Case Information
*1 Before GARWOOD, WIENER, and BENAVIDES, Circuit Judges.
GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:
Louis Thibault, Jr., (Thibault) brought suit against BellSouth Telecommunications (BellSouth), Directional Road Boring, Inc. (Directional), and Robert J. Parker, Robert W. Parker, and Parker Communications LLC (collectively Parker) arising out of electrical splicing work he performed in New Orleans, Louisiana in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Thibault claimed violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), under 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1), a Louisiana state-law breach of contract, and failure to pay wages under L A . R EV . S TAT . A NN . § 23:631. The trial court dismissed these claims on summary judgment. Thibault appeals the dismissal of the FLSA claim and the breach of contract claim. [1] We address two issues: first, whether Thibault may maintain a claim under the FLSA, and second, whether summary judgment is appropriate for his breach of contract claim. [2]
BACKGROUND
As a result of Hurricane Katrina, BellSouth’s telephone infrastructure suffered serious damage. BellSouth undertook the project of rewiring its entire New Orleans Area telecommunications grid. To complete this project, BellSouth employed “splicers.” A splicer installs, cuts, repairs, and tests various high voltage cables. Because of Katrina, BellSouth could not, by itself, restore phone services to the region. Accordingly, BellSouth contracted with Directional to provide assistance with their project. Directional also employed their own splicers. But even Directional’s additional splicers did not suffice. Directional therefore contracted with Parker to provide additional splicers for the project.
Parker contacted Bill Peek, a splicer in Delaware. Parker informed Peek that the job would require about eighty-four hours of work per week at an hourly rate of sixty-eight dollars and a fifty dollar per-diem. He also informed him that splicers would have to provide their own bucket trucks and tools to do the work. Mr. Peek was interested, and told his best friend, Lewis Thibault, of the job opportunity. Mr. Thibault was not a splicer by profession, but had experience as a navy jet engine mechanic. He owned and operated his own business in Delaware called K & L Sales, Inc. His business sold picnic tables, storage buildings, and golf carts. In 2005, his business made over $500,000 in gross profit. Despite his success, Thibault decided to accept Peek’s invitation to travel to New Orleans as it would provide a much needed break for him from his marital problems and he felt New Orleans would be an opportunity to “get [his] head clear.” Through Peek, Thibault was able to borrow a spare truck and various tools that the job required. Peek also taught Thibault the basics of splicing over the course of an evening; Thibault was able to learn the rest on the job.
In October, Thibault filled his trailer home with water and food, and the two men drove to Louisiana. From October 4, 2005 to January 6, 2006, Thibault worked as a splicer. In that time, Thibault made $51,628. Everyday, Thibault was required to report to Kenner Yard, a property rented by BellSouth. At the first meeting, Thibault claims that a Parker supervisor informed them that they would be paid sixty-eight dollars an hour, would work at least eighty-four hours a week and would get a per diem and a place to park his motor home. Every day, Thibault showed up to Kenner Yard, and was assigned a specific splicing job in New Orleans. BellSouth engineers created the overall rewiring plan for New Orleans. BellSouth supervisors designated the specific jobs to be done daily, and assigned Directional supervisors to distribute the assignments. When Thibault received his assignment, he was then required to take his truck to the job and work on the problem he was assigned. When completed, Thibault would return to Kenner Yard and would be assigned another splicing job. He worked in thirteen-day intervals with a one-day break in between. While Parker paid Thibault, BellSouth had to approve all vacation and break time. On January 6, Parker laid off Thibault. Directional offered Thibault a job as a splicer, working directly for Directional, but Thibault declined. Instead, he returned to Delaware, and has not worked as a splicer since. Thibault brought this suit against Parker, Directional, and BellSouth for overtime pay under the FLSA, breach of contract, and Louisiana wage law statutes.
ANALYSIS
I. Fair Labor Standards Act
Thibault contends that he is entitled to overtime compensation for hours
worked in excess of forty hours per week pursuant to the 29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1).
The FLSA gives employees
[3]
certain protections from employers. The defendants
contend that Thibault is not an employee, but an independent contractor. We
review Thibault’s status
de novo
.
Carrell v. Sunland Constr., Inc.
,
Here, we believe the holding of Carrell provides substantial guidance. In , this Court faced the issue of whether twenty welders were employees under the FLSA for purposes of overtime compensation. Id. The Carrell court went through each of the five factors, and decided overall that the welders were independent contractors. Id. at 334.
A. The Permanency of the Relationship
First, Carrell addressed the permanency of the relationship: “During each of the years relevant to this lawsuit, none of the Welders worked exclusively for Sunland. To work consistently throughout the construction season, which lasts six to nine months, the Welders moved from job to job, company to company, and state to state. Sunland hired the Welders on a project-by-project basis, but made an effort to move the Welders to subsequent projects. The duration of Sunland's construction projects averaged six weeks, but some projects lasted only a few days. The average number of weeks that each Welder worked per year for Sunland varied from approximately 3 weeks to 16 weeks.” at 332. Like the welders, Thibault did not work exclusively for the
defendants. He had his own business selling picnic tables, storage buildings, and customized golf carts, in his home state of Delaware. The nature of splicer work requires travel to different parts of the nation where the jobs are. Splicers travel from job-to-job and from state-to-state looking for work. Thibault and Peek traveled from Delaware to work in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The project lasted only until the re-wiring project after Katrina finished. Thibault intended to return to Delaware after seven or eight months.
B. Degree of Control
Second, the Carrell court addressed the degree of control exercised by the employer:
“While working for Sunland, the Welders performed only pipe-welding work. Sunland assigned the Welders to specific welding work and maintained daily time records for each Welder. Sunland, however, did not specify the amount of time that a Welder could spend on an assignment. Sunland required the Welders to work the same days and hours as the remainder of Sunland's crew, including taking the same daily break periods.” at 333. The court also relied on the fact that Sunland classified the welders
as independent contractors, and many of the welders considered themselves self-
employed. Here, the defendants considered the splicers independent contractors.
Many of the splicers considered themselves self-employed. The
Carrell
welders
did only welding, and similarly here Thibault only performed splicing work. The
defendants assigned the splicers to specific splicing work and maintained daily
time records for each splicer. BellSouth required the splicers to work the same
days and hours as the remainder of the BellSouth crew, including taking the
same daily break periods. In
Carrell
, Sunland did not control the manner and
method of pipe welding. ,
C. Skill & Initiative
Third, Carrell examined the skill an initiative required: “Pipe welding, unlike other types of welding, requires specialized skills. That the gas companies tested and certified each Welder before a job demonstrates the specialized nature of the work. As for the initiative required, a Welder's success depended on his ability to find consistent work by moving from job to job and from company to company. But once on a job, a Welder's initiative was limited to decisions regarding his welding equipment and the details of his welding work.” at 333. Thibault argues that he has never worked as a splicer before.
Thibault, however, was a jet engine mechanic in the navy. In fact, he described his abilities: “I aced the mechanical aptitude test in the Navy. You show me how to do something one time and I can do it.” Thibault learned the job from his friend Peek, but also learned how to splice on the job, working next to Peek and other splicers. Thibault explained that splicing dealt with complicated equipment:
“I mean, you’re talking – you’re talking phone cables this big around coming into a cross box, and there might be six of them in there. And each wire has 3,200 pairs in it, which is 7,400 wires. And its all going to these terminals. And you had to make sure they were going in at the right terminal and coming out at the right terminal.” Like Thibault, individuals learn to splice through an informal apprenticeship. A fellow splicer testified that it took him about a year to learn the job. Like the welders in Carrell , the splicers’ success depended on their ability to find consistent work by moving from job-to-job.
D. Relative Investements
The fourth factor the
Carrell
court examined was the relative investments
of the worker and the alleged employer. ,
Like the welders in
Carrell
, Thibault provided his own bucket truck, cable
splicer, pump, ventilator, ladder, climbing belt, harness, hard hat, safety vest and
other miscellaneous tools (such as wrenches, hammers, screwdrivers and other
items one would usually find in a toolbox). In fact, the record contains a list of
over 100 different tools splicers were expected to have for the job. Thibault had
his own motor home, which he brought to Louisiana to live in. He stocked it with
enough water and food to last him at least six weeks. He drove two days to get
to New Orleans. We also “recognize[]” the overall investment by the defendants.
,
E. Worker’s Opportunity for Profit & Loss Fifth and finally, the Carrell court examined the degree to which the worker’s opportunity for profit and loss is determined by the alleged employer:
“Sunland did not solicit bids or proposals from the Welders. It paid the Welders a fixed hourly rate of $23, plus $10 per day for rental of their grinders. Sunland intended approximately 40% of the $23 hourly rate to compensate the Welders for supplying their own welding equipment. Sunland required the Welders to submit invoices for work performed on Sunland projects. On appeal, the Welders stress that Sunland exclusively controlled the Welders' compensation while they worked on a Sunland project: Sunland rarely deviated from its hourly rate, and it controlled the number of hours that the Welders worked. . . .
[A] Welder's year-end profits or losses as a welder depended on his ability to consistently find welding work with other companies and to minimize welding costs.
. . . .
Sunland exerted some control over the Welders' opportunity for
profits by fixing the hourly rate and the hours of work. Yet, the tax
returns of Carrell indicate that the Welders' profits also depended on
their ability to control their own costs. Moreover, the Welders
worked for numerous companies in each of the years relevant to this
dispute.”
,
hour, plus $50 per day per diem. The defendants required the splicers to fill out time sheets and invoices of the work performed. Like the Carrell welders, the splicers’ year-end profits or losses depend on their ability to consistently find splicing work with other companies. Thibault’s friend, Bill Peek testified that, even though he lived in Delaware, splicing requires travel from job-to-job across the country. The splicers here increased profits by controlling costs (repairs, supply costs, food, water, housing, etc.).
F. Other Factors
The determination of whether an individual is an employee or independent
contractor is highly dependent on the particular situation presented.
Carrell
, 998
F.2d at 334. We do not hold that
all
splicers are always independent contractors.
Indeed, the nature of this analysis suggests that in some cases splicers might be
employees.
E.g.
,
Cromwell v. Driftwood Elec. Contractors, Inc.
, No. 09-60212,
The circumstances of Thibault’s employment reflect that he is not economically dependant on the defendants. Unlike Cromwell , evidence shows that Thibault is a sophisticated, intelligent business man who entered into a contractual relationship to perform a specific job for the defendants. Thibault worked for three months and his relationship to the defendants centered solely around the specific project. After splicing in New Orleans, Thibault returned to his company in Delaware and has not worked as a splicer since. For “tax reasons,” Thibault had Parker make all payments directly to his company, K & L Sales, Inc. In 2005, K & L Sales generated $500,503 in profit and $2,492,997 in gross sales. [4] When he worked as a splicer, he also oversaw K & L Sales operations and its multiple employees. As the owner of K & L Sales, Thibault routinely contracted with product manufacturers, customers, and transporters. He owned eight drag-race cars and also generated $1,478 in income from racing professionally. In 2005 and 2006, he also owned and managed commercial rental property that generated some income. [5]
Because we hold that the summary judgment record does not contain sufficient evidence to support a finding that Thibault was an FLSA employee while performing splicer services, we affirm the judgment dismissing the FLSA claims. [6]
II. Breach of Contract
Thibault also appeals the dismissal of his Louisiana law breach of contract
claim. Specifically, he argues the defendants promised him six months of
employment and breached that agreement when they fired him after three
months of work.
[7]
The district court held that the plaintiff did not produce any
summary judgment evidence that Thibault was hired for a fixed term. Under
Louisiana law, “[a]bsent a specific contract or agreement establishing a fixed
term of employment, an employer is at liberty to dismiss an employee at any time
for any reason without incurring liability for the discharge.”
Chapman v. Ebeling
,
“No single foreseeable event triggered the end of his job. . . . The time when his services would no longer be needed depended on a number of factors and, ultimately, on the judgment of his supervisor. Such a flexible relationship, promising employment until one's services are no longer needed, does not establish a fixed term, and, therefore, in Louisiana at least, must be regarded as employment at will.” at 220. Thibault did not produce sufficient summary judgment evidence to sustain a finding of an agreement to a fixed term. The evidence that Thibault points to does not specifically relate to any relationship or agreement between one of the defendants and himself for a term of six months: (1) BellSouth’s leasing of Kenner Yard for a two year term; (2) BellSouth’s agreement requiring Directional to supply splicers for a period of at least one year; and (3) Parker’s subcontract requiring Parker to supply splicers to Directional for at least one year. These actions are consistent with having no agreement with any specific splicer. They certainly do not even imply a contract with any specific splicer for a term of six months. Next, Thibault argues that an email from the Directional vice president that says splicer pay would remain the same for about 120 to 150 days (four to five months) suggests a six month contract. This does not get Thibault to the six month contract he seeks. An employer is free to ensure a group of employees that their rate of pay would not decrease without committing itself to a contractual relationship with each specific employee for a completely unrelated fixed term.
Thibault also points us to the length of other splicer’s employment: (1) Chris Floyd’s employment lasted two years; and (2) Bill Peek’s testimony that there would be at least six months of work. First, Floyd was an actual employee of BellSouth who managed the construction project, not a splicer like Thibault. Floyd’s agreement does not speak to any agreement between Thibault and any defendant. Second, Peek was questioned about the length of the work:
“Q. And what did you talk – what did – what was talked about during this meeting with [the Directional supervisor] about the length of the job?
A. Well, he said we had at least six months, and it was probably a
whole lot longer than that, but it would depend on our job quality
and – you know, just a pep talk to make everybody do good jobs if you
wanted to stay longer than six months, or whatever.”
Peek’s testimony does not show any objectively determinable end to the term of
employment.
See Overman
,
Our review of the record does not demonstrate any evidence of the existence of a fixed term either. Bill Peek handled all the communication with Parker before arriving in New Orleans. Once in Louisiana, Thibault testified that Dan Keener, a supervisor for Parker, and others, promised him that the work would last “at least six months” guaranteed, but that the work would “probably” take up to two years. Later in Thibault’s deposition, this exchange occurred:
“Q. All right. You talked earlier about a guarantee of six months of employment. Did anyone from Directional or BellSouth ever guarantee to you six months of employment?
. . .
A. The question that I have is ‘guaranteed.’ We were told . . . we were probably going to be there for two years. Did he guarantee it? No. ‘Chances are we’re going to be here for a long time, fellows. I mean, look at it.’
Q. That’s what he said?
A. Yeah, I mean, look at it. They’re still out there working. Q. All right. So it’s true no one from BellSouth guaranteed you six months of employment; right?
A. Correct.
. . .
A. ‘Guarantee’ is the key word in that question.
Q. Well, did anyone from BellSouth promise you six months of work? A. BellSouth and Directional said that we were going to be here for a long time.”
Thibault’s testimony has the same problems that Peek’s testimony had in establishing a fixed term of employment. Thibault himself had a problem with the word “guarantee,” and could not testify that the defendants guaranteed anything. According to Thibault, he was told about the length of the project, not a specific promise or guarantee about the length of time he would be employed. On this record, we do not find sufficient summary judgment evidence to sustain a finding of a fixed term of employment for six months.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the trial court because, first, Thibault was not covered by the FLSA because there is no summary judgment evidence sufficient to sustain a finding that he was an employee under the act and, second, there is no summary judgment evidence sufficient to sustain a finding that Thibault had a contract for a fixed term.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
[1] BellSouth and Directional filed cross claims against Parker arising out of Parker’s
duty to defend and indemnify. Parker filed a cross claim against Directional claiming
Directional breached its contract with Parker by failing to pay the correct amount for splicers.
The trial court resolved BellSouth and Directional’s claims against Parker. At the time of this
appeal, however, the trial court had not resolved Parker’s cross claims against Directional. At
the request of all parties, the district court entered an order under F ED . R. C IV . P. 54(b)
certifying as final judgments
nunc pro tunc
the judgment entered against Thibault. That order
allows us to retain our jurisdiction over the case.
See St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co. v. Fair
Grounds Corp.
,
[2] Thibault has not briefed or appealed the summary judgment on his claim under Louisiana wage law statutes. Therefore, we do not address that claim and the judgment as to it is affirmed.
[3] The FLSA defines “employee” to mean “any individual employed by an employer.” 29 U.S.C. § 203(e)(1). “‘Employ’ includes to suffer or permit to work” § 203(g).
[4] An individual’s wealth is not a solely dispositive factor in the economic dependence question. In 2005, Thibault reported an adjusted gross income of $82,951. His 1099 from Parker reported $45,584 in non-employee compensation.
[5] The plaintiff primarily relies upon
Hopkins v. Cornerstone Am.
to argue that he was
economically dependant on the defendents. The employer in
Hopkins
, however, has
significantly more economic control over its employees than defendants in the instant case had
over Thibault or the other similar splicers here. For example, the sales leaders in
Hopkins
worked for the employer for years and were not allowed to work for other companies or
themselves.
Id.
,
[6] Because Thibault was not an employee, we need not address Thibault’s contention that the defendants were joint employers under the FLSA.
[7] In the trial court, Thibault also brought a breach of contract claim based on a promise that Parker would provide him a paid location to keep his motor home. Since Thibault does not present this as an issue on appeal and does not brief it, we do not address it and hold any such claim has been waived by him.
