F I L E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
PUBLISH
JUL 15 1999
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
PATRICK FISHER
Clerk
TENTH CIRCUIT
PAUL C. CHESSIN; CHRISTOPHER
T. FORMAN; MICHAEL P. GALVIN;
CARLA D. HANSON; DANIEL C.
HASKIN; LEE R. STRAND; KARIN Nos. 98-1181, 98-1183
E. UEHLING, and other persons
similarly situated,
Plaintiffs-Appellants and Cross-
Appellees,
vs.
KEYSTONE RESORT
MANAGEMENT, INC., a Colorado
corporation,
Defendant-Appellee and Cross-
Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO
(D.C. No. 94-D-179)
David Lichtenstein, Denver, Colorado, for the Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-
Appellees.
Susan Strebel Sperber (Michael D. Nosler and Samuel M. Ventola with her on the
briefs) of Rothgerber, Johnson, & Lyons, Denver, Colorado, for the Defendant-
Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
Before BALDOCK, KELLY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
KELLY, Circuit Judge.
This interlocutory appeal arises from an employment suit by ski patrollers
against their employer Keystone Resorts Management, Inc. (“KRMI”). Plaintiffs
seek to recover overtime pay at one-and-a-half times the rate at which they were
regularly employed, liquidated damages, reasonable attorney fees, and costs. The
district court denied Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment under the
Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), 29 U.S.C. §§ 201-219, holding that
Keystone Ski Area (“Keystone”) and Arapahoe Basin Ski Area (“Arapahoe
Basin”) each constitute an amusement or recreational establishment within the
meaning of 29 U.S.C. § 213(b)(29), one of several exemptions to the general
overtime rule, 29 U.S.C. § 207(a). At all relevant times, KRMI owned and
operated Keystone and Arapahoe Basin.
Plaintiffs appeal the district court’s ruling that (1) Defendant KRMI
operated a recreational establishment; (2) Arapahoe Basin is separate from
Keystone for § 213(b)(29) purposes; and (3) applicability of the exemption
should be determined on a plaintiff-by-plaintiff and workweek-by-workweek
basis. KRMI cross-appeals the court’s determination that it may not
retrospectively benefit from the exemption. Our jurisdiction arises under 28
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U.S.C. §1292(a), and we affirm.
Background
The seven named Plaintiffs and twenty-nine additional Plaintiffs who filed
written consents under 29 U.S.C. § 216(b) (requiring written consent for
employee to be named as party plaintiff in suit under the FLSA) worked as ski
patrollers at Keystone or Arapahoe Basin and were employed by KRMI. KRMI
operated an all-season resort in Colorado that included lodging, retail stores,
restaurants, a convention center, and real estate sales and development, in
addition to skiing. 1 These facilities were located on or near National Forest
System lands. Plaintiffs’ duties as ski patrollers encompassed snow and terrain
management, search and rescue, public relations and customer service. In
addition to performing tasks on the ski mountains, patrollers rode shuttle buses
serving the ski and hospitality areas and provided information to resort guests on
the buses.
Plaintiffs sought partial summary judgment, contending that § 213(b)(29)
did not apply to KRMI, or any portion of KRMI, because it was not a recreational
establishment. KRMI then filed its own motion for summary judgment, claiming
1
After this case arose, KRMI was acquired by Vail Associates and is now
known as Vail Summer Resorts, Inc.
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that Plaintiffs were not entitled to overtime compensation because they came
under the § 213(b)(29) exemption. In denying the Plaintiffs’ motion, the district
court held that Keystone and Arapahoe Basin constitute separate amusement or
recreational establishments within the meaning of § 213(b)(29). Section
213(b)(29) states that
The provisions of . . . section 207 . . . shall not apply with respect to
– any employee of an amusement or recreational establishment
located in a national park or on land in the National Wildlife Refuge
System if such employee (A) is an employee of a private entity
engaged in providing services or facilities in a national park or
national forest, or on land in the National Wildlife Refuge System,
under a contract with the Secretary of the Interior or the Secretary of
Agriculture, and (B) receives compensation for employment in
excess of fifty-six hours in any workweek at a rate not less than one
and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed [.]
Id. (emphasis added).
The court found a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Plaintiffs
worked any weeks longer than fifty-six hours but held that, “[i]f . . . Plaintiffs
present evidence at trial that they worked in excess of 56 hours and were not
compensated, Defendant is not entitled to the exemption claimed in §
213(b)(29).” Aplt. App. at 521.
KRMI subsequently asked the district court to reconsider its holding that
the § 213(b)(29) exemption would not apply if Plaintiffs could prove that they
worked in excess of fifty-six hours without overtime compensation. KRMI also
asked the court to clarify how the exemption would be applied. The court denied
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reconsideration, explaining that each Plaintiff would be compensated at a time-
and-a-half rate for work in excess of forty hours in any week for which he
worked more than fifty-six hours without overtime pay. It also concluded that
“each work week must be analyzed separately” to determine the applicability of §
213(b)(29), and “each Plaintiff will bear the burden of proving at trial that he/she
worked in excess of 56 hours in a work week and did not receive overtime pay
for those hours.” Aplt. App. at 584. The parties then requested, and were
granted, leave to bring an interlocutory appeal from the district court’s ruling on
the FLSA claim.
The parties do not dispute that (1) prior to October 1993, KRMI paid
Plaintiffs a salary and did not provide overtime compensation, and (2) Plaintiffs
worked overtime hours. However, the number of weeks in excess of fifty-six
hours (if any) that each Plaintiff worked remains in dispute.
Discussion
The denial of summary judgment is reviewed de novo on an interlocutory
appeal. See, e.g., Evanston Ins. Co. v. Stonewall Surplus Ins. Co., 111 F.3d 852,
857-58 (11th Cir. 1997). We apply the same standard as the district court, and
summary judgment is appropriate only if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to
interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show
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that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c); see Butler v
Prairie Village, Kansas, 172 F.3d 736, 745 (10th Cir. 1999). In reviewing a
denial of summary judgment, “we examine the factual record and reasonable
inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary
judgment.” Butler, 172 F.3d at 745 (quoting Kaul v. Stephan, 83 F.3d 1208,
1212 (10th Cir. 1996)).
In a case involving the FLSA, an employer bears the burden of proving
both the nature of the “establishment” it operates and the applicability of an
FLSA exemption; we must construe the exemption narrowly against the
employer. See Arnold v. Ben Kanowsky, Inc., 361 U.S. 388, 392, 394 n.11
(1960).
I. Separate Establishments
Plaintiffs argue that the district court failed to identify the correct
establishment in assessing the applicability of the § 213(b)(29) exemption. The
court concluded that Keystone’s ski area and non-skiing operations constitute a
single establishment but that Arapahoe Basin is separate from Keystone.
Plaintiffs challenge the ruling that Keystone and Arapahoe Basin are separate
establishments. In their view, KRMI’s “operations, marketing, and strategic
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plan,” combined with “[t]he close proximity of Arapahoe Basin to Keystone’s
lodging facilities, and brevity of the shuttle bus ride between them” show that
Arapahoe Basin and Keystone comprised a single establishment during the
relevant time period. Aplt. Br. at 30.
In focusing on administrative and economic integration, Plaintiffs
misconstrue the meaning of “establishment” under the FLSA. Both the Supreme
Court and the Tenth Circuit have held that “Congress used the word
‘establishment’ to mean a distinct physical place of business rather than an
integrated business enterprise.” Brennan v. Yellowstone Park Lines, Inc., 478
F.2d 285, 289 (10th Cir. 1973) (citing Phillips, Inc., v. Walling, 324 U.S. 490
(1945)). In Yellowstone Park Lines, we reasoned that, because of the physical
distance between restaurants, hotels, and other types of lodging and services
within Yellowstone Park, such businesses could not be “considered as one
integrated unit subject to exemption under [29 U.S.C. § 213(a)(3)],” the
provision governing seasonal recreational establishments. See id. at 290. The
various establishments were “separate,” even though central management made
policy for all of them and at least two classes of employees served more than one
establishment. See id. at 288-89; see also 29 C.F.R. 779.23 (1998) (the word
“establishment,” as it appears in § 213(b), means “a ‘distinct physical place of
business’ rather than . . . ‘an entire business or enterprise’ which may include
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several separate places of business”).
The case law in at least one other circuit also supports the district court’s
ruling on the “separate establishment” issue. In Mitchell v. Birkett, 286 F.2d
474, 477-78 (8th Cir. 1961), two photography shops located nine miles apart
were deemed separate establishments under the FLSA. The Eighth Circuit stated:
Common ownership and close functional and economic relationship
between physically separated units of a business are not sufficient to
make such combined units a single establishment, particularly where,
as here, the geographic separation is substantial.
Id. at 478. Although the Yellowstone establishments were more than fifty miles
apart, a much greater distance than that between Keystone and Arapahoe Basin,
see Yellowstone Park Lines, 478 F.2d at 287, Birkett demonstrates that some
courts consider only a few miles a “substantial” geographic separation for the
purposes of the FLSA. See Birkett, 286 F.2d at 477-78.
In the instant case, Plaintiffs allege that the two ski areas marketed their
operations as one enterprise, exchanged some employees, and lacked separate
accounting and management. However, issues of business integration are not
dispositive in determining whether establishments are separate. Given the six-
mile separation between Arapahoe Basin and Keystone, we hold that they
constitute separate establishments for the purposes of § 213(b)(29).
II. Amusement or Recreational Establishment
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According to Plaintiffs, KRMI did not constitute a recreational
establishment for the purposes of § 213(b)(29) because providing ski facilities
could not be considered KRMI’s principal activity or purpose. See Hamilton v.
Tulsa County Public Facilities Authority, 85 F.3d 494, 498 (10th Cir. 1996)
(stating that inquiry into recreational character looks to “primary purpose” of the
establishment). Since we consider Arapahoe Basin a separate establishment
under § 213(b)(29), the only question is whether Keystone’s facilities are
primarily recreational. Arapahoe Basin offers few, if any, attractions for the
business traveler or retail customer; such facilities are all located at Keystone.
In support of their position, Plaintiffs contend that Keystone derives
substantial revenue from allegedly non-recreational sources, such as hotels,
restaurants, retail stores, and a convention center, and that many of its clients
visit on business trips. Because lodging and food sales represent Keystone’s
second largest revenue source, aside from ski operations, see Aplt. App. at 741-
56, the contentions that lodging is not “recreation” and that Congress did not
intend the FLSA’s recreational establishment exemption to extend to full-service
resorts represent the crux of Plaintiffs’ challenge.
We need not decide whether lodging, isolated from Keystone’s overall
business, constitutes recreation within the meaning of § 213(b)(29). Rather, our
inquiry centers on whether lodging and other services like restaurants and retail
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shops, viewed in the context of Keystone’s operations on or near national forest
land, have a recreational nature. This an issue of first impression in the Tenth
Circuit. According to Plaintiffs, Hamilton establishes that “[i]t is the character
of the revenue producing activity which affords the employer the protection of
the exemption.” See 85 F.3d at 497. However, the Hamilton court was
concerned with a different issue – whether the proper focus of its exemption
inquiry was the character of the establishment’s revenue-producing activity,
rather than the type of work performed by the employee, as the plaintiff urged.
See id. at 497-98.
Another Tenth Circuit case appears to lend support to KRMI’s position. In
Yellowstone Park Lines, we noted (but did not hold) that the facilities operated
by Yellowstone Park Company and its subsidiary – including many hotels and
cabins – were “[u]ndoubtedly . . . recreational in character.” Yellowstone Park
Lines, 478 F.2d at 288. 2 The sparse legislative history confirms that § 213(b)(29)
requires “concessioners providing accommodations, food and other consumer
goods in ‘national parks’” to “pay employees . . . time-and-one-half their regular
rate of pay for all hours over 56 in a week.” H.R. Rep. No. 95-521, at 34 (1977),
2
The only issue in Yellowstone Park Lines was whether the facilities
constituted one establishment. The parties stipulated that, if the court deemed
establishments “separate,” the seasonal recreational exemption, 29 U.S.C. §
213(a)(3), would apply. See Yellowstone Park Lines, 478 F.2d at 287.
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reprinted in 1977 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3201, 3235.
Plaintiffs cite Brennan v. Texas City Dike & Marina, Inc., 492 F.2d 1115
(5th Cir. 1974) for the proposition that a ruling in KRMI’s favor will allow any
merchant or lodging provider in the Rocky Mountains to circumvent the general
overtime provisions of the FLSA – thus creating a vast overtime exemption that
Congress did not intend. Plaintiffs exaggerate the potential impact of affirming
the district court’s orders. Moreover, Texas City Dike is distinguishable from
Plaintiffs’ case. In Texas City Dike, a marina, located on the Gulf of Mexico and
deriving its principal revenue from the sale of boats, motors, and trailers, was
found ineligible for the § 213(a)(3) exemption. See id. at 1119-20. The Fifth
Circuit reasoned that, unlike a national park, the Gulf was not set aside for
recreational use. Indeed, the court acknowledged, “enterprises that solely or
primarily sell goods” may qualify for the § 213(a)(3) exemption if they contract
to operate in a “geographically delimited” area designated for recreational use.
Id. at 1118-19; see id. at 1119 n.15. “Examples are pro shops at golf courses and
dry goods stores in national parks.” Id at 1118-19 (footnotes omitted).
By similar logic, § 213(b)(29) applies to Keystone. The parties do not
dispute that both the Keystone and Arapahoe Basin ski areas occupy national
forest land and that KRMI obtained a special use permit from the Department of
Agriculture, authorizing it to maintain a “four season recreation resort” in the
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White River National Forest. Aplt. App. at 158 (emphasis omitted); see Aplt. Br.
at 7. Thus, the fact that Keystone offers lodging, retail shops, restaurants and
other activities besides skiing does not disqualify it from the § 213(b)(29)
exemption. The evidence also establishes that, on an annual basis, ski operations
represent the largest revenue-producing category for Keystone. See Aplt. App. at
745-56. Thus, we hold that Keystone and Arapahoe Basin were, at all relevant
times, recreational establishments within the meaning of § 213(b)(29).
We decline to require an enterprise to derive a certain percentage of
revenue from strictly recreational activities in order to be considered recreational.
Although the Texas City Dike court used an income test to determine whether
providing recreation constitutes an enterprise’s principal activity, see Texas City
Dike, 492 F.2d at 1119-20, the Tenth Circuit has never held that financial
percentages are the only relevant factors. We prefer to examine the totality of the
circumstances, including but not limited to the establishment’s primary purpose;
activities and services, such as restaurants and shops, that it offers incidental to
its recreational facilities; its relationship to land set aside for recreational use;
and its revenue sources. 3
3
KRMI urges us to give great deference to Colorado Department of Labor
Minimum Wage Order 22 and a brief letter from a Department of Labor
investigator concluding that Keystone is a recreational establishment. Given our
disposition of the “separate establishment” and “recreational establishment”
issues, we need not decide what deference we owe these documents. We note,
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III. Calculation of Overtime Compensation Owed to Plaintiffs
A. Whether KRMI Has Lost the Benefit of the Exemption
The district court held that KRMI does not qualify for the § 213(b)(29)
exemption for any workweek in which a Plaintiff can prove that he worked more
than fifty-six hours without time-and-a-half compensation. KRMI is not eligible
for the exemption under these circumstances, the court reasoned, because §
213(b)(29) embodies two conditions, both of which must be met. First, the
employee must work for a recreational establishment in a national park or
national forest or on National Wildlife Refuge System land. See §
213(b)(29)(A). Second, the employee must “receiv[e] compensation for
employment in excess of fifty-six hours in any workweek at a rate not less than
one and one-half times the regular rate.” See § 213(b)(29)(B). According to the
district court, KRMI must compensate each Plaintiff at a time-and-a-half rate for
work in excess of forty hours during any given week that KRMI failed to comply
with § 213(b)(29)(B).
KRMI disputes this interpretation, contending that violation of §
213(b)(29)(B) means only that the employer must retroactively comply – i.e., that
however, that the latter document is neither admissible as a proper affidavit under
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e), nor does it demonstrate the thorough consideration and
reasoning necessary to provide guidance to this court. See Skidmore v. Swift &
Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140 (1944).
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it must pay the employee overtime for work in excess of fifty-six hours. In
support of its position, KRMI cites several cases regarding failure to comply with
the conditions of other FLSA exemptions. See Martin v. Coventry Fire Dist., 981
F.2d 1358 (1st Cir. 1992) (construing § 207(k) overtime exemption for
firefighters and law enforcement officers); Mills v. State of Maine, 853 F. Supp.
551 (D. Maine 1994) (construing § 207(k) exemption for state probation
officers); Lantz v. B-1202 Corp., 429 F. Supp 421 (E.D. Mich. 1977)
(interpreting § 213(b)(8)(A) overtime exemption for restaurant employees). Two
principles are common to these opinions. First, they suggest that receipt by an
employee of overtime compensation according to the provisions of a FLSA
exemption is not a condition precedent to the exemption’s applicability. See
Lantz, 429 F. Supp. at 424. Second, two of the cases cite the penalty provision
of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. § 216, for the rule that “an employer who fails to pay
statutorily required overtime . . . must simply pay the overtime owed (if the
violation is merely technical and in good faith).” Coventry Fire Dist., 981 F.2d
at 1360; see Mills, 853 F. Supp. at 552. None of these cases construes
§213(b)(29), however, and unlike KRMI, the defendant in Lantz was faced with a
relatively new statutory amendment, which arguably excused its failure to
comply. See Lantz, 429 F. Supp. at 423.
We next consider our precedent. In Spradling v. City of Tulsa, 95 F.3d
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1492, 1504-05 (10th Cir. 1996), we stated that an employer must affirmatively
prove that it qualified for a FLSA exemption either because (1) it publicly
declared its intent to establish a regime satisfying the exemption, or (2) the
employee’s working conditions actually met the requirements of the exemption.
Although the employer failed to carry its burden in Spradling, proof that it
actually paid overtime compensation in accord with § 207(k) does not seem to
have been required. However, because Spradling involved a § 207(k) exemption,
it does not provide a good model for determining whether KRMI adopted §
213(b)(29).
Interpreting § 207(k), which authorizes the establishment of non-traditional
work periods for firemen, the Spradling court held that “a public employer may
establish a 7(k) work period even without making a public declaration, as long as
its employees actually work a regularly recurring cycle of between 7 and 28
days.” Spradling, 95 F.3d at 1505 (quoting McGrath v. City of Philadelphia, 864
F. Supp. 466, 476 (E.D. Pa. 1994)) (emphasis added). To trigger the exemption,
the evidence had to show that the firemen regularly adhered to the § 207(k) work
period. Thus, the mere fact that a ski patroller worked at least one fifty-six-hour
week per season does not prove that KRMI adopted § 213(b)(29).
We are thus faced with an issue of first impression in the Tenth Circuit –
whether to construe § 213(b)(29) to exempt KRMI from normal overtime rules
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based on a policy that it retrospectively adopted in response to this lawsuit.
Although the First Circuit took this road, see Coventry Fire Dist., 981 F.2d at
1360, we decline to follow its lead. Section 213(b)(29) – which consists of two
conditions joined by the word “and” – is meaningless if an employer does not
have to satisfy both conditions. See Usery v. Associated Drugs, Inc., 538 F.2d
1191, 1193-94 (5th Cir. 1976) (holding that, to avail itself of the “professional
employees” exemption under § 213(a)(1), employer had to prove “each of the
conditions or standards prescirbed by the Regulations”). If KRMI cannot
demonstrate compliance with § 213(b)(29)(B), it must pay overtime
compensation as required by §207(a).
B. Week-by-Week, Plaintiff-by-Plaintiff Determination
The district court ruled that “each work week must be analyzed separately”
and “the exemption must be applied individually on a Plaintiff by Plaintiff basis.”
Aplt. App. at 584. The language of § 213(b)(29) supports a plaintiff-by-plaintiff
approach because it refers to “any employee” (instead of the plural “employees”)
and because it makes the exemption contingent on what kind of establishment the
employee works for and whether he receives overtime pay, rather than on the
employer’s overarching policy. Many of the regulations for implementing the
FLSA also center on the employees covered by the Act, instead of employers
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subject to it. See, e.g., 29 C.F.R. § 778.103 (1998) (referring to any workweek in
which “an employee is covered by the Act and is not exempt from its overtime
pay requirements”).
A workweek-by-workweek approach is also bolstered by the plain language
of the statute and regulations. Section 213(b)(29) refers to “any workweek,”
rather than some alternate unit of time, see 29 U.S.C. § 213(b)(29)(B), and as
KRMI notes, regulations governing the application of § 207 make the workweek
the proper unit for calculating overtime compensation. See 29 C.F.R. § 778.103.
The applicability of the § 213(b)(29) exemption must be determined on a
plaintiff-by-plaintiff and workweek-by-workweek basis.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s interlocutory orders are
AFFIRMED.
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