1 Wage & Hour Cas. 2d 1057
Sam HENSON, Jr.; Stanley G. Batten; Kelvin W. Johnson;
James Henson; Clarence R. Bond; Steven M. Mates; Yvonne
Scott; Michael W. Martins; Thomas M. Bragg; Russell A.
Honda; Hubert Lee Howell; Scott Turner; Lester St John
Gauntt, Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT, Appellant.
James Lee MORGAN; David L. Alvis; Eric A. Bailey; Melvin
Barrow; Richard E. Davis, Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT, Appellant.
Steve FELKNER; Clifton Hinnant, Jr.; Delvin R. Jackson;
Theodore T. Lewis, III; Eugene C. Rouse, Jr.; Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT; Appellant.
Alvin J. SINGLETON; Robert S. Smith; Wendell P. Smith;
Len Wilson, Jr.; Anthony J. Cook; Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT; Appellant.
Carolyn E. MORTON; Willie Joe Brown; Louis Crook, Jr.;
Velma Lake; Emmett G. McCormack; Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT; Appellant.
Arples MARTIN; Lee A. Berry, Jr.; Alza Froehlich; Tressie
M. Gilbert; Farran Holdcraft; Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT; Appellant.
Edgar HOUSEHOLDER; David Jackson; Joseph G. Motton,
Jr.; Charlie Spease; James T. Pickens; Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT; Appellant.
Henry S. WOOD; Shan Gachot; Mark A. Semelka; Robert D.
Miller; Appellees,
v.
PULASKI COUNTY SHERIFF DEPARTMENT; Appellant.
John R. HOUSER; Charlotte Y. Allmon; Michael C. Bliss;
Joe Bradley; John D. Breckon; Phillip L. Canady; Phillip
L. Clark; Angela Cook; Joel A. Cooper; Jerry Dawson;
Harold Elliot; Oather Lee Fulmer; Jeff Glover; Robert G.
Griffin; David Harrell; Scott G. Hasselbach; Daniel J.
Horn; John L. Hudson; Kenneth L. Kincaide; Ralph McMoran;
Thomas R. Manning; Larry J. Mickel; Darrell B. Pierce;
Larry M. Rakoski; Roy T. Reynolds, Jr.; Laurie R.
Robinson; Charles Dale Stroud; Phillip L. Tackett, Jr.;
Eugene Tyree, Jr.; Mike J. Welsh; Clay Almond; Kim
Almond; James Bonner; David Goldstein; Jack Romine;
James C. Smith; Tina Blankenship Smith; David Burns;
Jeffrey E. Flowers; Thomas E. Latina; Bill Mallett;
Charisse Y. Randolph; William M. Arnold; Sam Morshedi;
Martina Flick; William P. Bryan; Michelle D. Bryant; Tony
A. Bryant; James L. Dancy; Dean Jarrett, Appellants,
v.
NORTH LITTLE ROCK POLICE DEPARTMENT, Appellee.
Nos. 92-3442, 92-3970.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted June 14, 1993.
Decided Sept. 30, 1993.
Larry Don Vaught, Little Rock, AR, argued for appellant in No. 92-3442. John R. Houser, argued for appellants in No. 92-3970.
Philip E. Kaplan, Little Rock, AR, argued for appellees in No. 92-3442. Timothy Davis Fox, North Little Rock, AR, argued for appellee in No. 92-3970.
Before WOLLMAN and LOKEN, Circuit Judges, and BOGUE,* Senior District Judge.
WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
This consolidated appeal presents the issue of the standard that is to be applied in determining the compensability of meal periods under the Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA" or the "Act"), 29 U.S.C. Sec. 201 et seq. We must then apply that standard in reviewing the appropriateness of the grant of summary judgment in favor of the employees in No. 92-3442, Henson v. Pulaski County Sheriff Department, and the grant of summary judgment in favor of the city in No. 92-3970, Houser v. North Little Rock Police Department.
I.
The FLSA, originally enacted in 1938, mandates that covered employees be paid at least a minimum wage and that they receive one and one-half times their regular pay for any overtime hours worked. The Act, however, does not define when an individual should be considered to be working for purposes of the Act. In a series of cases decided in the years following the enactment of the FLSA, the Supreme Court addressed the Act's definition of work. In Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad v. Muscoda Local No. 123, the Court defined work as "physical or mental exertion (whether burdensome or not) controlled or required by the employer and pursued necessarily and primarily for the benefit of the employer and his business."
Despite the Supreme Court's longstanding definition of work, the employees argue that this court should adopt a regulation issued in 1961 by the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor (the "Wage and Hour Division"). That regulation, now codified at 29 C.F.R. Sec. 785.19(a) (all private and some public employers) and 29 C.F.R. Sec. 553.223(b) (certain public employers), purports to apply specifically to meal periods. It states that bona fide meal periods are not worktime under the Act, but in order to qualify as a meal period an employee must be "completely relieved from duty for the purposes of eating regular meals." 29 C.F.R. Sec. 785.19(a); see also 29 C.F.R. Sec. 553.223(b) (public agency may exclude meal periods from hours worked, "provided that the employee is completely relieved from duty"). In essence, this standard means that employees who remain subject to call during their meal breaks must always be compensated for that time, because they continue to perform an "inactive" duty and are not completely relieved of duty. Indeed, that is how the magistrate judge applied the standard in granting summary judgment to the employees in the Henson case.
Moreover, the employees contend that we adopted the completely-relieved-of-duty standard in a 1975 case. Mumbower v. Callicott,
We conclude that the predominantly-for-the-benefit-of-the-employer standard provides the appropriate test for determining the compensability of meal periods under the FLSA. Established in the earliest Supreme Court cases interpreting the FLSA, this standard comports with the Supreme Court's admonition to use a practical, realistic approach under the unique circumstances of each case when deciding whether certain activities constitute compensable work. See, e.g.,Skidmore,
The predominantly-for-the-benefit-of-the-employer standard has also been adopted by a majority of the courts of appeals that have addressed the scope of "work" under the FLSA, whether in the context of meal periods or after hours on-call time. See, e.g.,Lamon v. City of Shawnee, Kan.,
We do not lightly reject the Wage and Hour Division's regulation. Although such regulations do not bind us, as it is the courts that ultimately interpret the FLSA, they do "constitute a body of experience and informed judgment to which courts and litigants may properly resort for guidance." Skidmore,
We conclude that the Wage and Hour Division's meal period compensability standard lacks persuasive force. The regulation is inconsistent with the Supreme Court's longstanding interpretation of the Act and would mandate the application of a rigid rule in the face of the Supreme Court's direction that courts take a practical approach based on the unique facts of each case. Moreover, we note that the Wage and Hour Division has not consistently followed the policy that employers must compensate employees for meal times if they are not completely relieved from duty. See, e.g.,Bouchard v. Regional Governing Bd.,
Additionally, we do not agree with the employees' argument that we adopted the completely-relieved-from-duty standard in Mumbower. The facts in Mumbower--a switchboard operator attempting to sneak bites of lunch between answering phone calls--clearly required under any standard that the switchboard operator be compensated for the time that the employer labelled as her lunch period. Indeed, in Mumbower, we characterized the operator's lunch hour activities as "extra work for the employer's benefit and with his tacit approval." A passing reference to the Wage and Hour Division's regulation in such a clear cut case hardly rises to the level of a binding adoption of such a rigid standard.
II.
We now turn to the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of the police department in appeal No. 92-3970, Houser v. North Little Rock Police Department. "In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we apply the same standard as that applied by the district court. We thus will affirm the lower court's grant of summary judgment if there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Meester v. IASD Health Servs. Corp.,
The district court,1 construing all disputed facts in favor of the employees, found that there were no material facts at issue and that the police department was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The court accepted as true the following facts. The plaintiff patrol officers are given a half-hour meal break during each shift. The officers must obtain clearance from headquarters before beginning their break, but the break begins only when the officers reach their break destination. Likewise, the officers are entitled to return to the station and change into civilian clothes on the department's time before their break begins. When on break, the officers are allowed to go wherever they please, even outside of their patrol area. Although the officers may be approached by the members of public at times and are required to monitor their radios and to respond in the case of an emergency, they have no other work-related duties. Most importantly, the officers may and do tend to personal errands.
We agree with the district court that under these facts the police department is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The only potential restrictions on the officers' use of their meal periods for their own purposes arise from the possibility that citizens might ask them questions and from the monitoring of their radios for emergency calls to return to service. We conclude that these restrictions could not support a finding that the patrol officers spend their meal breaks predominantly for the benefit of their employer. The officers have a full thirty minutes to use for their own purposes and in which to travel to any desired location, subject only to the possibility of being recalled in an emergency. Because the employees' evidence does not create a genuine issue of material fact, we affirm the summary judgment in favor of the police department.
III.
In appeal No. 92-3442, Henson v. Pulaski County Sheriff Department, the plaintiffs are sheriff's deputies assigned as correctional officers at the Pulaski County Jail. Sitting by consent of the parties, the magistrate judge found that the following facts concerning the deputies' meal periods were undisputed. First, the deputies must remain on the premises of the jail facility during their thirty-minute meal breaks. If they receive their supervisor's permission, they may go to their cars or across the street to a fast food restaurant to pick up an order to bring back to the jail grounds. During the meal break, the deputies are free to do "anything they wish" and are relieved of all of their regular duties, which include supervising and feeding the inmates and maintaining order. The deputies, however, must respond to any emergency calls that are issued over the jail's intercom. One of the deputies testified at his deposition that such emergency calls occur approximately once a week, although he was reluctant to make such a generalization.
Applying the Wage and Hour Division's completely-relieved-from-duty standard to these facts, the magistrate judge granted summary judgment in favor of the employees, finding that they are required to perform "active or inactive" duties while eating and that these duties restrict their personal freedom to such an extent that they are not completely relieved from duty.
When the predominantly-for-the-employer's-benefit standard is applied to the facts of this case, however, it is clear that the summary judgment for the deputies may not stand. Summary judgment for the deputies would be proper only if because of the "active or inactive" duties the deputies are required to perform while eating they spend their meal breaks predominantly for the benefit of the Department. Although the deputies must spend their meal breaks on the jail premises and an emergency interrupts approximately twenty percent of their breaks, we cannot say as a matter of law that because of these requirements the deputies spend their meal breaks predominantly for the benefit of the Department. SeeLamon v. City of Shawnee, Kan.,
Additionally, whether the employees lose meal break time when responding to an emergency is in dispute. Captain White stated at his deposition that the deputies do not lose any time from their meal periods if they must respond to an emergency. Deputy Henson's deposition, on the other hand, states that he has not always been allowed to complete meal periods interrupted by an emergency. If the deputies lose their meal periods by responding to an emergency, then they are unable to pursue their meal periods adequately or comfortably. Because of these factual disputes, we cannot determine "whether during the meal periods the [deputies are] primarily occupied by their relaxation and consumption of food or [are] performing substantial duties that [prevent] their comfort and enjoyment." Brinkman v. Dep't of Corrections,
The grant of summary judgment in favor of the police department in Houser v. North Little Rock Police Department is affirmed. The grant of summary judgment in favor of the employees in Henson v. Pulaski County Sheriff Department is reversed, and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
