The appellants, some 1200 walking bosses and warehousemen employed in the long-shore and stevedoring industry in the San Francisco Bay area, brought 32 actions against the appellees, their employers, to recover overtime compensation and liquidated damages claimed to be owing under § 16 of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938. 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 201-219. The cases were consolidated for trial.
The facts upon which the actions are predicated are that these workers were paid at an agreed hourly rate for a basic 30-hour workweek, consisting of the first six hours of work between 8 A.M. and 5 :00 P.M. Mondays through Fridays. The same employment contracts provided that they should be paid “time and a half” for all work done outside this basic workweek. This included all work done after 5:00 P. M. and before 8:00 A.M., work done on Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, and work done after the first six hours of work between 8:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M., Mondays through Fridays. This contract overtime pay was sometimes called “clock overtime”, because applicable to certain hours during the day and week. In addition, special rates, even higher, were paid for handling dangerous or noxious cargo, or for work requiring special skill.
It was alleged in the complaints that the Fair Labor Standards Act required that overtime pay should be calculated on the basis of the average of the various rates of pay received and earned by plaintiffs during the first 40 hours of each week. This, said the employers, would be computing overtime on overtime. They asserted that the rates of pay were far in excess of those required by the Act. The minimum allowed by the Act permits 40 hours to be paid at straight time rate, and only requires overtime pay thereafter. But these employers, paying overtime at all times except the six hours mentioned, in each of the five days, Monday to Friday, a total of 30 hours, contended that they were more than meeting the Act’s requirements.
The suits were instituted in 1945. When the cases came to trial in May, 1947, the Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947, 29 U.S.C.A. § 251 et seq., had become effective, and defendants were permitted to amend their answers to plead defenses under §§ 9 and 11 of the Act. The cases were then tried and submitted, but before they were decided, the Supreme Court on June 7, 1948, handed down its decision in Bay Ridge Co. v. Aaron,
After Public Law 177 was passed, its provisions were set up as supplemental defenses, and thereafter, in a “supplemental opinion and findings”, the court added to its previous holding, a finding that under this Act the plaintiffs’ actions were barred.
The judgment denying the appellants’ claims is therefore based upon two independent grounds: one the good faith defense under the Portal-to-Portal Act; the other the defense under the Overtime-on-Overtime Act. Since the judgment must be affirmed if either defense be sustained, it was stipulated by the parties, with the approval of the court, that the court should first hear argument upon those issues of the appeal raised by appellants’ contention that the retroactive provisions of the Overtime-on-Overtime Act are unconstitutional.
The argument is that such retroactive enactment is void (1) as an attempt by Congress to exercise judicial power in violation of Article III of the Constitution, 1 and (2) as a deprivation of property without due process of law in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
These are the same two grounds of invalidity upon which the retroactive features of the Portal-to-Portal Act were attacked in Seese v. Bethlehem Steel Co., 4 cir.,
Appellants say that when they did the work for which additional compensation is here sought they acquired rights to overtime compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act, the measure of which overtime compensation was required to be as
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stated in the Bay Ridge decision. These, they say, were vested rights, contractual in nature. They cite such cases as Coombes v. Getz,
This is the line of argument presented in challenging the constitutionality of the retroactive provisions of the Portal-to-Portal Act. Appellees say that the decisions, such as that of this court in Lassiter v. Guy F. Atkinson Co., 176 F.2d 984, upholding the Portal-to-Portal provisions, 3 are controlling here. Plainly our decision here must depend upon whether this case may be distinguished from those just mentioned.
Appellants argue that the Portal-to-Portal cases present a very different situation from that now before us. They say that the result of the Supreme Court decision in the Anderson v. Mt. Clemens Pottery Co. case,
What is here sought, it is said, is no windfall result of a surprise decision in the Bay Ridge case. Attention is called to a letter written by the Wage-Hour Administrator on October 15, 1943, in line with what appellants allege in their complaints, that the “regular rate” upon which overtime must Ibe computed must be determined by dividing total earnings by total hours. So appellants say their actions cannot be called attempts to recover a windfall.
Finally, it is said, the claims which were made on industry as a result of the Mt. Clemens decision were so great, and so numerous, as to create a national economic emergency. Here the claims are limited to those of walking bosses and terminal employees, and if every possible claim of persons affected by the Bay Ridge decision were considered, the total could not exceed two million dollars. Although the Senate Report on the bill which became Public *446 Law 177 referred to estimates of potential liability ranging from $10,000,000, to $300,-000,000, we are told that these are inflated figures not warranted by the facts.
We think that notwithstanding these differences, the reasons which commanded an approval of the Portal-to-Portal Act, compel a like conclusion here. The two situations dealt with in these acts were not identical, but we think that in substance they were the same. The claims dealt with in the Portal-to-Portal Act w re for activity not previously considered work activity. This was because of the previous uncertainty as to what constituted the “workweek”. Here the uncertainty concerned the definition of the term “regular rate”.
4
The decision in the Mt. 'Clemens case that the activities there considered must be counted in calculating the workweek paralleled in every respect the decision: in the Bay Ridge case as to how the regular rate must be ascertained. The effect in each case was to require the court’s interpretation to be read as a part of the Act. “When the Fair Labor Standards Act was interpreted by the Supreme Court as requiring computation in the workweek of time consumed in walking to work and other preliminary activities, this was just as though the original act contained express provision to that effect; * * Seese v. Bethlehem Steel Co., supra,
As for the circumstance that generally the result reached in the Mt. Clemens decision was unexpected, while the Bay Ridge decision was anticipated by the institution of these actions, and by the Administrator’s 1943 letter, we think those are matters which may properly be considered by the court in determining whether the defenses afforded by these acts apply in a particular case, but we cannot perceive why a decision as to the validity of the Acts themselves should turn on this circumstance. Thus the employer claiming a defense under § 9 of the Portal-to-Portal Act must prove that he acted “in good faith in conformity with and in reliance on any administrative regulation, order, ruling,” etc. And § 1 of Public Law 177 refers to a “rate established in good faith.” To argue that the appellee employers here lacked the requisite good faith is no more than an argument that the court below made a wrong finding. 5 We think it not significant with respect to the validity of the Act here in question.
The argument that the Overtime-on-Overtime Act was not justified by an emergency comparable to that which prompted the Portal-to-Portal enactment raises , the familiar question as to whether Congress, or the courts, shall have the say as to the need for the questioned legislation. The senate Report which brought forward and set forth the committee’s views as to the need for this particular provision stated: “Indeed, in every important respect the overtime-on-overtime claims closely parallel the portal-to-portal claims. In our opinion, the factual and legal findings recited in the Portal-to-Portal Act are equally applicable here, and the situation requires the same expeditious' and equitable treatment by Congress.” (Senate Report No. 402, 81st Congress, 1st Session.) 6
It is true that recitals in legislation are not always conclusive. In a proper case the courts can examine into the facts to see whether Congress has transgressed
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the limits of its powers. Chastleton Corp. v. Sinclair,
The decisions upholding the Portal-to-Portal Act, (supra, note 3), 'have reached such general unanimity that we think it may be said that what they held is now beyond further question. Those decisions establish that if it may be said that private rights, contractual in nature, arose from the overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act, yet the character and quality of such rights are such that they must yield to the sovereign power to regulate commerce by legislation such as that of the Portal-to-Portal Act. They authoritatively held that the Fair Labor Standards Act must be so construed that if its overtime provisions were incorporated into private contracts, those contracts had “a congenital infirmity”, for the parties to a contract so constituted could not “remove their transactions from the reach of dominant constitutional power”. Norman v. B. & O. R. Co.,
We find no reason for distinguishing this case from that one, and the other cases in accord with it. We hold the challenged section valid.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. “The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish.”
. “It is true that the effect of the act is ' to take away rights held by the courts to arise under a statute as they have interpreted it; but this is done, not by the exercise of judicial but of legislative power. * * * Tbis does not in any manner affect adjudications already made, nor does it attempt to direct the courts in the exercise of judicial power. All ' that it does is to define rights, i.e., to amend or limit the effect of a prior statute so as to take away a cause of action given by it.” Seese v. Bethlehem Steel Co., 4 Cir.,
. The other decisions, in accord, from nine circuits, are the following: Manosky v. Bethlehem-Hingham Shipyard, Inc., 1 cir.,
. “We believe that the overtime-on-overtime claims cannot be distinguished from the claims covered by the Portal-to-Portal Act. In both cases the claims arose under the Pair Labor Standards Act and would not have existed were it not for that law; in both cases, the claims arose by reason of the failure of Congress to define a basic term in that act — the ‘workweek’ in the portal-to-portal situation and ‘regular rate’ in this overtime-on-overtime situation; * * *.” Report No. 402, Senate, 81st Congress, 1st Session, accompanying H.R. 858.
. It was held in Lassiter v. Guy P. Atkinson Co., supra, that ordinarily whether the employer acted in good faith was a question of fact for the trial court.
. The Overtime-on-Overtime Act did not contain, as did the Portal-to-Portal Act, a recital of Congressional findings. That such findings may be evidenced by committee reports, as in this case, see Ever-ard’s Breweries v. Day,
