Parth v. Pomona Valley Hosp., 2010 WL 5064380 (9th Cir. 2010)

The Fair Labor Standards Act required Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center (“PVHMC”) to pay its employees 1-1/2 times the employees’ regular rate for any employment in excess of eight hours in any workday and in excess of 80 hours in a 14-day period. However, many of PVHMC’s nurses preferred working 12-hour shifts in

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.

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.

Sullivan v. Oracle Corp., 557 F.3d 979 (9th Cir. 2009)

The Ninth Circuit has withdrawn its published opinion in this case and certified the following questions to the California Supreme Court: (1) Does the California Labor Code apply to overtime work performed in California for a California-based employer by out-of-state plaintiffs in the circumstances of this case, such that overtime pay is required for

Nigg v. United States Postal Serv., 555 F.3d 781 (2009)

Robert Nigg, a postal inspector currently employed by the United States Postal Service (“USPS”), and Keith Lewis, a retired postal inspector, sued the USPS alleging postal inspectors are entitled to overtime pay under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The district court granted summary judgment to the USPS after concluding that another federal statute

Larner v. Los Angeles Doctors Hosp. Associates, LP, 168 Cal. App. 4th 1291 (2008)

Josephine Larner, a nurse, sued her former employer, a hospital, for allegedly unpaid overtime. Larner brought the action on behalf of herself and all current and former nonexempt workers employed by defendants who failed to receive required premium overtime wages for the previous four years. The hospital successfully moved for

Sullivan v. Oracle Corp., 547 F.3d 1177 (9th Cir. 2008)

Three Oracle instructors (all non-residents of California) filed this class action to recover allegedly unpaid overtime under California law for work they performed while in California. Two of the instructors were residents of Colorado and one was a resident of Arizona; all of them worked in their home states and, from time to time,

Advanced-Tech Sec. Services, Inc. v. Superior Court, 163 Cal. App. 4th 700 (2008)

Ester Roman, who was employed as a security guard for Advanced-Tech, worked 12 hours on Labor Day 2006 and eight hours on Memorial Day 2007. Advanced-Tech’s employee handbook stated that employees who worked on designated holidays, including Labor Day and Memorial Day, would be paid 1.5 times their regular rate of