The Fair Labor Standards Act requires that employees be paid one and a half times their hourly wage for every hour that they work in excess of ,40 hours a week. 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1). But there is an exemption for workers in retail stores or other service establishments (including the automobile repair service that is the defendant in this case) who (1) are paid a wage that exceeds one and a half times the minimum wage and (2) receive more than half their compensation in the form of “commissions on goods or services.” § 207(i). In this suit, resolved in favor of the defendant on summary judgment, we are required to decide whether a system of compensation common in the auto repair industry is a commission system within the meaning of the statute.
The facts are undisputed; the question is what “commissions on goods or services” means. The plaintiffs’ contention that the defendant must prove its entitlement to the exemption by “clear and affirmative evidence” is therefore irrelevant; for evidence is used to resolve factual disputes, and there are none in this ease. But the contention is also incorrect, for nothing in the statute, the regulations under it, or the law of evidence justifies imposing a requirement of proving entitlement to the exemption by “clear and affirmative evidence.”
A number of FLSA cases
say
this is the standard.
Renfro v. Indiana Michigan Power Co.,
The phrase first appeared in
Donovan v. United Video, Inc.,
Earlier still, we read that “the burden is upon the appellant to bring itself plainly and unmistakably within the terms and the spirit of the exemptions.”
Armstrong Co. v. Walling,
At this point the trail grows cold. But one sees what happened: the opinion in Farmers Reservoir used “affirmatively” and “clearly,” and the opinions in Armstrong and Hunt Foods (following AH. Phillips) “plainly” and “unmistakably,” merely to indicate that exemptions are to be construed narrowly' — -that plainly is the meaning of the passage in AH. Phillips— and, in the Farmers Reservoir version, also that the burden of proof is on the defendant, since entitlement to an exemption is an affirmative defense. The phrases were then garbled (what could “affirmative evidence” mean? — it implies that there must be something called “negative evidence”), the garbled form repeated, and the original meaning forgotten.
Also forgotten was the presumption that the burden of proof in federal civil cases is proof by a preponderance of the evidence. “Because the preponderance-of-the-evidence standard results in a roughly equal allocation of the risk of error between litigants, we presume that this standard is applicable in civil actions between private litigants unless ‘particularly important individual interests or rights are at stake.’ ”
Grogan v. Garner,
Even if understood as merely a clumsy invocation of the familiar principle of statutory interpretation that exemptions from a statute that creates remedies should be construed narrowly, the “clear and affirmative evidence” formula of
United Video
and the cases following it is unsatisfactory because the underlying principle is mysterious. Why should one provision in a statute take precedence over another? But there is an answer in the passage we quoted from
Phillips
warning that to interpret an exemption broadly threatens “to abuse the interpretative process and to frustrate the announced will of the people.”
A.H. Phillips, Inc. v. Walling, supra,
The statute does not define “commission.” About all that is clear is that the word need not be used for the exemption to be applicable.
Mechmet v. Four Seasons Hotels, Ltd., supra,
Now suppose two real estate brokers work on the sale of the same house, and the question arises how they should split their commission. One broker suggests a 50-50 split, but the other ripostes, “I put in two-thirds of the time on this sale, so I should get two-thirds of the commission.” Suppose the first broker agrees. Does this mean, because the number of hours *509 they worked figured in their split of the commission, that they weren’t paid a commission, but an hourly wage? Surely not. This simple example turns out to resolve the present, complicated-seeming case.
Sterling, the defendant, a chain of auto repair shops, charges its customers as follows. It calculates the number of hours normally required to do a given type of repair (these are called “booked hours”) and multiplies that number by a dollar figure. The product of this multiplication is the labor price of the repair to the customer. Sterling adds material costs to the labor price to come up with a final price. A team of mechanics is then assigned to the job. Each member of the team keeps track of the hours he works on the job. When it’s completed and the hours of the team members are added up, Sterling determines each member’s compensation by multiplying (1) the number of booked hours for the job by (2) the ratio of the team member’s actual hours worked to the total hours worked by the team, and then by (3) a wage, per booked (not actually worked) hour, based on the skill or quality of the individual team member.
So suppose the number of booked hours assigned to the repair of a headlight is 6; a team of two mechanics completes the job in 3 hours; one member of the team, call him A, worked 2 hours and the other, B, 1 hour; and A’s booked-hour rate is $20 and B’s $15. Then A’s compensation would be $80 and B’s $30, for a total of $110. The figures for A and B are calculated as follows. A put in two-thirds of the total amount of time that it took to complete the job, and so he is credited with two-thirds of the booked hours. That is 4 hours, and when multiplied by $20 per booked hour yields $80. B put in one-third of the time, so he is credited with one-third of the booked hours, which is 2 hours, which when multiplied by $15 is $30. The customer would be charged 6 hours times some hourly rate, plus the cost of the materials used in the repair. Suppose the hourly rate is $40. Then the labor component of the price to the customer would be $240 ($40 x 6), and the team would have received 46 percent ($110 $240) of that price. The faster the team works, the more it earns per number of hours, since its commission is based not on the total number of hours it puts in on a job but on the number of booked hours times each team member’s booked-hour rate. That is how commissions work; they are decoupled from actual time worked. The percentage rate is implicit in Sterling’s method of compensation. It is equivalent to paying the team a percentage (46 percent in our example) of the labor component of the price of their service to the customer.
Notice how closely this method of compensation resembles our example of the two real estate brokers who work as a team and split the commission two-thirds one-third on the basis of their relative time. It is because the mechanics work in teams, with members making different contributions of time and skill, that it becomes necessary to allocate the commission. The fact that the time they put in is a factor in divvying up the commission no more alters the commission character of their compensation than in the broker case. If a team is paid a commission, the commission has to be divided between them somehow, and the method chosen for doing this doesn’t alter the character of the compensation as a commission.
The only differences between our case and the brokerage example are, first, that there is an additional weighting, by quality, in our case, and, second, that the commission in the real estate example is on the full price of the good sold (the house), whereas in our case it is on only part of the price — the price of the labor that goes *510 into' the repair. There is also a materials costs, and the mechanics do not share in the part of the price that covers those costs.
The first difference is irrelevant — but so is the second. Suppose a seller pays shipping costs and adds them to his price to the buyer, but the seller pays his salesmen commissions based on the price minus those costs; it would still be a bona fide commission system of compensation.
To try to distinguish the system in this case from the brokerage example would complicate the law without furthering the purposes of the overtime provision. The purposes are to spread work in order to reduce unemployment, to discourage (by increasing the cost to the employer) a degree of overtime that might impair workers’ health or safety, and to increase the welfare of low-paid workers.
Mechmet v. Four Seasons Hotels, Ltd., supra,
The plaintiffs argue that their class includes workers who .are paid much less than they. But if so and those workers feel aggrieved, it is odd that none of them is a class representative.
Although the mechanics are paid by the job, this is not piecework (which is not exempt from the overtime provision, 29 U.S.C. § 207(g);
United States v. Rosenwasser,
The system of compensation used by Sterling is industry-wide, and of long standing. Department of Labor, Wage & Hour Division, supra, § 21h04(d); “FLSA Compliance: Retail and Service Exemptions From Overtime Rules,” Payroll Practitioner’s Monthly, Oct. 2006; Ed Kovalchik, “Hourly Tech Pay Plans — Automobile Mechanics,” Ward’s Dealer Business (Apr.1996), http://findarticles.c om/p/articles/mi — m0FJN/is—n8—v30/ai—• 18728424. It is possible for an entire industry to be in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act for a long time without the Labor Department noticing. But a more plausible hypothesis is that the auto repair industry has been left alone because the character of its compensation system has *511 been recognized for what it is-commission system. ■a bona fide
AFFIRMED.
