Rosas v. Corporation of the Catholic Archbishop627 F.3d 1288 (2010) (en banc)

Cesar Rosas and Jesus Alcazar were Catholic seminarians who sued the Corporation of the Catholic Archbishop for, among other things, failure to pay them overtime wages under Washington state law. Based on the ministerial exception, the district court dismissed the case on the pleadings. A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit

Wang v. Chinese Daily News, 623 F.3d 743 (2010)

Plaintiffs (reporters for the Chinese Daily News) alleged they were non-exempt employees entitled to overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and California state law. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the reporters, finding journalists are not subject to the creative professional exemption to the FLSA or California law. The

Morgan v. United Retail Inc., 186 Cal. App. 4th 1136 (2010)

Amber Morgan filed this class action lawsuit against her former employer under Cal. Lab. Code § 226, alleging United Retail had violated the law because the wage statements issued by the employer listed the total number of regular hours and overtime hours separately and did not provide the sum of the regular and overtime hours as a separate line item. During her deposition, Morgan testified she was injured by United Retail’s failure to include an additional line item showing the sum of hours worked because “[i]t makes it a little difficult to count how many hours I have been working.”

Faulkinbury v. Boyd & Assocs., Inc., 185 Cal. App. 4th 1363 (2010)

Plaintiffs sought to represent and certify a class of 4,000 current and former employees of Boyd & Associates, which provides security guard services throughout Southern California. Plaintiffs alleged that Boyd denied the putative class members off-duty meal periods and rest breaks and that it had failed to include certain reimbursements and an annual bonus payment in calculating the employees’ hourly rate of overtime pay.

Rosas v. The Corporation of the Catholic Archbishop of Seattle, 598 F.3d 668 (9th Cir. 2010)

Cesar Rosas and Jesus Alcazar were Catholic seminarians who sued the Corporation of the Catholic Archbishop for, among other things, failure to pay them overtime wages under Washington state law. Based on the ministerial exception, the district court dismissed the case on the pleadings. The Ninth Circuit affirmed,

Arenas v. El Torito Restaurants, Inc., 183 Cal. App. 4th 723 (2010)

The plaintiffs in this case are salaried managers at El Torito, El Torito Grill and Guadala Harry’s restaurants in California from May 2002 to the present. Plaintiffs alleged they were misclassified as employees exempt from overtime because they routinely spent more than half of their working hours performing duties delegated to non-exempt

Gomez v. Lincare, Inc., 173 Cal. App. 4th 508 (2009)

Lincare provides respiratory services and medical equipment setup to patients in their homes. Plaintiffs were Lincare service representatives who drove vans containing liquid and compressed oxygen (defined by the federal government as “hazardous materials”) and worked on call in the evenings and on weekends. Plaintiffs sought compensation for the on-call time they spent resolving

The U.S. Department of Labor’s (the “DOL”) Wage and Hour Division recently issued a Wage and Hour Opinion Letter, FLSA 2009-3, addressing how a company can compute overtime payments retroactively for salaried employees it had mistakenly classified as exempt (not overtime-eligible) under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA” or the “Act”). The DOL reiterated its support for the half-time methodology in calculating back overtime due, endorsing the so-called “fluctuating workweek” model on a retroactive basis for remedying the misclassification of salaried employees. This is a significant development and, in so deciding, the DOL has “weighed in” on an issue that remains a source of lively debate in the federal courts.

Generally, the FLSA requires that overtime pay be calculated weekly (notwithstanding that an employer’s payroll period might be semi-monthly or bi-weekly) and that employees receive one and one-half times their regular hourly rate of pay for each hour worked in excess of 40 hours in a workweek. Here, the employer paid a guaranteed salary bi-weekly and expected the employees to work a minimum of 50 hours per week. The employer’s payroll software even converted the bi-weekly salary to an hourly rate by dividing the salary by 100, without regard to whether the employees worked more or less than 100 hours in the payroll period. When the employer concluded that it had mistakenly classified certain salaried employees as exempt, it wished to pay them back overtime retroactively, using a half-time methodology, reasoning that the employees had already been compensated straight-time for each hour over 40 worked in the workweek.

The DOL agreed. Since the fixed salary covered all the hours the employees worked in a workweek, straighttime already was included in the salary covering the hours worked over 40 and, as a result, the employees needed only to be paid an additional one-half of their actual regular rate for each overtime hour. Important to the DOL’s decision was the fact that the fixed salary was paid to the employees even when they worked less than 100 hours in the bi-weekly payroll period.

The Opinion Letter is particularly noteworthy for its generous interpretation of the fluctuating workweek’s “clear mutual understanding” requirement which, heretofore, many had understood meant that there had to be a “clear and mutual understanding” at the outset of how salary and overtime would be calculated and paid for hours worked. According to this Opinion Letter, the “clear and mutual understanding” criterion does not need to be set forth in writing and intent can be inferred from the parties’ conduct that the fixed salary was compensation for all hours actually worked by the employee in a given week, rather than for a fixed number of hours per week – a stance that adopts the minority view among judicial decisions that have considered the issue.