency for violations of a work rule by employees having a particular rank, it is fair to conclude that all employees in that rank are "subject to” such deductions. On the other hand, when such deductions have not occurred or have only occurred in idiosyncratic or unusual circumstances, that conclusion generally would not be warranted.
DiGiore v. Ryan,
