131 Lab.Cas. P 33,377,
3 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 357
Ragnar E. DANNESKJOLD, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Robert HAUSRATH, Individually and in his Capacity as Higher
Education Opportunity Programs Director and Coordinator of
programs of the HEOP Consortium of the Niagara Frontier
College; Thomas A. Coughlin III, Individually and in his
Cаpacity as Commissioner of the State of New York Department
of Correctional Services; Marion L. Borum, Individually and
in his Capacity as the Deputy Commissioner of Program
Services for the State of New York Department of
Correctional Services, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 95, Docket 95-2062.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Oct. 5, 1995.
Decided April 19, 1996.
Appeal from a grant of summary judgment by the District Court for the Western District of New York; David G. Larimer, Judge, dismissing a complaint by a prison inmate seeking unpaid minimum wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act for work performed as a clerk-tutor in a prison education program. Because we hold that the FLSA does not apply to prison inmates who provide services to the prison, we affirm.
James C. Gocker, Rochester, New York, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Daniel Smirlock, Assistant Attorney General, Albany, New York (Dennis C. Vacco, Attorney General, Peter H. Schiff, Deputy Attorney General, Wayne L. Benjamin, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel), for Defendants-Appellees Coughlin and Borum.
Dennis E. Ward, Williamsville, New York (Brenon & DiVita, Daniel J. Ward, of counsel), for Defendant-Appellee Hausrath.
Before: WINTER, JACOBS, and LEVAL, Circuit Judges.
WINTER, Circuit Judge:
Ragnar E. Danneskjold, an inmate at Attica state prison, appeals from Judge Larimer's grant of summary judgment for appellees, the Commissioner and the Deputy Commissioner of the New York State Department of Correctional Services and the Director of the Consortium of Niagara Frontier. Judge Larimer held that appellant's claim for unpaid minimum wages under the Fair Labor Standards Act ("FLSA" or "the Act"), 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-219, failed as a matter of law because Danneskjold was not an "employee" within the meaning of the statute. In reaching that conclusion, he applied the "economic reality" test set out in our decision in Carter v. Dutchess Community College,
We modify the test established in Carter.1 We hold that the FLSA does not apply to prison inmates in circumstances in which their labor provides services to the prison, whether or not the work is voluntary, whether it is performed inside or outside the prison, and whether or not a private contractor is involved. Because Danneskjold worked in an education program that provided rehabilitative services only to inmates, he was not an employee for purposes of the FLSA. We therefore affirm.
BACKGROUND
On appeal from a grant of summary judgment, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, in this case Danneskjold. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
Since 1975, the Consortium of thе Niagara Frontier (the "Consortium"), an association of Canisius College, Daemen College, and Niagara University, has offered inmates at Attica Correctional Facility an opportunity to earn college degrees by taking courses while serving their sentences. In addition to a professional teaching staff, the Consortium uses trained student inmates to assist in the administration of the program and to tutor other student inmates. In March 1987, Danneskjold respondеd to a notice posted by the Consortium seeking a clerk-tutor. After reviewing Danneskjold's application and interviewing him, Consortium personnel requested permission from the Department of Corrections inmate program committee to hire Danneskjold. The program committee approved the Consortium's request.
From March 16, 1987 until October 10, 1988, Danneskjold worked for the Consortium as a clerk-tutor. His duties included assisting and tutoring student inmates, assisting professors with academic and curricular matters, and correcting papers. For this work, the Department paid him between $.95 and $1.45 per day in accordance with the Department's inmate wage system.
On October 12, 1988, Danneskjold filed this suit, pro se, alleging that as a clerk-tutor he had been an "employee" of the Consortium and, as such, was entitled to receive the minimum wage for any and all hours worked. Based on our decision in Carter, the district court granted aрpellees' motion for summary judgment on the ground that Danneskjold and the Consortium were not in an employment relationship.
DISCUSSION
On appeal from a grant of summary judgment, we review the ruling de novo. Litton Indus., Inc. v. Lehman Bros. Kuhn Loeb Inc.,
The minimum wage provisions of the FLSA apply only to workers who are "employees" within the meaning of the Act. 29 U.S.C. § 206(a)(1). The Act defines "employee" as "any individual employed by an employer," id. § 203(e)(1), with certain exceptions not relevant to this case. An "employer" is one who acts "directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee." Id. § 203(d). The Supreme Court has held that these terms are to be applied in light of the "economic reality" of the relationship bеtween the parties. Goldberg v. Whitaker House Coop., Inc.,
In Carter,
In rеversing the district court, we rejected a per se rule that prisoners may never be considered employees for purposes of the FLSA. Id. at 13. We based that conclusion on three grounds. First, we reasoned that exempting an entire class of workers from the Act's coverage on account of their status could, in some instances, undermine one of the primary purposes of the FLSA: preventing unfair competition among employers if some were able to pay less than the minimum wage. Id. at 13; see also 29 U.S.C. § 202(a). Second, we noted that the statute does not include prison inmates in its specific exemptions from coverage. Carter,
Although we do not disturb Carter 's rejection of a rule that a prisoner's labor is at all times and in all circumstances exempt from thе FLSA, or discard use of an economic reality test to determine whether such labor is subject to the FLSA, we do reexamine and reject its use of the four-part Bonnette test to make that determination. We do so for three reasons.
First, Bonnette did not involve prison labor and is not well suited to determining the status of that labor under the FLSA. It involved the question of whether the state was the employer of persons, styled "chore workers," who provided statе-mandated in-home services to the aged, blind, and disabled. Bonnette held that the state was a joint employer of the chore workers, along with the recipients of their services. In the prison context, however, application of Bonnette leads to a radical result. Literally applied, the Bonnette factors would render all prison labor, including involuntary labor inside the penal institution, such as in a prison laundry, subject to minimum wage laws. No сourt has ever suggested, much less held, that the FLSA applies to such labor.
Second, because of a quirk of legal history, Carter was decided at a time (1984) when application of the FLSA to common state prison labor was barred by Supreme Court caselaw. In 1974,2 Congress extended the FLSA to cover state and municipal employees. However, in National League of Cities v. Usery,
Third, caselaw after Cartеr has been quite unkind to the use of the four-factor Bonnette test in determining the status of prison labor under the FLSA. In 1985, the Supreme Court overruled National League of Cities in Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth.,
Applying the four factors articulated in Bonnette, the district court held that, although the inmate-laborers were supervised exclusively by the owners of the construction company without interference from jail personnel, the sheriff made the decision as to whether or not an inmate was entitled to participate in the work release program and determined the rate of pay. Neither the sheriff nor thе construction company maintained any employment records on the inmates. In light of these facts, the district court held that the inmates were not employees under the Act and granted summary judgment for the defendants.
The Fifth Circuit reversed, holding that the fact that the sheriff maintained the power to "hire and fire" and set the daily wage was not dispositive. Examining the economic reality of the relationship in light of the policies underlying the FLSA, the Court held that the workers were being used for the economic advantage of the company. Id. at 1555. Furthermore, other construction contractors in the area could not compete on a level playing ground with a company facing minimal labor and overhead costs. Given these economic realities, the Fifth Circuit held that the inmates were "employees" of the company and were therefore entitled to the federal minimum wage. Id. at 1554-56.
Althоugh Watson cited Carter and set out the four-part Bonnette test, the decision actually applied an economic reality test at a higher level of generality than Bonnette. Instead of concentrating on details concerning power to hire, fire, supervise, and set wages (which in the case of prisoners always rests ultimately with prison officials) and the location of employment records (an almost irrelevant factor in this cоntext) the court looked to the underlying policies of the FLSA. It noted that the construction company got the benefit of labor in the private economy without paying FLSA wages. Id. at 1555. The labor provided services on the cheap that afforded the construction company a competitive advantage over similar employers who had to pay FLSA wages. Such competition, of course, tended to undermine compliance with the FLSA. The court was at pains, moreover, to note that labor was not part of the sentences of the prisoners in question. Id. at 1556.
Decisions subsequent to Watson have universally denied FLSA wages to prisoners, although the factual contexts of those decisions differ radically from that in Watson. The subsequent cases also have rather uniformly declined to use the four-part Bonnette test. For example, Vanskike v. Peters,
We agree with, and adopt, the reasoning of Vanskike that forced prison labor for the prison is not subject to the FLSA. The relationshiр is not one of employment; prisoners are taken out of the national economy; prison work is often designed to train and rehabilitate; prisoners' living standards are determined by what the prison provides; and most such labor does not compete with private employers. Id. at 810-11. Moreover, for reasons stated in Vanskike, Congress most certainly did not intend the FLSA to apply to forced prison labor. Id. at 810-12. Indeed, the continued existence of the Ashurst-Summers Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1761-62, which regulates the interstate transportation of prison-made goods to avoid competition between low-cost prison labor and free labor, reveals a congressional assumption that prison labor will not be paid at FLSA minimum wage levels.
Other circuits have similarly declined to apply the Bonnette four-point test in the context of prison labor. The Fourth Circuit has held that before a court may even consider whethеr the alleged employer exercises typical employer prerogatives, it must determine that the work performed by the inmate takes place outside the prison walls. Harker v. State Use Industries,
We believe that the caselaw described above has essentially read Bonnette, but not necessarily the economic reality test, out of the determination of whether a particular prisoner's labor is subject to the FLSA. We agree with those courts.
In our view, the Bonnette test is useful largely in cases involving claims of joint employment and has little relevance to the unique status of a prisoner and his or her relationship to the correctional institution. As noted, prisoners are not generally participants in the national economy. See Vanskike,
We also believe that so long as the labor produces goods or services for the use of the prison, voluntary labor by the prisoner--such as is involved in the instant matter--is also not subject to the FLSA. Voluntary work serves all of the penal functions of forced labor discussed above and, therefore, should not have a different legal status under the FLSA. Moreover, the performance of somе services for the prison may be enhanced by making the decision to work voluntary. Where the work is such that the quality of performance is difficult to measure and may depend on motivation, volunteers may be superior to involuntary workers. In the instant case, for example, tutoring of other inmates by prisoners who volunteer may be superior to tutoring by prisoners ordered to do so. In any event, the voluntary performance of labor that serves institutiоnal needs of the prison is not in economic reality an employment relationship. The prisoner is still a prisoner; the labor does not undermine FLSA wage structures; the opportunity is open only to prisoners; and the prison could order the labor if it chose. Indeed, to hold otherwise would lead to a perverse incentive on the part of prison officials to order the performance of labor instead of giving some choice to inmates.
Where a prisoner's work produces goods or services for the use of the prison, we also do not believe that the use of a private contractor as an intermediary subjects either the contractor or the institution to the FLSA unless the work undermines the FLSA in a particular labor market. For example, if a prison operated a laundry that served only inmates, clearly it might use prisoners to operate the laundry without pаying FLSA wages. We perceive no distinction of legal consequence between those circumstances and the provision of similar services to the prison by a private contractor using prison labor. Some tasks may be more efficiently handled by private contractors, but the legal status of prison labor under the FLSA should not be altered by the fact that the boss works under a contract with the corrections authorities instead of as a рrison employee. For the reasons stated above, we also believe that whether the labor is performed inside or outside the physical walls of the institution is irrelevant. If penal needs are better served by off-site labor, that fact does not alter the relationship for FLSA purposes.
We recognize, however, that our holding is limited to prison labor that produces goods or services for the use of the prison. We do not address the questions that arise when the prison labor is employed to produce goods or services that are sold in commerce. Compare Hale v. Arizona,
In sum, we continue to follow Carter in holding that prison labor is not in all circumstances exempt from the FLSA and that an economic reality test is to be used in determining whether payment of FLSA wages is required. We discard the four-factor Bonnette test as a surrogate for an economic reality test. We hold that prison labor thаt produces goods or services for institutional needs of the prison, whether voluntary or involuntary, inside or outside the institution, or in connection with a private employer, is not an employment relationship within the meaning of the FLSA. Where a prisoner's work for a private employer in the local or national economy would tend to undermine the FLSA wage scale, as in Watson, the FLSA applies. Intermediate cases will be resolved as they аrise.3
Danneskjold's work as a tutor for the consortium served only the institutional purpose of prisoner rehabilitation and in no way undermined FLSA wage scales. We therefore affirm.
Notes
We have circulated this opinion in draft to the judges of this court, and no active judge has sought an en banc hearing of this appeal. See Kramer v. Time Warner,
The relationship between prison labor and the FLSA was subject to only sporadic litigation prior to 1974. The only reported decisions in this area involved prisoners performing labor for private employers. Those decisions uniformly held that the work was not subject to the FLSA. See Hudgins v. Hart,
In Reimonenq v. Foti,
