Appellants brought this suit against their former employer, The First National Bank of Miami, Oklahoma, to recover unpaid overtime compensation, liquidated damages, and attorney’s fee, as provided by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, 52 Stat. 1060-1069, 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 201-219. The trial court held that the employees were not covered by the Act, entered judgment for the employer, and the employees have appealed.
The appellee bank owns and operates a six-story office building in Miami, Oklahoma. With the exception of a small lobby, the entire first floor is used by the appellee for the purpose of engaging in a national banking business. All space above the first floor is leased to various tenants and access to this part of the building is by use of said lobby, where appellee maintains and operates two electric elevators, which are used to convey the tenants and the public to and from the offices located on the upper floors. At various times during 1938, 1939, 1940, and 1941, the appellants were employed as elevator operators to work alternate work weeks of 42 and 46 hours, for which they were paid $5 per week.
The tenants, leasing space from appel-lee, during the years in question, were engaged in various businesses and professions, but those whose business activities related in any way to interstate commerce were: the executive and administrative offices of a mining and smelting company, engaged in operating lead and zinc mines in Oklahoma, Kansas, and Missouri, from which mines lead and zinc ore moved in interstate commerce; the executive offices of a railroad company, whose trains moved in interstate commerce; the offices of a company engaged in the sale of chat and crushed rock in Oklahoma and other states, small samples of which were occasionally mailed from this office interstate to prospective customers, but the majority of such samples were shipped direct from the company’s plant, located elsewhere; an attorney at law, who also owned a certain patented office device which he infrequently shipped interstate to purchasers from a supply retained in his law office, but the majority of such shipments were made from his residence; the office of an abstract company who prepared and delivered abstracts interstate; a sales office for the LaSalle Extension University, the educational courses of which were sold and conducted through interstate communications; the office of a salesman for the DuPont Company, which sold powder and other explosives interstate; a firm of brokers, who sold stocks and bonds throughout the country, and the private office of the bank’s inactive president. The space occupied by the foregoing tenants represented approximately 51 per cent, of the occupied space in the building and approximately 40 per cent, of all space. Some of the tenants in the building were depositors of the appellee bank, and they of course, used the elevators while going to and from the banking establishment, located on the first floor, for the purpose of transacting their banking business.
Our problem is to determine whether the appellants, as operators of the elevators in this building, were “engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce,” as those phrases are used in Sections 6 and 7 of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 206, 207.
There is no fixed formula by which the. courts can ascertain with exactitude whether the employee is “engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce,” but the decision in
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each case must turn upon the attendant facts. However, thus far the judicial process has developed certain fundamental precepts to guide us in the determination of coverage under these phrases. Namely, Congress did not intend to exercise the full scope of its commerce power, but plainly indicated its purpose to leave employment essentially local in character to state control.
1
Kirschbaum Co. v. Walling,
Specifically, we are urged to hold that these employees, as elevator operators, were engaged in the production of goods for commerce on the authority of Kirschbaum Co. v. Walling, supra. In that case the court held that elevator operators and other building employees were engaged in the production of goods for commerce, because the services which they performed were so closely and intimately associated with the actual production of goods for commerce as to be in reality a part of the process. There, concededly, the tenants occupying the building were actually engaged in the production of goods for interstate commerce, and the elevator operators in the building ran both the freight elevators which started and finished the interstate journeys of goods going from and coming to the tenants, and the passenger elevators which carried employees, customers, salesmen and visitors. In holding that elevator operators, under these facts, were engaged in the production of goods for commerce, the court said [
But the facts before us which bear upon the phrase “production of goods for commerce” are only remotely analogous to the facts in the Kirschbaum case. The executive and administrative offices of the mining and smelting company were located in the building serviced by the elevator operators, and this company was doubtless engaged in the production of goods for commerce, but it is not shown on this record whether any of the goods were produced in the building, or that any of the employees transported to and from the offices are directly or indirectly engaged in the production of the goods. The same is true of the chat and crushed rode company, and the abstract company, which produced abstracts, some of which were shipped in interstate commerce. In any event, the relationship is not shown to be “close and immediate.” Under these facts it cannot be said that the activities of the elevator operators were an essential part of, or necessary to, the production of goods for commerce.
It is, also, urged that the employees come within the coverage of the phrase “engaged in commerce,” chiefly because they are employees of a national bank, which they contend is engaged in com *703 merce, and for the reason that certain tenants, serviced by the elevators they operate, are “engaged in commerce.”
As an appropriate criterion for the interpretation of the phrase “engaged in commerce”, used in the Fair Labor Standards Act to measure coverage, the courts have adopted the judicial construction of the similar phrase “employed * * * in such commerce” used to measure coverage under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 35 Stat. 65, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51.
2
See Overstreet v. North Shore Corp.,
In Overstreet v. North Shore Corp., supra, the Supreme Court in measuring coverage under the phrase “engaged in commerce,” embraced what it deemed the “practical test,” announced in Pedersen v. Delaware, Lack. & West. R. R.,
In Overnight Motor v. Missel,
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The Shanks case, supra [
Whatever may have been the doubts and differences along the way, it now seems fairly plain that the phrase “engaged in commerce,” when used to measure coverage under the Fair Labor Standards Act, encompasses only employment actually in the “movement of commerce,” or activities so closely related thereto as to be practically a part of it. In other words, “engaged in commerce” means engaged in the interstate transportation or movement of commerce.
When coverage is measured by this test the inapplicability of the act to the employment here becomes manifestly plain. Conceding for the purposes of this case only, that at least a part of the activities of the bank constitute “movement of commerce” interstate,
6
it is not shown on this record what relationship, if any, these employees bear to the activities constituting the “movement of commerce.” Certainly they are not brought within the scope of the act by the showing that they transport the inactive president to and from his office, or other bank officers to and from his office on official business; or that the employees transported customers from their offices in the building to the banking establishment on the first floor. Cf. Stoilce v. First National Bank, supra, Rosenberg v. Semeria, 9 Cir.,
*705 We conclude that the employees were neither engaged in commerce or in the production of goods in commerce and are, therefore, not within the coverage of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
Section 13(a) (2), 29 U.S.C.A. § 213 (a) (2) provides: “The provisions of sections 206 and 207 * * * shall not apply with respect to * * * any employee engaged in any retail or service establishment the greater part of whose selling or servicing is in intrastate commerce; * * * .”
Prior to the amendment of August 11, 1939, 53 Stat. 1404, 45 U.S.O.A. § 51, the Federal Employers’ Liability Act provided: “Every common carrier by railroad while engaging in commerce between any of the several states * * * shall be liable in damages to any person suffering injury while he is employed by such carrier in such commerce % JjS Hi 9f
The Supreme Court, on authority of Overstreet v. North Shore Corp.,
See the dissenting opinion by Mr. Justice Murphy, who also wrote the opinion in Overstreet v. North Shore Corp.,
Both the McLeod and Smith cases involved coverage of cooks, who were employed to provide food and lodging for workmen engaged in the repair of railroad bridges used in interstate traffic. In each case the cook worked in a railroad camp car, situated on railroad tracks at or near where the workmen were engaged in the repair of the bridges. Four of the justices who dissented in the McLeod ease thought the Smith case was the proper test for coverage in the McLeod case.
Lorenzetti v. Amer. Trust Co., D.C.,
