180 S.W.2d 28 | Mo. | 1944
This is an action under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 [U.S.C.A., Title 29, Chap. 8, Secs. 201-219] to recover overtime compensation, liquidated damages and attorney's fees. (Sec. 216.) The court found for defendant on the ground "that defendant is a retail or service establishment the greater part of whose selling or servicing is in intrastate commerce within the meaning of Sec. 13(a)(2)" of the Act [29 U.S.C.A. 213 (a) (2)]. Plaintiffs have appealed. Our jurisdiction is invoked because of the amount involved.
The parties agreed upon most of the facts but some evidence was offered by each. Plaintiffs claim that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law under the facts. Defendant is incorporated under the laws of Missouri, furnishes and sells water only in the counties of Andrew and Buchanan and all of its plants, pipe lines and installations are located therein. Likewise, all of the work of its employees is performed in these counties. It takes water from the Missouri River, pumps it into settling basins where it is filtered, purified and sterilized. The water is then pumped into holding basins from which it flows by gravity into water mains to its customers, mainly in the City of St. Joseph. Defendant's mains are connected with the premises of each customer by a service pipe owned and installed by the owner of the premises. Defendant also furnishes standby fire pressure service, tests and repairs hydrants and valves, and inspects plumbing fixtures of customers. Defendant's rates and business are regulated by the Missouri Public Service Commission.
St. Joseph has about 75,000 inhabitants. It has industries engaged in producing goods for shipment in interstate commerce such as Swift Co., Armour Co., Quaker Oats Co., Goetz Brewing Co., Western Dairy and Ice Cream Co., Douglas Candy Co., and others engaged in bottling [30] soft drinks, making vinegar, and manufacturing chemicals. There are also six railroads through the city to which defendant furnishes water. Some of this is used to fill boilers of locomotives and drinking water tanks and other tanks on cars. The city is about seven miles long and three miles wide. Most of defendant's pipe mileage is in the residential sections. During the period involved herein it had from 18,330 to 19,007 total customers. Domestic customers (single private homes) were from 14,535 to 15,106, paying an average of less than $1.50 per month. Commercial customers (including apartment and boarding houses, two or more family homes, churches, hospitals and hotels, as well as wholesale and retail commercial establishments) were *821 from 3,446 to 3,520, paying an average of less than four dollars per month. Municipal customers (city and county) were 89 to 108, with an additional 120 to 123 fire service customers (not including municipal fire hydrants rented on a different basis) to service fire sprinkler heads, both public and private. Industrial customers were from 103 to 149 and other public utilities from 37 to 38. Industrial and other public utility users consumed 24.6% of the total volume of water and produced 12.4% of defendant's total revenue.
Industrial plants made various use of the water purchased. Swift Co. had their own wells and about 86% of all water consumed was well water. They preferred to use city water in their canning, curing and processing departments, but "got along at times with entirely all well water." Defendant's water was also used for washing live stock for slaughter and other cleaning purposes. Goetz Brewing Co. used it as an ingredient of its beer as well as for drinking water and cleaning purposes. Quaker Oats Co. used it at one plant only for drinking and cleaning purposes and in another plant as an ingredient in manufactured food products. Bottling companies used it as an ingredient of carbonated beverages. It was used by another company as an ingredient of vinegar. It was likewise used by chemical and pharmacal companies in their products. It was also used to fill boilers in factories using steam power plants.
Plaintiffs' work ranged from repairing mains, hydrants, meters and valves, inspecting plumbing, checking and testing the distribution system, and laying new mains, pipes and meters, to reading meters, collecting delinquent accounts, answering telephone calls and doing janitor or clerical work. Some of them worked on the reservoirs, washing, repairing and breaking ice in them. It was not shown that any one of them had ever directly connected or serviced the appliances through which water immediately flowed into the private water pipes of any industrial or public utility users as a part of his regular work or otherwise.
[1] Plaintiffs say that "their work in producing and distributing usable water to the numerous industries in and around St. Joseph is a `process or occupation necessary to the production' of `goods for commerce', as this quoted language is defined and used in Sections 203 and 207". [See definition of "produced" Sec. 203j.] Of course, whether or not water sold by defendant is necessary to the production of other goods would not make any difference if defendant is exempted from the application of the Act under the provisions of Sec. 213. Plaintiffs say that defendant is not a "retail or service establishment" because it is a public utility and if it falls into any other classification it is a manufacturer. Defendant raises no issue as to the form of action, or constitutional grounds, so that the question for our decision is the interpretation and application of provisions of the Act. Thus we are not called upon to consider herein what *822
Congress could do in this field but only to determine what it has done therein in this Act. The purposes of the Act were discussed, and its constitutionality settled, in United States v. Darby Lumber Co.,
[2] The basis of the Act is the Commerce Clause of the Constitution of the United States. However, the United States Supreme Court has called attention to the fact that "Congress did not exercise in this Act the full scope of the commerce power"; that it did not intend that it be "extended to business or transactions `affecting commerce'" only; and that it "plainly indicated its [31] purpose to leave local business to the protection of the states." [Walling v. Jacksonville Paper Co.,
[3] We think the trial court was right in holding that these exemptions applied to defendant herein. In White Motor Co. v. Littleton (U.S.C.C.A., 5th Cir.),
Plaintiffs say that this exemption should not apply to a public utility, citing Schmidt v. Peoples Telephone Union (U.S.C.C.A., 8th Cir.),
Certainly all of defendant's sales are "direct to the consumer" and the bulk of them are in small quantity. None of them are made "to one who intends to resell" [32] the water, and none of them are made outside this state. In this connection we note that the definition of "goods" (Sec. 203i) specifically provides that it "does not include goods after their delivery into the actual physical possession of the ultimate consumer thereof other than a producer, manufacturer or processor thereof." Certainly the water sold by defendant is delivered "into the actual physical possession of the ultimate consumer" *824
and is thus consumed by him, even if used in manufacturing foods or beverages with considerable water content. Surely, it could not be reasonably claimed that making beer, vinegar or coca cola (or converting water into steam) is producing, manufacturing or processing water. Such products are not sold as water as defendant sells it. Plaintiff's argue that defendant cannot be a retailer because it does not buy what it sells. However, we think the determining factor here is the character of its selling and not the manner of acquisition of what it sells. [See Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Co. v. Cream of Wheat Co. (U.S.C.C.A., 2d Cir.), 227 F. 46.] The fact that defendant sells water through the instrumentality of connecting pipes and meters does not prevent defendant's business from being retail. [See Walling v. Sanders (U.S.C.C.A., 6th Cir.),
Furthermore, whether or not defendant is within this exemption, we think that the activities of its employees in connection with its business of taking, processing and selling water, so far as the evidence discloses them, were too remote from "the production of goods for commerce" to bring them within the Act. Employees were much more immediately and directly connected with the production of goods for commerce, in the two cases recently decided by the United States Supreme Court upon which plaintiffs most strongly rely. [Kirschbaum Co. v. Walling,
In the Kirschbaum case, the court ruled that each case must be decided upon the specific factual situation involved, saying: "What is needed is something of that common-sense accommodation of judgment to kaleidoscopic situations which characterizes the law in its treatment of problems of causation." This, of course, is the test of *825
direct or remote connection. The court also applied a rule similar to that developed in determining the application of the Federal Employers' Liability Act, saying: "the work of the employees in these cases, had such a close and immediate tie with the process of production for commerce, . . . was therefore so much an essential part of it, that the employees are to be regarded as engaged in an occupation `necessary to the production of goods for commerce'". [See also Overstreet v. North Shore Corp.,
The Supreme Court of Arkansas in Couch v. Ward,