Wirtz v. Pepsi Cola Bottling Company of Augusta
Decision Date | 15 March 1965 |
Docket Number | No. 20627.,20627. |
Citation | 342 F.2d 820 |
Parties | W. Willard WIRTZ, Secretary of Labor, United States Department of Labor, Appellant, v. PEPSI COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF AUGUSTA, Inc., Appellee. |
Court | U.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit |
William Fauver, Atty., Bessie Margolin, Associate Sol., Jacob I. Karro, Deputy Associate Sol., Charles Donahue, Sol., Caruthers G. Berger, Atty., Dept. of Labor, Washington, D. C., Beverley R. Worrell, Regional Atty., for appellant.
E. D. Fulcher, Augusta, Ga., for appellee, Fulcher, Fulcher, Hagler & Harper, Augusta, Ga., of counsel.
Before TUTTLE, Chief Judge, MOORE* and BELL, Circuit Judges.
The question presented by this appeal is whether "route helpers" engaged wholly within the state of Georgia, were engaged in the "production of goods for commerce," within the meaning of Section 3(j) of the Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C.A., Supp. IV, § 201 et seq., because of their activity in picking up empty bottles for return to the Pepsi Cola Bottling Company of Augusta.
There is no dispute as to the facts. The employees concerned in the case accompany the driver-salesmen on their routes. They are engaged in the delivery of cases of bottled Pepsi Cola to defendant's customers within Georgia (concededly not a protected activity if this was all the employees did), and in collecting the used empty bottles for reuse in the subsequent bottling and delivery of Pepsi Cola to customers in both Georgia and South Carolina. About 46 per cent of the bottles thus picked up by the affected employees are, after being cleaned and refilled, distributed to points in South Carolina within a few days. The route helpers enter the customers' establishments, remove bottles of other brands from the wooden cases, or "flats", fill the flats with empty Pepsi Cola bottles, and load the flats on the truck. They then carry into the establishments flats filled with full bottles in the quantities specified by the driver-salesmen, and place them in the customers' establishments. After serving the last customer on the route, the truck returns with the empty bottles to the defendant's plant, where the empties are unloaded by other employees and "placed in the plant for use without any segregation as between Georgia and South Carolina routes."
It was stipulated by the parties that
It was also stipulated that
It is clear from the record here that 93 per cent of the bottled Pepsi Cola delivered to Georgia and South Carolina customers were delivered in used bottles, and, as indicated above, some 46 per cent of these were delivered in interstate commerce.
We think it clear that these employees are engaged in the "production of goods for commerce," when we view the definition of "goods" in Subsection (i) of Section 3 of the Act, and the definition of "produced".1
While we recognize that on substantially the same issues the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Clougherty v. James Vernor Company, 187 F.2d 288, and the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in Mitchell v. Hygrade Water & Soda Company, 285 F.2d 362, have arrived at a contrary result, we conclude that we must, with deference, differ from these decisions.
It is apparently conceded that the persons in the plant who wash the empty bottles, and thus prepare them for refilling, are covered employees. It is impossible to see why every other person whose activities include handling these bottles in a manner that is essential to their reuse within the immediate future are not in precisely the same relationship to the commerce involved as would be those who are engaged in servicing the bottles at the plant.
In light of the admitted facts, we conclude that the dissenting opinion by Judge Woodrough in Mitchell v. Hygrade Water & Soda Co., supra, clearly states the correct legal principle involved:
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