Connell v. Vermilya-Brown Co.

Decision Date28 November 1947
Docket NumberDocket 20717.,No. 51,51
Citation164 F.2d 924
PartiesCONNELL et al. v. VERMILYA-BROWN CO., Inc., et al.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Second Circuit

Sol L. Firstenberg, of New York City (Jacob Bromberg, of New York City, on the brief), for plaintiffs-appellants.

James Randall Creel, of New York City (Eidlitz, French, Fink & Markle, of New York City, on the brief), for defendants-appellees.

Before AUGUSTUS N. HAND, CLARK, and FRANK, Circuit Judges.

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

This appeal presents the interesting question whether or not the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 201 et seq., applies to work done on an Outlying Defense Base in Bermuda obtained by the United States under a 99-year lease and executive agreement with the British Government on March 27, 1941. Defendants were engaged in a joint venture for the construction of such a base, now known as Fort Bell and Kindley Field, under a contract with the United States made February 4, 1941. Plaintiffs are eleven former employees of defendants seeking the benefits of the Act. Decision has gone against them below on summary judgment, and they now appeal.

Plaintiffs were hired in New York and were employed by defendants at different times during the period from September, 1941, to the middle of 1943 in connection with the construction of this Defense Base. All of the work for which they seek overtime compensation was performed in Bermuda. Seven of them were employed as patrolmen and acted as policemen in the leased areas; the other four were employed as fire patrolmen and acted as firemen in the same areas. The affidavit of plaintiff David Joseph Townsend, supported by the affidavit of plaintiff John Joseph Connell, describes the character of the work in which all the plaintiffs were engaged. Townsend avers that a substantial part of their duties was to protect materials unloaded from ships docked in St. George and Hamilton, Bermuda. Included in such materials were crates that were never opened, but were reshipped to other places. He did not know their ultimate destination. Because of wartime conditions he was unaware of the places to which the materials were shipped.

The obligations defined by the Act are required of every employer for the benefit of each of his employees "who is engaged in commerce or in the production of goods for commerce," 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 206, 207, with certain exemptions not here pertinent stated in § 213. "Commerce" is defined to mean "trade, commerce, transportation, transmission, or communication among the several States or from any State to any place outside thereof"; while "`State' means any State of the United States or the District of Columbia or any Territory or possession of the United States." § 203(b) and (c). The district court ruled that none of the leased areas of Bermuda where the construction work of the defendants was being performed was a "Territory or possession of the United States" within the meaning of the Act. Our question is therefore as to the correctness of this ruling and specifically whether or not the leased area is a "possession" within the statutory meaning.

Initially we must ascertain the nature and extent of the transfer of interest made by the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to this country in the Agreement and Lease, as set forth in 55 Stat. Pt. 2, 1560-1594. The Lease itself refers to notes previously exchanged for the grant "of the lease of naval and air bases and facilities connected therewith, in certain localities," and then provides for the demise to the United States of America of "all that property described in the Schedule hereto and delineated on the plans annexed hereto" for a term of 99 years, with the "rights, powers and authority and on the terms and conditions" stated in the contemporaneous Agreement, which "shall be regarded as incorporated in and made part of this lease." 55 Stat. Pt. 2, 1577.

The Agreement is therefore the important document for our purposes. This provides initially as a "General Description of Rights": "The United States shall have all the rights, power and authority within the Leased Areas which are necessary for the establishment, use, operation and defence thereof, or appropriate for their control, and all the rights, power and authority within the limits of territorial waters and air spaces adjacent to, or in the vicinity of, the Leased Areas, which are necessary to provide access to and defence of the Leased Areas, or appropriate for control thereof." Art. I(1), 55 Stat. Pt. 2, 1560. It then continues with the enumeration of certain specific "rights, power and authority" included "inter alia," such as "(a) to construct (including dredging and filling), maintain, operate, use, occupy and control the said Bases," and "(d) to regulate and control within the Leased Areas all communications within, to and from the areas leased." 55 Stat. Pt. 2, 1561.

Other provisions also serve to show the nature of the grant. Thus the United States is given the "absolute right" to assume and exercise jurisdiction of all offenses within a leased area, by a British subject "apprehended therein," and by any other person, without restriction, with provision for surrender of offenders to the appropriate authority of the Territory if the United States so elects, Art. IV(1, 2), and for surrender of offenders to the United States authorities where they are within the Territory, but outside the leased areas, Art. VIII. The immigration laws of the territory adjacent to the bases do not apply to the leased areas, Art. XIII. United States postal facilities are to be established in the leased areas, Art. XVI. No person in the leased areas serving or employed there can be subject to income tax or poll tax of the territory adjacent to the bases, Art. XVII. The leased areas are to revert to the "Lessor" only when abandoned by the United States with "notice" of such abandonment, Art. XXI. And Art. XXIV, significantly entitled "Possession," provides: "On the signing of this Agreement, leases of the Leased Areas, substantially in the forms respectively set out in Annex II hereto, shall be forthwith executed, and all rights, power, authority and control under such leases and under this Agreement (including transfer of possession where it shall not previously have been transferred) shall thereupon become effective immediately, and pending execution of such Leases they may be exercised ad interim and possession of the Leased Areas shall be immediately given so far as the location thereof is then ascertained. Where the precise location of a portion of any Leased Area is not ascertainable until more detailed descriptions are available, possession of such portion shall be given as rapidly as possible." 55 Stat. Pt. 2, 1569.

The Agreement does not specifically declare the leased areas to be part of the territory of the United States. It does contain, however, the following interesting negative provision: "It is understood that a Leased Area is not a part of the territory of the United States for the purpose of coastwise shipping laws so as to exclude British vessels from trade between the United States and the Leased Areas." Art. XI(4), 55 Stat. Pt. 2, 1565.

The cumulative effect of these various provisions compels the conclusion that the areas are subject to fully as complete control by the United States as obtains in other areas long known as "possessions" of the United States. Thus, Title 48 of the United States Code Annotated entitled, "Territories and Insular Possessions," includes laws relating to such diverse areas as the Philippine Islands, § 1001 et seq. (compare usage in the Supreme Court, Hooven & A. Co. v. Evatt, 324 U.S. 652, 672-674, 678, 680, 65 S.Ct. 870, 89 L.Ed. 1252); the islands upon which guano is discovered, §§ 1411-1419; and Swains Island, Tutuila, Manua, and other Samoan islands, and Guam, §§ 1431, 1431a, 1432, 1433, with all the diverse governments and degrees of sovereignty involved in these instances. Except for the Philippines, now made independent, 48 U.S.C.A. § 1231 et seq., those possessions seem rather clearly included within the coverage of the Act; indeed, the General Counsel of the Division specifically includes Guam, Guano Islands, and Samoa along with Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, the Canal Zone, and the Virgin Islands as "territories and possessions" subject to the Act. Release No. 73, Office of the General Counsel, Wages and Hours Division.1 The Act would seem broadly enough phrased, in its purpose "to extend federal control in this field throughout the farthest reaches of the channels of interstate commerce," Walling v. Jacksonville Paper Co., 317 U.S. 564, 567, 63 S.Ct. 332, 335, 87 L.Ed. 460, to cover American workmen at Bermuda bases as fully as natives working in Samoa or Guam.2 Indeed, the coverage is, if anything, still broader; the statutory reference is to "possession" uncapitalized (unlike the reference to "Territory"), not even to "Insular Possessions," and may indeed be intended to be as broadly inclusive as the simple definition of Webster's Dictionary: "The thing possessed; that which anyone occupies, owns, or controls; in pl., property in the aggregate; wealth; dominion; as, foreign possessions." We need not so decide at this time; but we feel compelled to conclude that the intended coverage of the Act is sufficiently broad to include areas such as those here in question.

Defendants urge, and the district court agreed, that the question whether the areas are possessions is a political one, either already settled or to be settled only by executive or legislative determination. Undoubtedly courts should avoid the determination of political issues, but it is difficult to see how this is such an issue. Before us is a matter of interpretation of an Act in issue between two groups of private parties. Obviously this arises in consequence of political acts, and those conceivably might have been of...

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3 cases
  • Co v. Connell
    • United States
    • U.S. Supreme Court
    • December 6, 1948
    ...Act applied to the Bermuda base, reversed this judgment and remanded the case to the District Court for further proceedings on the merits. 164 F.2d 924. Our affirmance of this judgment approves that disposition of the On account of the obvious importance of the case from the standpoint of a......
  • Spelar v. United States
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Second Circuit
    • December 8, 1948
    ...between Great Britain and the United States, as set forth in 55 Stat.Pt. 2, 1560-1594, is discussed at some length in Connell v. Vermilya-Brown Co., 2 Cir., 164 F.2d 924, where we held that the Bermuda base transferred pursuant to this same agreement was a "possession" of the United States ......
  • Spelar v. United States
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Eastern District of New York
    • February 11, 1948
    ...to which plaintiff refers, was recently carefully considered and analyzed by Judge Clark in this circuit. Connell v. Vermilya-Brown Company, Inc., 2 Cir., 1947, 164 F.2d 924. The Connell case involved a claim under the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 201, by persons who had done con......

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