Hayden v. Bowen

Decision Date26 December 1968
Docket NumberNo. 25836.,25836.
Citation404 F.2d 682
PartiesFred G. HAYDEN, d/b/a Houston International Airport Limousine Service, Appellant, v. A. G. BOWEN et al., Appellees.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Robert L. Burns, Sears & Burns, Houston, Tex., for appellant.

George C. Dixie, Dixie, Wolf & Hall, by Chris Dixie, Houston, Tex., for appellees.

Charles Donahue, Sol., Bessie Margolin, Assoc. Sol., Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C., Robert E. Nagle, Helen W. Judd, Attys., U. S. Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C., Major J. Parmenter, Regional Atty., amici curiae.

Before GEWIN, PHILLIPS* and GOLDBERG, Circuit Judges.

GEWIN, Circuit Judge:

The appellees, former employees of Houston International Limousine Service, brought this action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas to recover unpaid minimum wages and overtime compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 as amended.1 The primary question presented is whether the appellees were engaged in "commerce" within the meaning of the Act. The district court answered this question in the affirmative and ruled against the limousine service on its subsidiary contentions. We affirm.

Houston International Airport, located within the city near its southern boundary, is approximately eleven miles from downtown Houston. During the period relevant to this suit transportation between the airport and points within the city was provided primarily by taxicabs, limousines, and private automobiles. With the exception of chartered buses on a few occasions, no public transit system served the airport. Houston International Limousine Service, owned by appellant Hayden, operated out of the airport under a franchise granted by the city of Houston, which owns and operates the airport. The franchise permitted Hayden to transport persons from the airport to hotels, offices, and apartment buildings within the city and from these points to the airport.2 The director of the city's department of aviation designated the specific pickup and delivery points.

The franchise required that Hayden provide air conditioned limousines around the clock in sufficient numbers to meet the demand for ground transportation resulting from scheduled incoming and outgoing flights, and that the service be so spaced that under normal conditions no more than one hour would elapse between the arrival of a scheduled aircraft and the arrival of its passengers at the designated points in the city, or between the departure of passengers from any designated point in the city and the departure of the aircraft. Additionally, the franchise directed that the limousines be used exclusively to provide public airport ground transportation services. Fares were also fixed by the franchise.

Section 3(b) of the Fair Labor Standards Act provides:

"Commerce" means trade, commerce, transportation, or communications among the several States or between any State and any place outside thereof.3

Whether an employee is engaged in commerce is determined by practical considerations, not by technical concepts. The test is whether the employee's work is so directly and vitally related to the functioning of an instrumentality or facility of interstate commerce as to be a part of it, rather than isolated local activity.4 It is established in this circuit that the Act is to be given a liberal interpretation.5

Hayden contends that the Supreme Court's holding in United States v. Yellow Cab Co.6 dictates the conclusion that the appellees were not engaged in commerce. In Yellow Cab the Court declared, after examination of the practical considerations involved, that taxicabs which carried passengers from their hotels, homes, and offices in Chicago to the railroad station, and conversely, were not an integral part of interstate commerce because their relation to interstate transit was too casual and incidental. An analysis of the facts which the Court considered in reaching its result makes it obvious, however, that Yellow Cab does not govern the fact situation presented by the case sub judice. The taxicabs in that case did not serve railroad passengers exclusively; quite the contrary, they were required to serve every person within the city. The cabs were under no contractual duties relating to rail movement. Railroad travelers had complete freedom to arrive at or leave the station by cab, trolley, bus, subway, elevated train, private automobile or various other means of conveyance. The present case is hardly analogous. Hayden's limousine service was an important means of ground transportation available to travelers. But of greater significance is the fact that air travel, predominately interstate, into and out of the Houston International Airport was the very lifeblood of the limousine service and, with few exceptions, the exclusive source of its patronage. The limousine service worked hand-in-glove with the airlines. Coordination of flight schedules with Hayden's operation was vitally important to both enterprises. Hayden's dispatchers would acquire from the airlines the number of passengers who needed transportation from their respective hotels to the airport and then dispatch the proper number of limousines to the hotels. And when a flight schedule was changed, notice of the change was sent to the limousine office. Thus it is clear that the Yellow Cab case is no authority for holding that Hayden's limousine operation was only casually or incidentally related to interstate transit. The essential nature of Hayden's business was the transportation of airline passengers to and from the Houston International Airport.7

Hayden places great reliance upon Mateo v. Auto Rental Co.,8 in which the Ninth Circuit held that employees of Auto Rental, who were engaged in transporting airline passengers between the Honolulu Airport and downtown districts, were not as a practical matter involved in interstate movement. There are, however, important dissimilarities between the facts in that case and the facts in the case before us. Auto Rental did not operate under the strictures of a franchise. The company determined its own pickup and delivery points, was under no obligation to coordinate its activities with flight schedules, and was free to use its limousines for purposes unrelated to airport transportation. And, unlike Hayden's operation, it was engaged in stiff competition with other "airporter" systems. Whether this court would have reached the Mateo result on these facts is a question we need not decide. But we have no difficulty in concluding that Mateo should not govern the result in the present case.

The facts in this case are not significantly different from those upon which the Fourth Circuit based its finding in Airlines Transp., Inc. v. Tobin9 that a limousine service operating out of the Raleigh-Durham Airport was engaged in commerce. Airline Transportation had contracted with three airlines to provide their passengers with ground transportation between the airport and downtown points designated by the airline companies. The limousines were to be used exclusively in this service. The municipalities of Raleigh and Durham fixed the fares to be charged. In addition to the limousines, commercial transportation to and from the airport was available by bus and taxicab. By their contracts, the airlines had much the same control over limousine operations as did the city of Houston by its franchise. We do not view the absence of comprehensive contractual ties between Hayden and the airlines as a basis for factually distinguishing the two cases because the terms of the franchise sufficiently obligate Hayden to provide the service which was the object of the airlines contracts in Tobin.

The result in Tobin and the conclusion which we reach in this case are supported by the Supreme Court's decision in United States v. Capital Transit Co.10 Residents of the District of Columbia who worked in government offices in Virginia daily boarded local buses near their homes which took them to a terminal within the District, where they changed to different buses which then took them on to Virginia. The Court held that the passengers' interstate journey to work actually began at the time they boarded the first bus near their homes and ended when they alighted from the bus at their place of employment in Virginia. The Court acknowledged that the interstate trip was broken at the terminal but concluded that, in the "commonly accepted sense of the transportation concept," the entire trip was interstate.11 Although this case is a pre-Yellow Cab decision, the Court has pointed out in a subsequent opinion that Yellow Cab does not conflict with the Capital Transit case.12

Hayden contends further that he was exempt from the requirements of the Act even if the appellees were engaged in commerce, because his limousine service was a local motor bus carrier and, therefore, exempt from the minimum wage and hour requirements.13 We agree with the Wage and Hour Administrator that

the indispensable characteristic of a local motor bus carrier is that it is a carrier which serves an integrated commercial or industrial area for the purposes of carrying persons to and from their work in offices and factories, children to and from school daily, and other persons attending to necessary routine business.14

This definition accords with the ordinary and commonly understood meaning of the term "local motor bus carrier." We think it manifest that Hayden's limousine service did not fall within the terms of the definition and, therefore, that it was not exempt from the minimum wage and hour provisions.15

Hayden argues, alternatively, that even if the appellees were covered by the Act, the tips which they received in the performance of their duties should be computed in determining their minimum wages. The Act...

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  • Bingham v. Airport Limousine Service
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Western District of Arkansas
    • July 1, 1970
    ...without mention of an accounting, that an agreement is necessary to consider tips in computing an employee's minimum wage. Hayden v. Bowen, (5 Cir. 1968) 404 F.2d 682, cert. den. 395 U.S. 933, 89 S.Ct. 1995, 23 L.Ed.2d The 1966 amendments to the Act make it clear that, as a matter of law, t......
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    ...arrangement, where gratuities in the form of tips are included in employee wages pursuant to an agreement between the parties); Hayden v. Bowen, 404 F.2d at 686 (inferring from Williams that tips should be excluded absent such an agreement). Furthermore, we conclude that the exclusion of po......
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    ...fee agreements were irrelevant to the district court's evaluation of the fee petition. Similarly, the Fifth Circuit in Hayden v. Bowen, 404 F.2d 682, 686 (5th Cir.1968), cert. denied, 395 U.S. 933, 89 S.Ct. 1995, 23 L.Ed.2d 448 (1969), held that an employer was without standing to challenge......
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    • October 4, 1979
    ...v. Wilson Building, Inc., 478 F.2d 1090 (5th Cir.), Cert. denied, 414 U.S. 855, 94 S.Ct. 156, 38 L.Ed.2d 105 (1973); Hayden v. Bowen, 404 F.2d 682 (5th Cir. 1968), Cert. denied, 395 U.S. 933, 89 S.Ct. 1995, 23 L.Ed.2d 448 (1969). No De minimis rule applies to the Act; any regular contact wi......
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