Plaintiffs brought suit under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq., for unpaid minimum wages, etc., under § 16(b) of the Act, claiming they were employees engaged in interstate commerce or in the production of goods for interstate commerce within the meaning of the Act.
Defendant is a national banking association and owns and operates an eighteen story building in Chicago, Illinois. In the conduct of its banking business it occupies certain portions of the building, the balance of which it leases to various individuals and corporations, none of whom produce or manufacture any goods, wares, products, commodities, merchandise, or articles of commerce on the premises. Some of the tenants, however, are elsewhere engaged in interstate commerce and in the production of goods for interstate commerce. The building is operated from a separate office, as a segregated unit, under the direct control of a vice-president, and maintains a separate account with defendant. From this account the plaintiffs are paid.
The defendant’s banking customers are engaged in many lines of business, some of which constitute interstate commerce or
It will not be necessary to enumerate the defendant’s many banking activities. It will be enough to say that it maintains accounts in banks in other states and in foreign countries. It buys and sells credits located abroad and payable in foreign currency, for its own account and for the account of its customers. It. issues commercial letters of credit addressed to other banks in Illinois and in other states and foreign countries.
One of the plaintiffs is a watchman; the others are elevator operators, janitors, and maintenance workers engaged in the maintenance and operation of the building. The elevator operators run the elevators from the first floor to the eighteenth floor, transporting the various tenants and persons desiring to visit the tenants. The janitors and maintenance workers clean the building, sweep and scrub the floors, and remove dust and other waste. Their work is done both in the portion of the building occupied by the banking units and in that portion of the building occupied by the tenants, as well as in the corridors. The watchman walks through the corridors watching for possible fires and other things that might endanger the tenant’s property.
The District Court was of the opinion that the plaintiffs were not covered by the Act.
True, the Act is remedial in character and should, in order to effectuate its spirit, be interpreted liberally, but it has been held that Congress did not intend to extend federal control throughout the farthest reaches of the channels of interstate commerce. Kirschbaum Co. v. Walling,
In the case of Stoike v. First National Bank,
In Rosenberg v. Lorenzetti,
In Johnson v. Dallas Downtown Development Co., 5 Cir.,
Applying the reasoning and the principles enunciated in the cases cited, we are impelled to the conclusion that the District Court decided correctly that the plaintiffs in this case were not “engaged in commerce” under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
The judgment of the District Court will be affirmed. It is so ordered.
