GOLDBERG, SECRETARY OF LABOR, v. WHITAKER HOUSE COOPERATIVE, INC., ET AL.
No. 274
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 30, 1961. Decided April 24, 1961.
366 U.S. 28
Philip S. Bird argued the cause for respondents. With him on the brief was Cyril M. Joly.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent cooperative was organized in 1957 under the laws of Maine; and we assume it was legally organized. The question is whether it is an “employer” and its members are “employees” within the meaning of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, § 3, 52 Stat. 1060, as
The corporate purpose of the respondent as stated in its articles is to manufacture, sell, and deal in “knitted, crocheted, and embroidered goods of all kinds.” It has a general manager and a few employees who engage in finishing work, i. e., trimming and packaging. There are some 200 members who work in their homes. A homeworker who desires to become a member buys from respondent a sample of the work she is supposed to do, copies the sample, and submits it to respondent. If the work is found to be satisfactory, the applicant can become a member by paying $3 and agreeing to the provisions of the articles and bylaws. Members were prohibited from furnishing others with articles of the kind dealt in by respondent.1 They are required to remain members at least a year. They may, however, be expelled at any time by the board of directors if they violate any rules or regulations or if their work is substandard.2 Members are not liable for respondent‘s debts; they may not be
By § 11 (d) of the Act the Administrator is authorized to make “such regulations and orders regulating, restricting, or prohibiting industrial homework as are necessary or appropriate to prevent the circumvention or evasion of and to safeguard the minimum wage rate prescribed in this Act.” Section 11 (d) was added in 19493 and provides that “all existing regulations or orders of the Administrator relating to industrial homework are hereby continued in full force and effect.”
These Regulations4 provide that no industrial homework, such as respondent‘s members do, shall be done “in or about a home, apartment, tenement, or room in a residential establishment unless a special homework certificate”5 has been issued. Respondent‘s members have no
These Regulations have a long history. In 1939, shortly after the Act was passed, bills were introduced in the House to permit homeworkers to be employed at rates lower than the statutory minimum.6 These amendments were rejected.7 Thereupon the Administrator issued regulations governing homeworkers;8 and we sustained some of them in Gemsco, Inc., v. Walling, 324 U. S. 244 (1945). In 1949 the House adopted an amendment which would have exempted from the Act a large group of homeworkers.9 The Senate bill contained no such exemption; and the Conference Report rejected the exemption.10 Instead, § 11 (d) was added, strengthening the authority of the Administrator to restrict or prohibit homework.11 Still later respondent was organized; and, as we have said, it made no attempt to comply with these homework regulations.
We think we would be remiss, in light of this history, if we construed the Act loosely so as to permit this homework to be done in ways not permissible under the Regulations. By § 3 (d) of the Act an “employer” is any person acting “in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee.” By § 3 (e) an “employee” is one “employed” by an employer. By § 3 (g) the term employ
There is no reason in logic why these members may not be employees. There is nothing inherently inconsistent between the coexistence of a proprietary and an employment relationship. If members of a trade union bought stock in their corporate employer, they would not cease to be employees within the conception of this Act. For the corporation would “suffer or permit” them to work whether or not they owned one share of stock or none or many. We fail to see why a member of a cooperative may not also be an employee of the cooperative. In this case the members seem to us to be both “members” and “employees.” It is the cooperative that is affording them “the opportunity to work, and paying them for it,” to use the words of Judge Aldrich, dissenting below. 275 F. 2d, at 366. However immediate or remote their right to “excess receipts” may be,12 they work in the same way as they would if they had an individual proprietor as their employer.13 The members are not self-employed; nor are they independent, selling their products on the market for whatever price they can command. They are regimented under one organization, manufacturing what the organization desires and receiving the compensation the organization dictates.14 Apart from formal differences,
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER, with whom MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR. JUSTICE STEWART join, dissenting.
It is clear and undisputed that the Fair Labor Standards Act does not apply in the absence of an employer-employee relationship. Here, upon what seems to me to be ample evidence, the District Court found that the cooperative was created and is being operated as a true cooperative under the laws of Maine, 170 F. Supp. 743, and, on appeal, the Court of Appeals approved those findings. 275 F. 2d 362. Unless those findings are clearly erroneous, they must be accepted here.
If, as seems practically inevitable in the light of the Court‘s judgment, the cooperative must now be dissolved, will not its assets, including its “depreciation [and capital] reserves” as well as its “excess receipts,” have to be refunded to its members “according to the percentage of work submitted [by them respectively] to the Cooperative for sale,” and not according to their memberships or investments, just as required by the Maine statute and the cooperative‘s articles? This seems wholly inconsistent with any notion that the members were employees of the cooperative or that they were suffered to work for it, or that it bought or paid them for their knitted articles.
