This suit,
*
appealed from the United States District Court for the Eastern Dis
*849
trict of New York, Civil Action No. CV-85-1467 (Weinstein, C.J.), is one of several companion cases brought by federal civilian fire fighters against the government under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-19,
as amended
in 1974, Pub.L. No. 93-259, § 6(c)(1)(A), 88 Stat. 55, and under the Little Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2). The court entered a final summary judgment deciding remaining issues, except the names of party plaintiffs. After discovery, it is expected there will be thousands (including those in companion cases), though this expectation depends for fulfillment on the court’s decision whether or not to toll the statute of limitations on equitable grounds, as stated in our previous decision, on the interlocutory appeal,
United States v. Cook,
The questions we must decide are (1) whether the ordinary 29 U.S.C. § 255(a) two-year period of limitations is applicable, or whether that statute extends the time to three years because the violations were “willful” as held in the trial court; (2) when the claims accrued for statute of limitations purposes; and (3) whether an award of counsel fees might be made without abuse of discretion, though it was disproportionately large with respect to the claims of the present named plaintiffs, and is justified largely by the benefit from counsel’s efforts to the thousands of class members expected to become parties to this or other suits. We reverse the decision of the trial court as to willfulness, affirm its holding that no claim accrued before September 22, 1983, when the government for the first time furnished a corrected wage study of standards prevailing with respect to state and local firemen, and affirm the award of counsel fees.
Discussion
I
A. The Willfulness Issue
The correct interpretation of the Act was no longer in issue when the court decided willfulness, nor was it disputed the Labor Department had failed to determine the statutory overtime of government firemen as the 1974 statute,
supra,
required that it should. Those amendments extended the FLSA to employees of public agencies, federal and state. As to fire fighters, it required the Secretary of Labor to make a study showing the average length of tours of duty of publicly employed fire fighters. The results were to be used as a basis to determine how many hours could be worked before overtime liability began. The Secretary, in mistaken reliance on
National League of Cities v. Usery,
The district court held
on summary judgment,
without testimony or fact findings, that the various government agencies that failed to conform fully with FLSA on Labor Department advice, did sb willfully. This reflects practically a
per se
rule that any government agency that employs civilians and does not compensate them as the FLSA is afterwards held to require, violates willfully. It was not shown in any way what a federal agency might do if it mistrusted the expertise of the Secretary of Labor as to the often labyrinthine requirements of the FLSA, or that it would not always worsen its troubles by substituting its own expertise for his or hers. We note that since the decision of the trial court, the Second Circuit law was announced that
failure
to seek the advice of the Secretary of Labor establishes a willful violation.
Russo v. Trifari, Krussman & Fishel, Inc.,
The explanation of the decision of the trial court probably resides in the influential Fifth Circuit case of
Coleman v. Jiffy June Farms, Inc.,
The United States Supreme Court has now emphatically rejected the
“Jiffy June”
standard, with various others we need not discuss.
McLaughlin v. Richland Shoe Co.,
— U.S. -,
As regards the case of a federal agency that has in good faith accepted and followed the advice of the Secretary of Labor, we think a new
per se
rule is now appropriate; given these facts, that any mistake in responding to the demands of the FLSA is not willful. It is not at all apparent what triable issue would remain as to the agency’s willfulness. Accordingly, we do not think a remand is needed to conduct a factual inquiry. Such a remand was made in
Brock v. Richland Shoe Co.,
The Supreme Court dissenters in Rich-land Shoe would not follow the Jiffy June standards. Apparently no party or Justice favored it. They would require the delinquent employer to have had a “reasonable basis” for not following the Act as later construed, a difference acknowledged to be small.
*851 II
B. Accrual Date of Claim
The district court held that “the cause of action accrued on September 22, 1983, when the OPM published the results of the recomputed study of hours of work * * While the Court does not expressly so state, we suppose it means that nonpayment of legal overtime before the stated date did not accrue a claim without more. This is contrary to the usual rule,
i.e.,
that a claim for unpaid overtime under the FLSA accrues at the end of each pay period when it is not paid.
Beebe v. United States,
Ill
C. Counsel Fees
The United States argues the fee award was excessive; implicitly it admits that an award in some amount was appropriate and timely. The statute authorizing the fee, 29 U.S.C. § 216(b), provides that the court “in addition to any judgment awarded to the plaintiff or plaintiffs” shall “allow a reasonable attorney’s fee to be paid by the defendant.” Defendant cites a Civil Rights case,
Johnson v. Georgia Highway Express, Inc.,
With respect to novelty and difficulty of the questions, this case has been in this court twice on defendant’s appeals and we have not found it easy and simple. It is of course true that the decisions in Jones v. Donovan settled some threshold questions, but we are unable to say they left nothing for the trial court or us to do.
*852 As to the eighth factor, we do not deem it an abuse of discretion to look past the named plaintiffs in measuring the magnitude of results.
In view of the possibility, however remote, that no plaintiff in this suit will recover anything, we add that the jurisdiction to award counsel fees is lost if no plaintiff in this case enjoys a recovery to which the fee is “in addition.” Our conclusion is that no abuse of discretion is shown by appellant, and we therefore affirm on the fee issue.
IV
Conclusion
With respect to the length of the limitations period, we reverse and remand with directions to ascertain who is now a party, and the damages, if any, to be recovered by any party on the basis that the limitations period is two years, not three, subject to tolling if the court so holds. With respect to the accrual issue, we affirm with di-" rections to modify as shown. We affirm the fee award, subject to the caveat that no award is owing unless some plaintiff recovers something in this case.
Costs
Each party to bear his own costs.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
Lester H. Cook, Louis Montalto, George T. Delano, Carrol Rogers, and Richard M. Deasy have been dismissed in order to avoid problems of double recovery. Wilfred T. Sullivan and Charles M. Krause were dismissed on the ground of primary jurisdiction. Others have been added. The judgment under review here named Michael G. Martin, Arthur F. Koen- *849 mund, John M. Harnedy, and Thomas E. Reed as those whose motion for partial summary judgment was granted.
