Case: 07-30942 Document: 00511251351 Page: 1 Date Filed: 10/01/2010
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT United States Court of Appeals
Fifth Circuit
FILED
October 1, 2010
No. 07-30942 Lyle W. Cayce
Clerk
DANIEL CASTELLANOS-CONTRERAS; OSCAR RICARDO DEHEZA-
ORTEGA; RODOLFO ANTONIO VALDEZ-BAEZ
Plaintiffs - Appellees
v.
DECATUR HOTELS LLC; F PATRICK QUINN, III
Defendants - Appellants
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of Louisiana
Before JONES, Chief Judge, and KING, JOLLY, DAVIS, SMITH, GARZA,
BENAVIDES, STEWART, DENNIS, PRADO, OWEN, ELROD, SOUTHWICK,
and HAYNES, Circuit Judges.1
HAYNES, Circuit Judge, joined by JONES, Chief Judge, and JOLLY, SMITH,
GARZA, BENAVIDES, OWEN, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges in full; joined
by KING, DAVIS, STEWART and PRADO, Circuit Judges, as to Section III.A.
only:
A group of hotel workers present in this country under H-2B visas 2 (“the
Workers”) sued Decatur Hotels and Patrick Quinn (collectively “Decatur”)
alleging violations of the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). Decatur moved to
1
Judges Wiener and Clement stood recused and did not participate.
2
The term “H-2B visa” refers to a visa authorized by 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(b).
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dismiss and for summary judgment, and the Workers moved for partial
summary judgment. In a single order, the district court granted the Workers’
motion in part and denied Decatur’s motions. Thereafter, the court certified that
order for interlocutory appeal to this court. On appeal, a panel of this court
reversed the district court and rendered judgment for Decatur. See
Castellanos-Contreras v. Decatur Hotels LLC, 559 F.3d 332 (5th Cir.), withdrawn
and replaced by 576 F.3d 274 (5th Cir. 2009). En banc review was granted, thus
vacating the panel opinion. Castellanos-Contreras v. Decatur Hotels LLC, 601
F.3d 621 (5th Cir. 2010). We now REVERSE the district court’s order denying
Decatur’s motion and REMAND for entry of judgment in favor of appellants.
I. Facts and Procedural Background
In the wake of the devastation wrought upon the city of New Orleans by
Hurricane Katrina, Decatur found itself unable to hire a sufficient number of
American workers to staff its hotel properties. It was solicited by Virginia
Pickering, who had a business known as Accent Personnel Services, to use her
service to navigate the regulations necessary to allow Decatur to legally hire
workers from other countries. Pickering also had a business known as VP
Consultants that provided data about employers seeking foreign workers to
various foreign recruitment companies. The Workers allege these foreign
recruitment companies charged them to provide information about U.S.
companies seeking foreign workers and the procedures for obtaining such jobs
and securing necessary visas.
The Workers consist of one hundred people3 from various Latin American
countries who came to New Orleans on H-2B visas to work at Decatur’s hotels
in housekeeping and other service roles. The Workers allege they were required
3
Originally, three foreign workers filed suit seeking to represent themselves and
similarly situated H-2B Decatur workers. Ninety-seven such workers filed notices of consent
to participate in the lawsuit.
2
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to pay (1) placement fees charged by various recruitment companies, (2) their
own visa-application fees, and (3) all transportation expenses necessary to
relocate to the United States. The parties do not dispute that Decatur did not
reimburse the Workers for these expenses. The parties also do not dispute that
Decatur paid its own H-2B application fees and the recruitment fees Pickering
and Accent charged it.
All parties agree that Decatur paid the Workers more than the minimum
wage should the court find Decatur was not required to reimburse the disputed
expenses. However, the Workers argue that federal law requires Decatur to
reimburse them for their travel expenses, visa fees, and recruitment payments
during their first week of work, failing which, such sums must be deducted from
the first week’s wage before calculating whether a minimum wage, under the
FLSA, was paid. Contending that these deductions took their pay below the
minimum wage, the Workers sued Decatur under the FLSA.
In the district court, Decatur moved for summary judgment, contending
that it was not required under the FLSA (or any other applicable law) to
reimburse the travel, visa, and recruitment expenses in question. For their part,
the Workers moved for summary judgment contending that the court was
required to deduct the disputed expenses as part of the minimum wage
calculation and that, under that calculation, Decatur had violated the FLSA. In
a single order, the district court granted the Workers’ motion in part and denied
Decatur’s motion entirely. The district court held that the only remaining issues
were the strictly mathematical calculations of wages actually paid and, should
that yield a finding of liability, the amount of damages due. Thereafter, it
certified this order under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) for interlocutory appeal, and a
motions panel of this court granted leave to appeal.
The parties and the en banc court agree that the FLSA applies to the
Workers in the situation before the court. However, the parties disagree on the
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threshold question of whether this court has jurisdiction to consider this appeal
and, unsurprisingly, on the merits question of whether the disputed expenses
can or should be deducted as part of the FLSA calculation. A panel of this court
opted to utilize its discretion to exercise jurisdiction in this case and ultimately
found that Decatur was correct on the merits. After granting en banc rehearing
and following reargument of the case, we now issue this opinion, again finding
jurisdiction and reversing the district court on the merits.
II. Standard of Review
The court reviews its own jurisdiction de novo. Nehme v. INS, 252 F.3d
415, 420 (5th Cir. 2001).
The court reviews certified orders de novo. Tanks v. Lockheed Martin
Corp., 417 F.3d 456, 461 (5th Cir. 2005). Under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), a grant or
denial of summary judgment is reviewed de novo, applying the same standard
as the district court, First Am. Bank v. First Am. Transp. Title Ins. Co., 585 F.3d
833, 836-837 (5th Cir. 2009), but review only extends to controlling questions of
law, Tanks, 417 F.3d at 461. Further, the court’s inquiry “is limited to the
summary judgment record before the trial court.” Martco Ltd. P’ship v. Wellons,
Inc., 588 F.3d 864, 871 (5th Cir. 2009). The court must view the evidence in the
light most favorable to the non-moving party, Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v.
Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986), and the movant has the burden of
showing this court that summary judgment is appropriate, Celotex Corp. v.
Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). Summary judgment is appropriate where the
competent summary judgment evidence demonstrates that there is no genuine
issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law. Bolton v. City of Dallas, 472 F.3d 261, 263 (5th Cir. 2006); see F ED . R.
C IV. P. 56(c). A genuine issue of material fact exists if a reasonable jury could
enter a verdict for the non-moving party. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. 242, 252 (1986).
4
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III. Discussion
A. Jurisdiction
The jurisdiction question presented to the en banc court breaks down into
two parts: (1) is there appellate jurisdiction to reach any question other than
whether the FLSA generally applies to the Workers (i.e., do we have the power
to hear the issues Decatur presents), and, if so, (2) should we exercise our
discretion to hear this appeal? We address each question in turn.
1. Appellate Jurisdiction
The Workers contend that the district court only certified the question of
whether the FLSA generally applies to the Workers, i.e., were the Workers
entitled to be paid the minimum wage? In turn, they argue that this question
is not one “as to which there is a substantial ground for difference of opinion”
and, thus, they contend that we lack jurisdiction at all. As a fall back position,
they contend that, at most, we have jurisdiction to decide only this threshold
question but not the question of whether federal law requires reimbursement of
the expenses in question. Decatur contends that jurisdiction is proper because
the order certified necessarily includes consideration of the “merits” question of
whether the disputed expenses are ever chargeable against wages paid. We
agree with Decatur.4
The district court granted in part the Workers’ motion for summary
judgment and denied Decatur’s motion for summary judgment in the single
order that is the subject of the certified interlocutory appeal. In order to grant
the Workers’ motion and deny Decatur’s motion, the district court had to
examine whether the expenses in question were of the kind for which
reimbursement—to the extent necessary to stay at or above minimum wage—is
required by the law. The district court itself stated that it considered these
4
Moreover, the Workers conceded at oral argument that the jurisdictional question that
remains before the court is purely prudential.
5
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matters to be “factual issues,” i.e., that the law provides for their recovery
depending on the facts of a given case. In deciding that there were “fact
questions” on these issues, the district court necessarily decided that such
expenses could sometimes be reimbursable, at least under certain facts. If, as
a matter of law, they are not, the district court’s order would be incorrect.
Under § 1292(b), it is the order, not the question, that is appealable.
Yamaha Motor Corp. v. Calhoun, 516 U.S. 199, 205 (1996); see Melder v. Allstate
Corp., 404 F.3d 328, 331 (5th Cir. 2005) (raising argument in district court
deemed sufficient to render it “fairly included” in the certified order); Brabham
v. A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc., 376 F.3d 377, 380 n.2 (5th Cir. 2004) (reaching
alternative grounds addressed in the certified order but omitted from the list of
certified questions); Reserve Mooring Inc. v. Am. Commercial Barge Line, LLC,
251 F.3d 1069, 1070 n.4 (5th Cir. 2001) (same); see also Schlumberger Techs. v.
Wiley, 113 F.3d 1553, 1557 n.6 (11th Cir. 1997) (holding that, if an issue is
contained within the order from which the interlocutory appeal is taken, the
district court’s refusal to certify that issue does not defeat court of appeals’
jurisdiction over that issue). If the district judge makes certification as provided,
“[t]he Court of Appeals . . . may . . . permit an appeal to be taken from such
order.” 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (emphasis added). Section 1292(b) limits this court’s
jurisdiction over interlocutory appeals to reviewing “questions that are material
to the lower court’s certified order.” Adkinson v. Int’l Harvester Co., 975 F.2d
208, 212 n.4 (5th Cir. 1992); see Ducre v. Executive Officers of Halter Marine,
Inc., 752 F.2d 976, 983 n.16 (5th Cir. 1985) (“Thus, the appellate court may
address all issues material to the order and is not limited to consideration of the
‘controlling question.’ This is especially so when the issues outside the
‘controlling question’ provide grounds for reversal of the entire order.” (citations
omitted)); see also J.S. ex rel. N.S. v. Attica Cent. Schs., 386 F.3d 107, 115 (2nd
Cir. 2004) (“We are not necessarily limited to the certified issue, as we have the
6
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discretion to consider any aspect of the order from which the appeal is taken.”);
McFarlin v. Conseco Servs., LLC, 381 F.3d 1251, 1255-56 (11th Cir. 2004) (“[W]e
have the power to ‘review an entire order, either to consider a question different
from the one certified as controlling or to decide the case despite the lack of any
identified controlling question.’” (quoting Yamaha, 516 U.S. at 205)); Pinney
Dock & Transp. Co. v. Penn Cent. Corp., 838 F.2d 1445, 1455 (6th Cir. ) (“[E]ven
those issues not properly certified are subject to our discretionary power of
review if otherwise necessary to the disposition of the case.”), cert. denied, 488
U.S. 880 (1988).
The district court’s conclusion that there were fact issues was based upon
its finding that the expenses in question could be reimbursable. If it is true that
the expenses are reimbursable, then liability to the Workers depends upon
calculating what each Worker paid for the disputed expenses, subtracting that
figure from what each Worker was paid after his/her first week, and dividing the
remaining amount by the hours worked. If that amount is above the minimum
wage, no liability attaches. See generally 29 C.F.R. § 531.36 (2010); see also
Arriaga v. Fla. Pac. Farms, L.L.C., 305 F.3d 1228, 1237 n.11 (11th Cir. 2002)
(providing an example of an FLSA minimum wage calculation). If it falls below
the minimum wage, then damages are based at least in part on this calculation
of the “back pay” owed to the employee. See 29 U.S.C. § 216(b) (2010). Thus, the
predicate finding that the disputed expenses are reimbursable costs that the
employer owes the Workers is critical and material to the district court’s
conclusion that there are fact issues. However, the threshold question of
whether such expenses are, as a category, reimbursable is a legal question that
can properly be the subject of interlocutory review. We conclude that we have
appellate jurisdiction to review the question of whether the travel, visa, and
recruitment expenses in question are required to be reimbursed as part of the
minimum wage calculation under the FLSA.
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2. Discretion
The conclusion that we have the power to consider these questions does
not end our jurisdictional analysis. Interlocutory review under § 1292(b) is not
mandatory; rather, it is discretionary. Thus, we must consider whether we
should address these questions at this stage.
Suffice it to say that this is a question about which reasonable jurists
can—and, in the case of this court, do—debate. A motions panel of this court
permitted Decatur to pursue this appeal, and the original panel exercised its
discretion to hear the appeal. Others on our court might have had a different
take had they been on either panel. But we are no longer at the beginning of
this case; instead, we are very far along. Considerable time has passed, two
panel opinions have issued, and the parties have briefed the merits three times:
to the original panel, in connection with the rehearing petitions, and in merits
briefing to the en banc court. Additionally, this case has been the subject of two
oral arguments. After so much time and effort has been expended by both the
parties and the court as a whole, the discretionary decision now becomes much
different, and the majority of the court agrees it should be resolved in favor of
hearing the merits.
B. The Merits
Turning then to the merits, we address each category for which the
Workers claim reimbursement is required: (1) inbound travel expenses; (2) visa
expenses; and (3) recruitment expenses.
1. Inbound Travel and Visa Expenses
No statute or regulation expressly states that inbound travel expenses
must be advanced or reimbursed by an employer of an H-2B worker. There are
laws that say that outbound travel expenses (i.e., return) must be paid for H-2B
workers under certain circumstances and that inbound expenses for H-2A
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workers require reimbursement,5 but no statute or regulation expressly requires
reimbursement for inbound travel for H-2B workers. See 8 U.S.C. § 1184(c)(5)(A)
(requiring payment of outbound transportation costs in certain circumstances
for H-2B workers); 20 C.F.R. § 655.102(b)(5)(I) (2009) (requiring payment of
inbound transportation costs in certain circumstances for H-2A workers).
Silence on this issue, in the face of these specific laws governing transportation,
is deafening.
Similarly, no law or regulation provides that fees for the employee side of
the visa application process must be paid by the employer. See 22 C.F.R. §
40.1(l)(1) (2010) (requiring non-immigrant visa applicants, such as the Workers
here, to submit processing fees when they apply for visas). It is undisputed that
Decatur paid its own fees for the employer side of the process—the application
to hire H-2B workers. See 8 C.F.R. §§ 103.7(a), 103.7(b)(1), 214.2(h)(2)(i)(A)
(2010) (requiring, collectively, that a U.S. employer submit certain forms and
filing fees to become an H-2B visa sponsor).
While this lack of law would seem to end the matter as to both the travel
and visa expenses, the Workers advance various arguments in support of their
reimbursement claim which we now address. First, the Workers argue that both
expenses are “specifically required for performance of the employer’s particular
work” because the employee must have a visa and must get to the employer in
order to work legally. In short, they cannot “use” the transportation and visa
outside the context of that employment. They contend that these expenses are
“primarily for the benefit and convenience of the employer.” Hence, they argue
that these expenses constitute “tools of the trade” pursuant to 29 C.F.R. § 531.35
5
As defined by 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(H)(ii)(a), “H-2A” workers include only those
individuals temporarily relocating to the United States to perform “agricultural labor and
services.” Conversely, “H-2B” workers include only those individuals temporarily relocating
to the United States to perform other non-agricultural labor or services.
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(2010),6 such that their payment of these expenses are “de facto deductions” from
their wages.
This argument stretches the concept of “tools of the trade” too far. Our
precedents look to the nature of disputed expenses rather than simply declaring
every cost that is helpful to a given job an employer expense. Mayhue’s Super
Liquor Stores, Inc. v. Hodgson, 464 F.2d 1196, 1199 (5th Cir. 1972) (asking
whether an act tended to shift employer expenses); Brennan v. Veterans
Cleaning Servs., Inc., 482 F.2d 1362, 1369 (5th Cir. 1973) (assessing various
claimed expenses by analogy to other expenses previously deemed not properly
chargeable). A visa and physical presence at the job site are not “tools”
particular to this “trade” within the meaning of the applicable regulations See
also 29 C.F.R. § 531.32 (2010) (describing items like safety caps, explosives,
lamps, electric power, company police or security, taxes and insurance on
employer buildings, railway fare for maintenance-of-way railway workers, and
uniforms as “other facilities” not subject to deduction from the employees’
wages).7
6
The Workers also contend that wages must be paid “free and clear” and that the
singular exception contained in 29 U.S.C. § 203(m) supports their position. See 29 U.S.C. §
203(m) (permitting an employer to deduct from wages the cost of furnishing meals and
lodging). Section 203(m) does not directly impose liability upon employers for expenses that
employees incur, and it has nothing to do with travel or visa expenses. In short, the Workers’
“free and clear” argument begs the question of whether these are expenses that the employer
is legally required to bear—a question we answer in the negative.
7
Additionally, the Workers’ argument that these expenses are specific and unique to
the employer in question is contradicted by the federal regulation governing the use and
transferability of H-2B visas: “If the alien is in the United States and seeks to change
employers, the prospective new employer must file a petition on Form I-129 requesting
classification and an extension of the alien’s stay in the United States.” 8 C.F.R. §
214.2(h)(2)(i)(D) (2010). In other words, the employee does not have to return to his or her
home country and start from the beginning in order to change employers once in the United
States. It is interesting to note that it appears that at least some of the Workers are still in
the United States despite the seemingly temporary nature of the H-2B visa and the recent
fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
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Second, the Department of Labor, briefing as an amicus in support of the
Workers, also points to its own recent “interpretation” as informing whether
travel and visa expenses are covered under the FLSA.8 However, the
Department’s Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2009-2 (“Bulletin”) was issued long
after the events in question. The general rule, applicable here, is that changes
in the law will not be applied retroactively when the result would be that “new
and unanticipated obligations may be imposed upon a party without notice or an
opportunity to be heard.” Bradley v. Sch. Bd. of Richmond, 416 U.S. 696, 720
(1974). Thus, even “‘congressional enactments and administrative rules will not
be construed to have retroactive effect unless their language requires this
result.’” Landgraf v. USI Film Prods., 511 U.S. 244, 272 (1994) (quoting Bowen
v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp., 488 U.S. 204, 208 (1988)). Whatever deference may
be due to the Department’s informally promulgated Bulletin in the future, it
does not itself in any way purport to apply retroactively.9 Accordingly, we
decline to apply it to the situation here.
The dissenting opinion focuses on the Department’s previous position that
relocation expenses paid by the employer could not be deducted from wages.
8
Notably, the Workers make no effort to rely upon the Department’s recently revised
“interpretations” in support of their own position. In fact, in originally requesting rehearing,
the Workers argued that casually promulgated interpretations of the FLSA—like the one now
at issue—should not inform the court’s understanding of the statute.
9
We acknowledge that the regulatory landscape is now very different than it was just
a few short years ago. See, e.g., 20 C.F.R. § 655.22(g)(2) (2010) and 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(h)(6)(i)(B)
(2010). We express no opinion as to how our decision today affects those new regulations.
Moreover, we do not, as the dissenting opinion suggests, claim that the Secretary’s
amicus briefing is entitled to no deference because the Bulletin and briefing were filed after
the events giving rise to this suit. Rather, the Secretary contends, paradoxically, that the
position of the Department has remained the same for fifty years save a 98-day period but also
concedes that the Department publicly informed employers it would suspend the enforcement
of FLSA standards relating to reimbursement issues from 1994 until 2008—when it concluded
that reimbursement was not necessary. In short, we decline to engage in the ex post
imposition of new duties that did not clearly exist at the time of the events giving rise to this
suit under the guise of Auer deference.
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Significantly, the Department did not address the issue of reimbursing
relocation expenses until 1994. At that point, the Department announced it
would analyze the issue of reimbursement and adopted a position of
non-enforcement during its deliberations. The first time the Department
specifically spoke to reimbursement in the context of alleged “kickbacks” like
those at issue here was its announcement in 2008 that it would not require
reimbursement.10 The Department then reversed itself 98 days later to assert
for the first time that reimbursement was required. Carefully read, the
Department of Labor letters did not in fact include or promote a “reimbursement
required” position until the Department informally changed course in 2009. In
fact, none of the letters cited in the dissenting opinion expressed a clear,
10
The dissenting opinion argues that a 1986 Department letter produced in response
to an employer’s effort to settle its outstanding liability constitutes an earlier pronouncement
of the Department’s position. Properly read in context, it is not. The correspondence answers
a specific question: whether the Department persisted in its belief that employers could not
make transportation deductions that cut into the minimum wage, or, as the employer
contended, it had recently adopted that position. The dissenting opinion’s quoted language
is nothing more than the administrator suggesting that reimbursement likely could be
required under the facts of that case. Importantly, the decisions of the district court in the
underlying case reveal: (1) the letter addressed agricultural workers(now properly categorized
as H-2A workers); (2) the case involved direct payments by the workers to the employer for
transportation expenses; and (3) the letter was issued as a rejection of the employer’s attempts
to find a way to settle its outstanding minimum wage liability—not a general inquiry into
whether such liability existed. Thus, the 1986 letter is exactly the sort of post hoc
rationalization in the context of active litigation that the Supreme Court warned will undercut
the authority of such agency pronouncements. Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 462 (1997).
Moreover, as a litigation document prepared in a very specific context, it is doubtful
that even the most diligent employer could have readily accessed (or would have known to look
for) this so-called “interpretation.” While not dispositive, it is noteworthy that the dissenting
opinion would hold an employer liable under such a piece of random, litigation-specific
correspondence where the affidavits of the very workers at issue in this case do not state that
the Workers ever requested or expected reimbursement prior to this litigation. Even now,
after all these years, if Decatur wanted to write a check, it would not know the amount. Yet
the dissenting opinion would hold that Decatur should somehow have divined such a figure
on its own within one week of the Workers starting their employment, no less, despite the fact
that it had no reasonable way of determining it—according to the dissent—had a sua
sponte duty to investigate the Workers’ costs and provide reimbursement of as yet untold sums
during their first week on the job in order to avoid a Wage-Hour violation.
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unequivocal stance that employee-incurred relocation costs constitute a
kickback. Thus, this inconsistency and ambiguity—properly afforded the
deference discussed in the dissenting opinion—did not create any affirmative
duty to reimburse and, moreover, merely underscores the problem with the
suggestion that we retroactively apply the Department’s most recent guidance.
Finally, the Workers cite to the Eleventh Circuit’s decision in Arriaga v.
Fla. Pac. Farms, L.L.C., 305 F.3d 1228 (11th Cir. 2002), to support their
position. Arriaga, however, dealt with H-2A workers, not H-2B workers. Id. at
1232-33. Historically, H-2A and H-2B workers have been treated differently.
Compare 20 C.F.R. §§ 655.90–.113 (2007) (broadly setting out a distinct
regulatory regime for the management of the H-2A program) with 20 C.F.R. §§
655.1–.4 (providing the regulatory regime for H-2B workers) (2007)11 ; see also
Sweet Life v. Dole, 876 F.2d 402, 406 (5th Cir. 1989) (explaining that the H-2
program was specifically redesigned by Congress in 1986 to “separat[e]
agricultural from nonagricultural workers in the administrative scheme”).
Indeed, the regulations specifically provide some transportation reimbursement
obligation for H-2A workers while remaining silent on similar expenses incurred
by H-2B workers. Thus, Arriaga’s reasoning does not control here.
Accordingly, we conclude as a matter of law that these expenses are not
reimbursable,12 and the district court erred in denying Decatur’s motions on
these points.
2. Recruitment Expenses
11
The regulations cited have undergone substantial revision in recent years. The 2007
edition of the Code of Federal Regulations is cited because it was that version that the district
court considered when it concluded that H-2A and H-2B workers were not sufficiently
distinguishable to prevent Arriaga from applying to the instant case.
12
Because we hold that the FLSA does not obligate Decatur to reimburse the Workers
for their transportation expenses, we do not consider Decatur’s argument in the alternative
that, even if the FLSA otherwise purports to obligate reimbursement, the Portal-to-Portal Act
nevertheless bars recovery.
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The Workers raise some of the same arguments regarding the recruitment
expenses, and we will not repeat our analysis of those arguments.13 Again, the
statute and regulations are silent, so we turn to considering the Workers’
additional arguments regarding recruitment expenses.
The Workers argue that they were required to pay recruiting fees and,
therefore, those fees should be considered “part of the job,” citing Rivera v.
Brickman Group Ltd., Civ. No. 05-1518, 2008 WL 81570 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 7, 2008).
They contend that fact issues are presented as to the nature of the payments and
whether they were required by Decatur. In response to Decatur’s motion for
summary judgment, the Workers proffered no evidence to support the concept
that Decatur required any recruitment fees to be paid to the foreign recruiters
or that it required the Workers to use these recruiters to apply to Decatur. The
fact that the Workers benefitted from these services by finding jobs with Decatur
does not suggest that Decatur was the one who required their use of job
placement firms.14
13
It is noteworthy, however, that even Arriaga did not require reimbursement of the
recruitment expenses.
14
The Workers’ suggestion that unresolved fact disputes prevent this court from
considering this point is belied by the record. The affidavits submitted by some of the Workers
indeed talk about going to foreign recruiters and being charged fees but in no way suggest that
Decatur charged those fees or required their payment. Instead, the affidavits say that they
were told by the foreign recruiter that they “had to pay for the cost of the program to be able
to go and work for the Defendants.” The only tie between the foreign recruiter and Decatur
comes in the Workers’ statement that they “understood that the [foreign recruiter’s] agency
was an agency utilized by the Defendants for the recruitment of workers like me . . . .” The
affiant’s “understanding,” without any stated basis for such “understanding” is no evidence
of agency tying the foreign recruiter (such as UniverJobs) to Decatur. See Cormier v. Pennzoil
Exploration & Prod. Co., 969 F.2d 1559, 1561 (5th Cir. 1992) (holding that affidavits offered
to support or oppose summary judgment must be based on personal knowledge to create a
genuine issue of material fact); see also FED . R. CIV . P. 56(e)(1). Nor is there any evidence of
a contract between UniverJobs or the other foreign recruiters and Decatur. Thus, even if we
were to follow Rivera’s reasoning, it would not apply here.
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Moreover, the claim asserted rests on the argument that when the
Workers paid for recruiting services in their home countries, they paid an
expense belonging to the employer. As with visa costs, both employers and
employees contribute to the recruiting cost of using the program: employers pay
recruiters to help them navigate the visa application process and locate workers
in foreign countries (here, Decatur hired Accent), and employees pay recruiters
in their home countries to help them find work in the United States. The
division of payment for each party’s respective benefit indicates, as in the visa
context, that the Workers’ use of recruiters in their own countries was not
Decatur’s business expense. Again, while recruiters in general may benefit both
parties, the payment for that benefit can be (and has here been) apportioned to
each party appropriately. It is undisputed that Decatur paid the fees it was
charged by Accent for recruiting services. Thus, no material fact issue was
raised on this point.
Newly enacted Department of Labor regulations15 (promulgated after the
time in question) actually support the conclusion that recruitment expenses were
not reimbursable at the time. These regulations provide protection for guest
workers from unscrupulous recruiters by requiring employers to contractually
obligate those with whom they work not to charge employees recruiting fees.
These new regulations actually suggest that the expenses in question were not
previously to be charged against the employers. If they were to be so charged
previously, there would be no need to protect the employees as provided in the
new regulations.
In sum, Decatur was not required to reimburse the Workers for the fees
they paid to the various job placement firms. Consequently, the district court
erred in denying Decatur’s motions on this point.
15
20 C.F.R. § 655.22(g)(2) (2010) and 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(h)(6)(i)(B) (2010).
15
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Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s judgment and REMAND for
entry of judgment in favor of appellants.
REVERSED and REMANDED for entry of judgment.
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DENNIS, Circuit Judge, dissenting, joined fully by ELROD, Circuit Judge; and
joined in Sections I and II only by KING, DAVIS, STEWART, and PRADO,
Circuit Judges.1
The majority opinion (1) ignores controlling Supreme Court decisions
holding that federal courts must give deference to the Department of Labor’s
(“DOL”) reasonable interpretations of its own valid regulations under the Fair
Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”); (2) adopts and applies its own eccentric
interpretation of the FLSA and the DOL’s regulations, holding, contrary to the
DOL’s views, that the plaintiffs, temporary workers from South American
nations, have no right to sue their employers under the FLSA for paying them
sub-minimum wages by refusing to reimburse them for their outlay for visa,
transportation and recruitment costs incidental to and for the primary benefit
of the employers’ foreign-labor recruitment program; (3) misconstrues the record
in the district court, treating material facts as undisputed, when, in truth, those
facts are in dispute—the evidence as to them is mostly undiscovered, and the
district court has not yet tried or decided them; and (4) misapplies Supreme
Court and circuit precedents to improperly reach questions not within our
appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). I respectfully dissent.
The most unfortunate and harmful part of the majority’s decision, which
must be addressed first, is its incorrect interpretation and application of the
FLSA, the DOL’s regulations, and the DOL’s interpretation of its regulations. In
its erroneous ruling, the majority opinion creates a split between us and the
Eleventh Circuit and establishes a circuit precedent that permits employers to
1
In other words, Judges King, Davis, Stewart, and Prado agree with the majority
opinion that it is appropriate for this court to reach the merits of the case within its limited,
certified appellate jurisdiction but disagree with the majority as to the merits of the case and
join this dissenting opinion in that respect. Judges Dennis and Elrod dissent from the
majority’s decision pertaining to both its exercise of appellate jurisdiction and the merits of
the case.
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shift their costs in recruiting foreign labor to their temporary foreign worker
recruits; this allows those employers to effectively reduce temporary foreign
workers’ wages below the nationally established minimum wage floor and
creates a competitive disadvantage for other employers who pay legitimate
wages at or above that floor.
The majority opinion also adopts the panel’s cavalier misreading of the
district court’s decision to erroneously misapply Supreme Court and circuit
precedents and to overreach our appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.§ 1292(b).
This second unfortunate precedent is also regrettable, but it is less imitable and
harmful than the majority’s FLSA precedent because the majority opinion cloaks
its jurisdictional overreach by misrepresenting the district court’s decision as
having reached and decided the merits before certifying a threshold question of
law to this circuit.
I.
In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina flooded major low-lying parts of New
Orleans, causing hundreds of hotel and tourist workers to evacuate the city
permanently or for extended periods. Hotel businesses revived quickly, however,
because Katrina left the city’s tourist venues, located on higher ground,
relatively unscathed. Faced with a labor shortage, defendants-appellants hotel
employers, Decatur Hotels, LLC and F. Patrick Quinn III (“Decatur”), obtained
approval from the DOL to temporarily recruit, employ and obtain visas for
plaintiffs-appellees from South American nations as H-2B workers (the “Hotel
Workers”).2
2
Under the H-2B program, guest workers are “authorized to come to the United States
temporarily to perform services or labor for . . . an employer” who has “petitioned” for the right
to employ H-2B guest workers and whose petition has been approved by the DOL. 8 C.F.R.
§ 214.2(h)(1)(i). Before H-2B visas can be granted, the prospective employer must “establish
. . . the need for the employee[s]” and that such a need “will end in the near, definable future[,]
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Decatur recruited the Hotel Workers from Bolivia, the Dominican Republic
and Peru. The Hotel Workers allege that Decatur’s agents required them to pay
between $3500 and $5000 each for the recruiters’ fees, visa fees and
transportation costs. The workers, who served as housekeepers, desk clerks and
maintenance staff, were paid between $6.04 and $7.79 per hour, but Decatur
refused to reimburse them for their visa, transportation and recruitment costs.
Consequently, plaintiffs contend that these costs reduced their effective wages
to substantially less than the federal minimum wage of $5.15 per hour in their
first pay periods. As a result, they were forced to work for three to five months
just to recoup their visa, transportation and recruitment costs. Moreover, it is
undisputed that under the H-2B program, they were legally prohibited from
working for other employers outside the program who might have paid them
higher wages. The Hotel Workers argue that Decatur’s system of compensation
and de facto wage deductions placed them in debt peonage.
As a result, wage disputes arose between Decatur and the Hotel Workers.
On August 16, 2006, the Hotel Workers sued Decatur, alleging that Decatur had
failed to comply with the minimum wage provisions of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C.
§§ 203(m), 206(a). Specifically, the Hotel Workers alleged that Decatur’s refusal
to defray the Hotel Workers’ out-of-pocket visa, transportation and recruitment
[g]enerally . . . one year or less.” Id. § 214.2(h)(6)(ii)(B). Moreover, the DOL must determine
that the workers’ employment will not “displac[e] qualified United States workers” and that
their work will “not adversely affect[] the wages and working conditions of United States
workers.” See id. § 214.2(h)(6)(i)(A). Once admitted, the guest workers’ legal status is tied to
performing labor for the specific employer who petitioned for the visas. See id. § 214.2. Under
no circumstances can the workers remain in the country longer than three years. Id.
§ 214.2(h)(15)(ii)(C). What is more, if at any point the H-2B visas expire or the workers are
dismissed from their jobs, they are required to immediately leave the country. See id.
§ 214.2(h)(6)(vi)(E), (h)(17)(iii)(C). To help ensure such an exit, throughout the period of H-2B
employment, the guest workers must maintain a “residence in a foreign country” and have “no
intention of abandoning” it. 8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(v)(H).
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expenses violated the national minimum wage requirement by pushing the Hotel
Workers’ wages below the minimum wage in their first pay periods.
After only limited discovery, Decatur filed a motion to dismiss and for
summary judgment, which the district court construed as contending that the
Hotel Workers were not entitled to any protection by the FLSA and,
alternatively, that the FLSA did not require Decatur to refund their
transportation, visa and recruitment costs as part of the minimum wage
requirement. In support of its motion, Decatur filed a unilateral statement of
facts. The Hotel Workers produced evidence contesting Decatur’s asserted facts
and a cross-motion for partial summary judgment. The district court denied
Decatur’s motion to dismiss and for summary judgment and partially granted
the Hotel Workers’ motion, but only insofar as it held that, as temporary H-2B
workers, they were protected by the FLSA’s minimum wage requirements. The
district court declined to decide whether the FLSA required the visa,
transportation and recruitment expenses paid by the Hotel Workers to be
treated as de facto wage deductions. On Decatur’s further motion, the district
court certified its order addressing only the threshold legal question—whether
the FLSA’s minimum wage protection applies to H-2B foreign temporary
workers—for an interlocutory appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). A motions panel
of this court granted the appeal. The case was heard and decided twice by an
oral argument panel. Ultimately, we granted an en banc rehearing vacating the
panel’s opinion.
II.
Although the majority opinion concedes that the FLSA applies to the wages
of the Hotel Workers, it does not heed the Supreme Court’s decisions that require
federal courts to give deference to the DOL’s reasonable interpretation of its valid
regulations under the FLSA. The majority does not attempt to reconcile its
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decision with the Supreme Court’s cases; nor does it try to show that the DOL’s
interpretations are unreasonable and therefore not controlling. Rather, the
majority adopts an unfounded, eclectical approach, applying the statutory,
regulatory and interpretive provisions it chooses while disregarding those that
are inconsistent with its own notions of justice. I respectfully submit that my
colleagues have lost sight of the proper role and perspective that the Supreme
Court has said federal courts must maintain in construing and applying a
congressionally authorized administrative agency’s interpretations of its own
regulations. In doing so, the majority opinion has reached a decision conflicting
not only with the Supreme Court’s decisions, but also with the DOL’s
interpretations of its own regulations, the decisions of the Eleventh Circuit and
the decisions of several federal district courts. Regrettably, the majority opinion
also deprives foreign temporary workers in this circuit of minimum wage
protection against employers shifting to them costs incidental to and primarily
for the benefit of the employers’ businesses, viz., the costs of visas, transportation
and recruitment necessary to hiring foreign workers.
Congress created the Department of Labor in 1913 in part, “to foster,
promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States.” An
Act to Create a Department of Labor, Pub. L. No. 62-426, § 1, 37 Stat. 736 (1913).
In 1938, Congress passed the Fair Labor Standards Act, creating the Wage and
Hour Division in the Department of Labor and codifying worker protections such
as minimum wage and overtime pay. 29 U.S.C. § 201 et. seq. Prior to the Hotel
Workers filing this lawsuit in August 2006, the FLSA required Decatur to pay
each of its employees not less than $5.15 an hour. 29 U.S.C. § 206(a)(1) (2006)
(amended 2007). The FLSA also provides that the “‘Wage’ paid to any employee
includes the reasonable cost, as determined by the Administrator [of the Wage
and Hour Division], to the employer of furnishing such employee with board,
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lodging, or other facilities, if such board, lodging, or other facilities are
customarily furnished by such employer to his employees.” 29 U.S.C. § 203(m).
Congress expressly granted the DOL the authority to promulgate necessary
rules, regulations or other orders under the FLSA and amendments thereto.3
Moreover, in cases arising under the FLSA, the Supreme Court has held that the
power of the DOL to administer the FLSA “necessarily requires the formulation
of policy and the making of rules to fill any gap left, implicitly or explicitly, by
Congress.” Long Island Care at Home, Ltd. v. Coke, 551 U.S. 158, 165 (2007)
(quoting Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
843 (1984)) (quotation marks omitted). “When an agency fills such a ‘gap’
reasonably, and in accordance with other applicable (e.g., procedural)
requirements, the courts accept the result as legally binding.” Id. (citing Chevron,
467 U.S. at 843-44; United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 227 (2001)).
The Supreme Court has also held that the DOL’s interpretations of its own
regulations are “‘controlling’ unless ‘plainly erroneous or inconsistent with’ the
regulations being interpreted.” Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 171
(quoting Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 461 (1997), in turn quoting Robertson v.
Methow Valley Citizens Council, 490 U.S. 332, 359 (1989), in turn quoting Bowles
v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co., 325 U.S. 410, 414 (1945)) (other quotation marks
omitted). Our circuit and others have held that opinion letters, handbooks and
other published declarations of an agency’s views, including amicus briefs, are
authoritative sources of the agency’s interpretation of its own regulations. Belt
v. EmCare, Inc., 444 F.3d 403, 415 (5th Cir. 2006) (“We conclude that Auer
applies, so we give controlling weight to the DOL’s position adopted in the 1974
3
See 29 U.S.C. § 259(a); see also Fair Labor Standards Act, Pub. L. No. 99-150,§ 6, 99
Stat. 787, 790 (1985); Fair Labor Standards Act, Pub. L. No. 89-601, § 602, 80 Stat. 830, 844
(1966); Fair Labor Standards Act, Pub. L. No. 87-30, § 14, 75 Stat. 67, 75 (1961).
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opinion letter, 1994 Handbook, and amicus brief . . . .”); see also IntraComm, Inc.
v. Bajaj, 492 F.3d 285, 293 (4th Cir. 2007) (noting that “the Secretary[ of Labor]’s
interpretation of her own combination-exemption regulation in opinion letters
and in her amicus brief to this court is entitled to [Auer] deference”); In re
Farmers Ins. Exch., 481 F.3d 1119, 1129 (9th Cir. 2007) (“We must give deference
to the DOL’s interpretation of its own regulations through, for example, Opinion
Letters.”).4
As shown above, the statutory text of the FLSA clearly leaves relevant
gaps. For example, it does not define the scope of terms such as “wage” and
“board, lodging, or other facilities.” 29 U.S.C. § 203(m). Consequently, it provides
the DOL with the power to fill these gaps through reasonable regulations.
The DOL responded by issuing a series of regulations defining the minium
wage under the FLSA. 29 C.F.R. pt. 531; id. §§ 531.32, 531.35. In doing so, it
followed all necessary procedural requirements—“[i]t gave notice, it proposed
regulations, it received public comment, and it issued final regulations in light
of that comment.” Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 165. See also 32 Fed.
Reg. 13575 (1967) (promulgating the regulations). “The subject matter of the
regulation[s] in question concerns a matter in respect to which the agency is
expert, and it concerns an interstitial matter, i.e., a portion of a broader
definition, the details of which, as we said, Congress entrusted the agency to
work out.” Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 165.
4
See Belt, 444 F.3d at 416 n.35 (“The most important reason for extending greater
deference to an amicus brief that purports to interpret an agency’s own ambiguous regulation
(under Auer), than a brief that interprets the organic statute directly (under Chevron), is the
greater expertise and familiarity of the agency with respect to the history and content of its
own enacted rules. See John F. Manning, Constitutional Structure and Judicial Deference to
Agency Interpretations of Agency Rules, 96 Colum. L. Rev. 612, 630-31 (1999).”).
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These regulations, promulgated in 1967 without subsequent change,
explain that a minimum wage is only paid if it is provided “finally and
unconditionally or ‘free and clear.’” 29 C.F.R. § 531.35. They elaborate on this
rule by continuing:
The [minimum] wage requirements of the Act will not be met where
the employee “kicks-back” directly or indirectly to the employer or to
another person for the employer’s benefit the whole or part of the
wage delivered to the employee. This is true whether the “kick-back”
is made in cash or in other than cash. For example, if it is a
requirement of the employer that the employee must provide tools of
the trade which will be used in or are specifically required for the
performance of the employer’s particular work, there would be a
violation of the Act in any workweek when the cost of such tools
purchased by the employee cuts into the minimum or overtime wages
required to be paid him under the Act. See also in this connection
§ 531.32(c).
Id. § 531.35.
29 C.F.R. § 531.32(c), the provision cross-referenced in § 531.35, provides
further examples of items understood to be for the benefit of the employer and
therefore prohibited from being paid by the employee or charged against his or
her wage so that the effective wage is reduced below the statutory minimum in
any pay period. These examples include expenses that further the employer’s
business, such as “[s]afety caps, explosives, and miners’ lamps,” or that are
incurred by the employee to fulfill his or her job function, such as “charges for
rental of uniforms where the nature of the business requires the employee to
wear a uniform,” as well as costs that merely facilitate the smooth and consistent
operation of the employer’s enterprise, such as “company police and guard
protection.” Id. § 531.32(c).
29 C.F.R. § 531.32 also describes expenses that would not be considered to
be for the employer’s benefit and therefore could be paid by the employee or
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deducted from his or her minimum wage despite reducing it below the statutory
minimum. Id. § 531.32(a). Such expenses, the regulation explains, “must be
something like board or lodging.” Id. By contrast, it continues, they cannot
include transportation costs where those costs are “incident of and necessary to
the employment.” Id.
The majority opinion does not challenge the validity or reasonableness of
these DOL regulations. Therefore, according to the Supreme Court’s cases, we
must accept the DOL’s regulations as legally binding and then consider the
DOL’s interpretations of them. Because the agency’s interpretations are
creatures of its own regulations, the DOL’s interpretations of them are, under
Supreme Court jurisprudence, controlling unless plainly erroneous or
inconsistent with the regulations being interpreted. See Long Island Care at
Home, 551 U.S. at 171 (citing Auer, 519 U.S. at 461).
For nearly fifty years, the DOL has interpreted its regulations pertinent to
this case to mean that employers must bear the visa, transportation and
recruitment costs incidental to their hiring of temporary foreign guest workers,
and that they must reimburse these costs to workers whenever the employer’s
failure to do so would effectively reduce the employee’s wage below the statutory
minium in the first pay period.5 Because the majority opinion contends
incorrectly that the DOL did not interpret its regulations to require
reimbursement of employees for any such costs prior to 1994, a detailed
examination of the agency’s interpretations is necessary.6 Starting on May 11,
5
While the minimum wage requirements of the FLSA must be satisfied in each pay
period, only the first pay periods of the Hotel Workers are relevant here because their out of
pocket visa, transportation and recruitment costs were expended prior to the commencement
of their employment.
6
Majority Op. 11-12 & 11 n.9.
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1960, DOL opinion letters and handbooks have consistently held that, in the
language of the regulations, guest workers’ transportation costs from the point
of hire to the place of employment were for the benefit of the employer as they
were “incidental to the recruitment program[s]”; thus, they could not be properly
considered as a “part of wages.” Wage-Hour Opinion Letter, dated May 11, 1960.7
A letter issued on September 26, 1977, reiterated this interpretation of the
regulations, explaining that transportation costs must be paid by the employer
because they were “regarded as part of the employer’s recruitment cost, which
must be borne by the employer.” Wage-Hour Opinion Letter, dated Sept. 26, 1977
(emphasis added). Moreover, a letter from November 28, 1986, stated that “an
employee who pays his or her own transportation must be reimbursed to the
7
See also Wage-Hour Opinion Letter No. 937, ¶ 66-69 CCH-WH ¶ 30,949, dated Feb.
4, 1969 (“[B]ecause the cost of transportation to and from a work-site was normally regarded
as part of the employer’s recruitment cost, it could not be deducted from employees’ wages, if
the result would be to reduce the wages below the minimum required by either the Service
Contract Act or the Fair Labor Standards Act.”); Wage-Hour Opinion Letter No. 1139, ¶ 69-73,
CCH-WH ¶30,709, dated Nov. 10, 1970 (“The cost of transporting employees to and from the
point of hire would not properly be computed as part of individual employees wages for either
‘direct’ or ‘indirect’ employees as such expense is a cost incidental to an employer’s recruitment
program which should be borne by the employer. Moreover, withholding of such transportation
costs could not be legally made to the extent that they reduce wages below statutorily required
minimum wages or overtime compensation. FLSA, Section 3(m) and Regs., Section 531.36 and
.37.”); Wage-Hour Opinion Letter, dated Sept. 26, 1977 (stating the same principle); Wage-
Hour Opinion Letter, dated Nov. 28, 1986 (“It remains our position that where, as here,
migrant workers are hired in Puerto Rico for employment elsewhere, no deduction that cuts
into the minimum wage may be made for transportation of migrant workers from the point
of hire and return to that point. The rationale for this position is that transportation costs
incurred in this connection are deemed to be primarily for the benefit of the employer.”); U.S.
Dep’t of Labor, Wage-Hour Field Operations Handbook, ¶ 30c13(e) (1988) (stating the same
principle); Wage-Hour Opinion Letter No. 531, 1990 WL 712744, dated June 27, 1990 (“Under
the FLSA, it has always been the position of the Department of Labor that no deduction, that
cuts into the minimum wage, may be made for transportation of workers from, the point of
hire and return to that point. This is so, because such transportation costs incurred in this
connection are deemed to be primarily for the benefit of the employer (29 CFR Part
531.32(c)).”); Wage-Hour Opinion Letter dated May 10, 1996 (“The Department’s current policy
remains that worker-incurred transportation costs from the point of remote hire to the
worksite are primarily for the benefit of the employer.”).
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extent the wages received the first week of employment less the transportation
costs total less than the minimum wage for all hours worked”; the letter thereby
made clear that the DOL interpretations do not solely address wage deductions,
but also establish a reimbursement requirement. Wage-Hour Opinion Letter,
dated Nov. 28, 1986 (emphasis added). See also Wage-Hour Opinion Letter, dated
May 10, 1996 (“It is also the Department’s policy that employees remotely hired
under the H-2A program may not be required to bear the cost of transportation
to the worksite to the extent that such expenses infringe on the employee’s
receipt of the FLSA minimum wage.”). These same interpretations were in place
at the time the Hotel Workers were hired and thus when their FLSA rights were
violated in their first pay periods. Letter from Kristine A. Iverson, Assistant Sec’y
for Cong. & Intergovernmental Affairs, U.S. Dep’t of Labor, to Senator John W.
Warner (May 30, 2001) (“Let me first summarize the [DOL’s] existing policy with
regard to enforcing the general [FLSA] interpretation on worker-incurred
transportation costs. Employers are liable for worker-incurred transportation
costs for remotely-hired workers from their point of hire to the employer’s
worksite.”). Thus, contrary to the majority’s assertion, a careful reading of the
DOL’s prior interpretations reveals that (1) well before 1994, in fact, as early as
1986, the DOL interpreted its regulations to require reimbursement of expenses
that were primarily for the benefit of the employer because they reduced the
employee’s wage below the statutory minimum; and (2) as early as 1977, the DOL
regarded travel costs as part of the employer’s “recruitment costs,” which must
be borne by the employer. Therefore, historically, and at the time this case arose,
the DOL interpreted its regulations to require the employer to reimburse foreign
temporary workers their recruitment-related costs.
As recently set forth by the DOL in the 2009-2 Field Assistance Bulletin
issued by the United States Department of Labor, Employment Standards
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Administration, Wage and Hour Division, the DOL stated that its consistent,
long-lived interpretations of its regulations, commencing in 1960, are the same
as the DOL’s current and prevailing interpretation of the regulations in 2009. In
its Bulletin’s interpretation, the DOL reads the pertinent regulations, which have
not been changed since 1967 in any relevant sense, to require employers to
reimburse H-2B employees for their inbound transportation, visa and
recruitment costs.8 The Bulletin explains that this has always been the DOL’s
interpretation of the relevant regulations,9 except for a short-lived interpretation
by the DOL issued in December 2008.10 That single inconsistent interpretation
8
Wage and Hour Division, U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2009-2
(2009), available at http://www.dol.gov/whd/FieldBulletins/FieldAssistanceBulletin
2009_2.htm. The Bulletin states: “Accordingly, in the context of the H-2B temporary
nonimmigrant visa program, we conclude that such travel and visa costs are for the primary
benefit of the employer. Therefore, the employer must reimburse those costs in the first
workweek to the extent that they reduce the employee’s wage below the minimum wage.” Id.
at 12 (footnote omitted). “[U]nder both the visa program regulations and the FLSA, we believe
that employers are responsible for paying the fees of any recruiters they retain to recruit
foreign workers and provide access to the job opportunity.” Id. “Whenever the employer is
found to be the primary beneficiary, the employer must reimburse such expenses if the failure
to do so would bring the employee’s wage below the minimum wage.” Id. at 9 n.3.
9
The Bulletin states: “Over a period of 30 years beginning in 1960, Wage and Hour
issued a series of opinion letters consistently concluding that the cost of transporting remotely
hired temporary employees to and from the point of hire is a cost that must be borne by the
employer, as a cost incidental to the employer’s recruitment program, because the
transportation is primarily for the employer’s benefit; therefore, such transportation costs
could not reduce the employees’ wages below the required minimum wage.” Id. at 3.
Emphasizing that its prior interpretations required reimbursement, as well as prevented
deduction, of such costs, the Bulletin also explains that “[i]n a letter dated May 10, 1996, Wage
and Hour clarified that its ‘policy remains that worker-incurred transportation costs from the
point of remote hire to the worksite are primarily for the benefit of the employer.’” Id. at 4.
10
The Bulletin also explicitly disagrees with the second panel opinion in this case,
which, like the instant majority, had held that the FLSA does not require employers to
reimburse H-2B employees for their transportation and related costs. The Bulletin states: “We
thus disagree with the Fifth Circuit’s recent decision in Castellanos-Contreras [v. Decatur
Hotels, LLC] holding that the FLSA does not require employers to reimburse H-2B employees
for their transportation and related fees. [576 F.3d 274 (5th Cir. 2009).] The court concluded
that, because the FLSA kick-back regulation does not specifically address transportation, visa
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was issued on December 19, 2008, but was withdrawn 98 days later, on March
26, 2009.11 See Labor Certification Process and Enforcement for Temporary
Employment in Occupations Other than Agriculture or Registered Nursing in the
United States (H-2B Workers) and Other Technical Changes, 73 Fed. Reg. 78020,
and recruitment expenses and the Department of Homeland Security and Department of State
regulations do not require employers to pay such expenses, they are not employers’ business
expenses. [Id.] The court declined to follow Arriaga [v. Florida Pacific Farms, L.L.C., 305 F.3d
1228 (11th Cir. 2002)] both because that decision involved H-2A [workers], instead of H-2B
[workers], and because it relied upon section 3(m) [of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. § 203(m)] and the
‘incident of and necessary to’ standard in § 531.32 instead of § 531.35 (the kick-back
regulation). The court also stated that the fact that the 2009 H-2B regulations newly require
employers to forbid their recruiters from charging fees to employees suggests that such fees
were not previously an employer expense. We believe that the Arriaga court correctly relied
upon the section 3(m) principle—that an employer may take credit only for a facility that is
for the employee’s primary benefit and may not require an employee to bear an employer
business expense if that will reduce the employee’s pay below the minimum wage—as that
principle is interpreted in both § 531.32 and § 531.35 (indeed, § 531.35 contains a
cross-reference to § 531.32). The fact that § 531.35 does not specifically address transportation,
visa and recruitment fees for temporary foreign workers is irrelevant to the analysis. The
regulation sets forth the general prohibition against kick-backs and has one example relating
to tools of the trade; that does not indicate that kick-backs for other employer expenses are
permissible. The Castellanos-Contreras decision is, of course, binding precedent in the Fifth
Circuit.” Id. at 11 n.5. This statement does not deprive the DOL’s interpretation of its
controlling force. As the Supreme said in Long Island Care at Home, “[w]e have no reason . .
. to suspect that [this] interpretation is merely a post hoc rationalizatio[n] of past agency
action, or that it does not reflect the agency’s fair and considered judgment on the matter in
question. Where, as here, an agency’s course of action indicates that the interpretation of its
own regulation reflects its considered views . . . we have accepted that interpretation as the
agency’s own, even if the agency set those views forth” in response to litigation and decisions
in the lower courts. 551 U.S. at 171 (third and fourth alteration in original) (quoting Auer, 519
U.S. at 462) (quotation marks omitted).
11
“The [December 19, 2008] preamble [interpretation] inaccurately characterized these
expenses as ‘relocation’ costs when in fact the expenses are costs incurred as a result of travel
away from the employee’s foreign home for temporary employment, not a change in the
employee’s domicile for permanent employment. Moreover, this situation involves the
employer’s assertion, and the Department of Labor’s certification, that there are not sufficient
U.S. workers available to perform the work. After weighing all the factors relevant to
transportation and other costs incident to temporary employment under the H-2B program,
we believe that the employer is the primary beneficiary of the temporary employee’s travel and
immigration-related costs.” Field Assistance Bulletin at 7.
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78039-78041 (Dec. 19, 2008) (containing the 2008 interpretation); Withdrawal of
Interpretation of the Fair Labor Standards Act Concerning Relocation Expenses
Incurred by H-2A and H-2B Workers, 74 Fed. Reg. 13261 (Mar. 26, 2009).
What is more, the Secretary of Labor, in an amicus brief filed in this case
with our permission, interprets the DOL regulations at issue here as having
always meant (except for the brief three-month period between December 2008
and March 2009) that transportation and visa fees are an incident of and
necessary to H-2B employment, requiring employers to repay employees for
advancing those costs, if failure to do so would reduce an employee’s pay below
the national minimum wage floor.12 The Secretary concludes,
Thus, but for a brief three-month period, the Department has
expressed a consistent interpretation of the requirements of the
FLSA for some 50 years. The Department’s interpretation, as
manifested by its extensively-supported Field Assistance Bulletin
setting forth the application of its longstanding interpretation of the
FLSA in the particular H-2B context, is entitled to substantial
deference.13
The Secretary states that the DOL does not have sufficient facts in this case to
express a view regarding whether Decatur ultimately must reimburse the Hotel
Workers for their outlay of recruitment fees.14 However, “the Secretary notes that
the December 2008 H-2B final rule [which is distinct from the withdrawn
preamble] prohibits employers and their agents from seeking or receiving
payment for recruitment costs and requires employers contractually to forbid
their foreign labor contractors or recruiters from seeking or receiving payments
12
See En Banc Brief for the Sec’y of Labor as Amicus Curiae in Support of Plaintiffs-
Appellees at 20, 24, 2010 WL 3049082.
13
Id. at 24.
14
Id. at 25 n.8.
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from prospective employees.”15 In this connection, the Secretary also notes that
the preamble to that final rule “states that requiring employers to incur such
costs is reasonable because a recruiter is essential to the securing of such
workers.”16 Finally, the Secretary concludes that “an employer would be
responsible for paying for ‘de facto recruitment fees charged for access to the H-
2A program,’”17 and that “[s]imilarly, under the FLSA, the employer is the
primary beneficiary of the recruiter fees when the employer has retained a
recruiter to locate foreign workers and effectively limits the job opportunity only
to workers using that particular recruiter.”18 Therefore, the Secretary’s amicus
brief is an immediate and case-specific interpretation of the DOL’s regulations
that the transportation, visa and recruitment expenses alleged by the plaintiffs
to have been required of them were primarily for the benefit of Decatur Hotels
and thus must be reimbursed if they reduce the plaintiffs’ wage below the
statutory minimum.
“[T]he Secretary’s interpretation comes to us in the form of a legal brief; but
that does not, in the circumstances of this case, make it unworthy of deference.”
Auer, 519 U.S. at 462. See also Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 171
(“Where, as here, an agency’s course of action indicates that the interpretation
15
Id. (citing 20 C.F.R. § 655.22(g)(2), (j)).
16
Id. (citing Labor Certification Process and Enforcement for Temporary Employment
in Occupations Other than Agriculture or Registered Nursing in the United States (H-2B
Workers) and Other Technical Changes, 73 Fed. Reg. 78020, 78037 (Dec. 19, 2008)).
17
Id. (quoting Temporary Agricultural Employment of H-2A Aliens in the United
States, 75 Fed. Reg. 6884, 6925 (Feb. 12, 2010)).
18
Id. (citing Rivera v. Brickman Group, Ltd., Civ. No. 05-1518, 2008 WL 81570, at *13-
14 (E.D. Pa. Jan. 7, 2008) (unpublished); Morales-Arcadio v. Shannorn Produce Farms, Inc.,
No. 605CV062, 2007 WL 2106188, at *14 (S.D. Ga. July 18, 2007) (unpublished)).
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of its own regulation reflects its considered views—the Department has clearly
struggled with the third-party-employment question since at least 1993—we have
accepted that interpretation as the agency’s own, even if the agency set those
views forth in a legal brief.”). “The Secretary’s position is in no sense a ‘post hoc
rationalizatio[n]’ advanced by an agency seeking to defend past agency action
against attack.” Auer, 519 U.S. at 462 (alteration in original) (quoting Bowen v.
Georgetown Univ. Hosp., 488 U.S. 204, 212 (1988)). “There is simply no reason to
suspect that the interpretation does not reflect the agency’s fair and considered
judgment on the matter in question.” Id.
The majority opinion does not appear to appreciate the significance of the
Secretary’s amicus brief, for it seems to follow its own rule that FLSA regulations
are to be narrowly construed against employees and that minimum wage
protections are to be withheld except as to employees plainly and unmistakably
within their terms and spirit. “But that is a rule governing judicial interpretation
of statutes and regulations, not a limitation on the Secretary’s power to resolve
ambiguities in his own regulations. A rule requiring the Secretary to construe his
own regulations narrowly would make little sense, since he is free to write the
regulations as broadly as he wishes, subject only to the limits imposed by the
statute.” Id. at 462-63.
Under the Secretary’s and the DOL’s legally binding interpretations of the
DOL’s regulations, Decatur must bear the visa, transportation and recruitment
costs that, under the alleged facts, were necessarily incurred in temporarily
hiring the foreign Hotel Workers to work in their New Orleans hotels in 2005 and
2006. Further, under the DOL’s controlling view of the regulations, Decatur was
obligated to reimburse the Hotel Workers the sums that each advanced to pay
these necessary expenses; Decatur’s failure to do so within each foreign worker’s
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first pay period caused it to pay the Hotel Workers sub-minimum wages in
violation of the FLSA. As the DOL has explained, the visa, transportation and
recruitment costs were incidental to and primarily of benefit to Decatur’s
business. Although the temporary foreign workers, of course, received some
benefit from their employment, under the DOL’s interpretation of its regulations,
they were not the primary beneficiaries of Decatur’s foreign worker program
because they were visaed servants of Decatur while in the United States and
legally bound to return to their foreign nations after their temporary
employment. Thus, the majority opinion, by following its own erroneous view of
the DOL’s regulations rather than the Secretary’s or the DOL’s interpretations
of them, reaches the legally opposite and clearly wrong conclusion that the FLSA
can never afford the Hotel Workers, or any foreign temporary workers in their
situation, any relief or compensation for having been made to absorb the visa,
transportation and recruitment costs necessary to Decatur’s foreign labor
recruitment venture.
The Secretary’s interpretation of other DOL regulations pertaining to
recruitment fees paid by temporary foreign workers under the H-2B and H-2A
programs further counsels against denying the Hotel Workers’ claim for
reimbursement of such expenses as a matter of law. The Secretary stated in her
amicus brief that under these regulations there is at least one scenario in which
the Hotel Workers could prevail, viz., by showing that Decatur authorized or
ratified foreign recruiters’ actions in charging foreign workers substantial fees as
a condition of employment by Decatur. In the district court, the Hotel Workers
filed declarations asserting that they were charged fees by recruiters as a
precondition of their employment by Decatur. See Declaration of Rodolfo Antonio
Valdez-Baez (Recruiters provided Valdez-Baez a contract to work for Decatur,
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pre-signed by a Decatur employee, and informed him that if he wanted the job he
would have to pay them $1800 as part of “the cost of the program to be able to go
and work for the Defendants.” His declaration goes on “I understood that the
[recruitment agency] was an agency utilized by Defendants for the recruitment
of workers like me to work for them with H-2B visas.”); Declaration of Oscar
Ricardo Deheza-Ortega (stating very similar facts); Declaration of Daniel
Castellanos-Contreras (stating that his recruiter told him “that in order to obtain
an H-2B visa and this job with the Defendants, I had to pay all of the expenses
of the program” and that the recruiter charged him a fee); Declaration of
Francisco Sotelo-Aparicio (stating very similar facts). Moreover, they produced
a contract between a subdivision of the defendants-employers’ domestic recruiting
firm and the defendants-employers stating that the subdivision agreed “to act as
the authorized agent on Client’s [the defendants-employers] behalf to prepare
and submit the required documents to petition for temporary labor from outside
the United States under the H2B [sic] labor certification process.” The Hotel
Workers also produced evidence showing that the defendants-employers worked
closely with those recruiters to provide necessary job-related information and
prepare the H-2B applications. The district court took as undisputed that the
foreign recruiters were “sub-contract[ors]” of the defendants-employers’ domestic
recruiting firm. Castellanos-Contreras v. Decatur Hotels, L.L.C., 488 F. Supp. 2d
565, 567 (E.D. La.), amended in part by Castellanos-Contreras v. Decatur Hotels,
L.L.C., No. 06-4340, 2007 WL 6867035 (E.D. La. July 19, 2007) (unpublished).
The district court was never called upon to evaluate the credibility of the
plaintiffs’ declarations or attempt to resolve the obvious dispute between the
parties over whether the recruiters acted as the defendants-employers’ agents in
charging the Hotel Workers recruiters’ fees.
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Therefore, no party, nor this court, has sufficient knowledge to decide
whether, under the Secretary’s interpretation of these regulations, Decatur owes
reimbursements to the Hotel Workers for foreign recruitment costs. A proper
reading of the district court’s record and decision clearly shows that the facts
surrounding the charging and payment of recruitment fees in this case were very
much in dispute, undecided and subject to further and ongoing discovery when
the district court certified only the threshold legal issue of FLSA coverage vel non
to this court. Thus, the majority opinion manifestly errs in precluding the Hotel
Workers from any possibility of recovering from Decatur for the fees they paid the
recruiters in their foreign countries. Only by applying its own erroneous view of
the DOL’s regulations, instead of the Secretary’s or the DOL’s, or by assuming
or reading into the record undisputed facts that simply are not there, or both, can
the majority opinion reach its clearly incorrect conclusion.
Because the majority uses its own eccentric methodology, rather than that
prescribed by the Supreme Court, it reaches erroneous conclusions, which it in
turn uses as incorrect premises in support of the majority opinion.
First, the majority assumes that an H-2B foreign temporary worker may
not recover from his or her employer for visa, transportation and recruitment
costs, unless the FLSA and the DOL’s regulations expressly and specifically
authorize such recovery. Because “[n]o statute or regulation expressly states that
inbound travel expenses must be advanced or reimbursed by an employer of an
H-2B worker”19 the majority concludes, “this lack of law would seem to end the
matter as to both the travel and visa expenses.”20 As noted above, however, the
19
Majority Op. 8.
20
Id. at 9.
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Supreme Court has not confined the DOL to such a literal or wooden
approach in its regulations interpreting the FLSA. “When an agency fills [an
explicit or implicit statutory] gap reasonably, and in accordance with other
applicable (e.g., procedural) requirements, the courts must accept the result as
legally binding.” Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 165 (quotations marks
and citations omitted).
Second, the majority opinion similarly ignores the DOL’s interpretation and
the plain words of the regulation in reading 29 C.F.R. § 531.35. The majority
concludes that for a cost to be “primarily for the benefit of the employer” under
that regulation, it must fall literally within the “tools of the trade” term.21
However, the DOL reasonably, and therefore permissibly, reads its regulation as
using “tools of the trade” as merely an “example” of the kind of costs that are “for
the employer’s benefit.”22 The plain meaning of the regulation is the same.23
Here, the DOL’s interpretation of its regulation falls well within the principle
21
Majority Op. 9-10.
22
See, e.g., Wage and Hour Division, U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Field Assistance Bulletin No.
2009-2, at 11 n.5 (2009), available at http://www.dol.gov/whd/FieldBulletins/
FieldAssistanceBulletin2009_2.htm (“The fact that §531.31 does not specifically address
transportation, visa and recruitment fees for temporary foreign workers is irrelevant to the
analysis. The regulation sets forth the general prohibition against kick-backs and has one
example relating to tools of the trade; that does not indicate that kick-backs for other employer
expenses are permissible.”); En Banc Brief for the Sec’y of Labor as Amicus Curiae in Support
of Plaintiffs-Appellees at 5, 2010 WL 3049082 (“The regulations further state that expenses
such as tools of the trade . . . are primarily for the convenience of the employer and, therefore,
may not be included as wages.”).
23
As 29 C.F.R. § 531.35, in pertinent part, plainly states: “For example, if it is a
requirement of the employer that the employee must provide tools of the trade which will be
used in or are specifically required for the performance of the employer’s particular work,
there would be a violation of the Act in any workweek when the cost of such tools purchased
by the employee cuts into the minimum or overtime wages required to be paid him under the
Act.”
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that an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations is “‘controlling’ unless
‘plainly erroneous or inconsistent with’ the regulations being interpreted.” Long
Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 171 (other quotation marks omitted) (quoting
Auer, 519 U.S. at 416, in turn quoting Robertson, 490 U.S. at 359, in turn quoting
Bowles, 325 U.S. at 414).
Third, the majority opinion refuses to apply the DOL’s interpretations of
its valid regulations under the FLSA for the inaccurate reason that the
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) statutes and regulations require
employers to pay H-2A workers’ inbound transportation costs, but do not speak
to H-2B workers’ inbound transportation or visa expenses. This reasoning fails
to recognize that the FLSA is a separate statutory scheme with distinct
regulations that must be given their own meaning and effect. The FLSA and its
regulations represent a self-sufficient set of rules meant to prevent “labor
conditions detrimental to the maintenance of the minimum standard of living
necessary for health, efficiency, and general well-being of workers.” 29 U.S.C.
§ 202. See Barrentine v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys., Inc., 450 U.S. 728, 739 (1981)
(“The principal congressional purpose in enacting the Fair Labor Standards Act
of 1938 was to protect all covered workers from substandard wages and
oppressive working hours, ‘labor conditions [that are] detrimental to the
maintenance of the minimum standard of living necessary for health, efficiency
and general well-being of workers.’” (alteration in original) (quoting 29 U.S.C. §
202(a))). That the DOL’s regulations under the FLSA, particularly regarding
whether the minimum wage requirement is satisfied, are not repeated in other
statutes or regulations does not detract from the regulations’ binding legal effect.
In Powell v. United States Cartridge Co., the Supreme Court stated that to the
extent the FLSA’s requirements overlap with those of another statute, we must
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apply the provisions of both so long as “compliance with one [does not] make[] it
impossible to comply with the other.” 339 U.S. 497, 519 (1950). Here, there has
been no showing that it would be impossible for Decatur to comply with both the
INA and its regulations and the FLSA’s minimum wage requirements. See
Arriaga v. Fla. Pac. Farms, L.L.C., 305 F.3d 1228, 1235 (11th Cir. 2002) (“[T]he
Supreme Court has stated that when employment statutes overlap, we are to
apply the higher requirement unless the regulations are mutually exclusive.
There has been no demonstration here that it is impossible to simultaneously
comply with both” guest worker and FLSA regulations. (citation and footnote
omitted)).
Lest there be any doubt that the FLSA’s minimum wage requirements
control, the majority’s own authority states as much. The cited immigration and
nationality regulations, when describing the H-2B visa program, state that “an
employer subject to the FLSA may not make deductions that would violate the
FLSA.” 20 C.F.R. § 655.22(g)(1). See, e.g., Id. § 655.17(g) (stating with regard to
H-2B workers that “[t]he wage offer, or in the event that there are multiple wage
offers, the range of applicable wage offers . . . must not be less than the highest
of the prevailing wage, the Federal minimum wage, State minimum wage, or
local minimum wage applicable throughout the duration of the certified H-2B
employment”).
Fourth, the majority opinion is simply mistaken in stating that we owe no
deference to the DOL’s interpretations of its regulations in its amicus brief and
its 2009-2 Field Assistance Bulletin because they were filed or issued “after the
events in question.”24 Both the Bulletin and the amicus brief demonstrate the
24
Majority Op. 11.
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agency’s considered views and interpretations of its own regulations—the DOL
has clearly studied and interpreted its regulations on the question of
reimbursement of temporary foreign workers’ visa, transportation and
recruitment expenses since at least 1960. In such circumstances, the Supreme
Court has accepted and adopted that agency’s interpretation, even when the
interpretation is contained in documents drafted after the case at bar was filed.
See Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 171 (citing Auer, 519 U.S. at 462).
Similarly, in the 2009-2 Field Assistance Bulletin, the DOL sets forth
comprehensively the DOL’s past, present and prevailing interpretation of its
regulations: that employers are responsible for paying the transportation,
recruitment and visa expenses of H-2B employees where shifting these costs to
employees would effectively bring their wages below the FLSA minimum wage
in their first work week of employment.
The Bulletin acknowledges that the DOL briefly advanced the opposite
interpretation, for 98 days beginning December 19, 2008, but notes that this
inconsistent interpretation was withdrawn on March 26, 2009.25 The Bulletin
clarifies that the DOL reaffirms its past long-standing interpretation as its
prevailing interpretation and explains why it concludes that the employer, not
the employee, is the primary beneficiary of visa and transportation costs
necessary and incidental to the employment of temporary foreign workers.26 As
for the responsibility for foreign recruiter fees in obtaining such workers, the
Bulletin provides:
25
Wage and Hour Division, U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2009-2,
at 5-6 (2009), available at http://www.dol.gov/whd/FieldBulletins/FieldAssistanceBulletin
2009_2.htm.
26
Id. at 9-12.
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“The fact that a recruiter is essential to the securing of such a worker
does not dissuade the Department from requiring the employer to
bear the expense; rather, it underscores the classification of that
payment as a cost allocable to the employer.” 73 Fed. Reg. at 78037.
The Department continues to believe that employees should not have
to pay a recruiter for access to this visa program, because the
employer is the primary beneficiary of these costs. Thus, under both
the visa program regulations and the FLSA, we believe that
employers are responsible for paying the fees of any recruiters they
retain to recruit foreign workers and provide access to the job
opportunity. See Rivera v. Brickman Group, Ltd., 2008 WL 81570, at
**13-14 (E.D. Pa. 2008) (because the H-2B employer required the
employees to use a particular recruitment company, it was required
to reimburse them where the recruiter fees reduced their wages below
the FLSA minimum).27
Thus, as the Bulletin states, under the DOL’s interpretation of its
regulations—prevailing both (i) when the plaintiffs’ FLSA actions accrued in 2005
and 2006 and (ii) at the time this court’s en banc decision is rendered in
2010—employers are required to bear the visa, transportation and recruitment
costs of foreign temporary workers, if shifting those costs to employees effectively
reduces their wages below the FLSA minimum wage in their first work week of
employment. Therefore, application of that long-standing DOL interpretation to
the present case would be neither retroactive nor improper. Instead, the majority's
refusal to defer to the DOL’s prevailing interpretation, in effect, supplants it with
the withdrawn 98 day aberrant interpretation that has no relevance to this case.
The agency’s interpretation—in its Bulletin and amicus brief— of the “regulations
falls well within the principle that an agency’s interpretation of its own
regulations is ‘controlling' unless ‘plainly erroneous or inconsistent with’ the
regulations being interpreted.” Long Island Care at Home, 551 U.S. at 171 (other
27
Id. at 12.
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quotation marks omitted) (quoting Auer, 519 US at 461, in turn quoting
Robertson, 490 U.S. at 359, in turn quoting Bowles, 325 U.S. at 414).28
Fifth, the majority opinion’s efforts to distinguish the underlying principles
that govern this case from those applied by the Eleventh Circuit in Arriaga v.
Florida Pacific Farms, L.L.C., 305 F.3d 1228 (11th Cir. 2002), are superficial and
without merit. It is true that the Eleventh Circuit performed a direct plain
language analysis of 29 C.F.R. §§ 531.32, 531.35, rather than a deferential reading
of the DOL’s interpretations as I have applied here, following the Supreme Court’s
cases. However, the Arriaga court’s interpretations of the regulations are almost
identical to the DOL’s interpretations. The Eleventh Circuit concluded that “it is
28
The majority opinion’s efforts to suggest a retroactivity problem either in the
application of the DOL’s interpretation in the Bulletin or its interpretation in the its amicus
brief are without merit. See Majority Op. 11 & n.9. This case does not call upon us to decide
an arguable retroactivity issue. Under 29 U.S.C. § 255, an employee’s right of action against
his employer for underpayment of minimum wages accrues upon the employer’s violation of
the FLSA. Cf. Unexcelled Chem. Corp. v. United States, 345 U.S. 59, 65 (1953) (“We conclude
that ‘the cause of action accrued’ . . . when the minors were employed.”); Riley v. Dow Corning
Corp., 767 F. Supp. 735, 743 (N.D.N.C. 1991) (stating a plaintiff’s claim under the FLSA
accrued when he was denied his proper wage), aff’d, 986 F.2d 1414 (4th Cir. 1993)
(unpublished table decision). Thus, the Hotel Workers’ rights of action against Decatur
because of its alleged FLSA violations accrued in 2005 and early 2006; and the workers timely
brought this suit on August 16, 2006. The DOL’s interpretation of the regulations that foreign
temporary workers’ visa, transportation and recruitment costs were for the employer’s benefit
was the same then as it is now. Thus, we are not required to choose between two different
interpretations of the regulations in this case. Moreover, as noted above, the DOL’s decisions
to, at times, not enforce its interpretations of its regulations, in no way altered the meaning
or import of those interpretations, which created a right for the Hotel Workers to have the
expenses at issue in this appeal reimbursed. 29 C.F.R. § 790.18(a). The cases cited by the
majority opinion, Bradley v. School Board of Richmond, 416 U.S. 696, 715-17 (1974) (holding
that “an appellate court must apply the law in effect at the time it renders its decision,” unless
such application would work a manifest injustice or there is statutory direction or legislative
history to the contrary), and Landgraf v. USI Film Products., 511 U.S. 244, 286 (1988) (holding
that provisions of the Civil Rights Act of 1991 creating a right to recover compensatory and
punitive damages for certain violations of Title VII, and providing for trial by jury if such
damages are claimed, did not apply to Title VII case pending on appeal when the statute was
enacted on retroactivity grounds), are inapposite to this case.
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apparent that the line is drawn” between expenses that are for the benefit of the
employer and those that can be charged to the employee “based on whether the
employment-related cost[s] [are] a personal expense that would arise as a normal
living expense.” Arriaga, 305 F.3d at 1243. “Uniforms provide an illustration of
this dividing line. ‘Charges for rental uniforms,’ when required by the
employment, are considered to be primarily for the benefit of the employer[,] 29
C.F.R. § 531.32(c)[,]” because they would not arise from normal living. Id. at 1243-
44. By contrast, “if the employer merely prescribes a general type of ordinary basic
street clothing to be worn while working and permits variations in details of
dress[,] the garments chosen would not be considered uniforms . . . and [are]
therefore not primarily for the benefit of the employer” as their expense would be
analogous to a typical living expense. Id. at 1244 (citations omitted) (first
alteration in original) (quoting Ayres v. 127 Rest. Corp., 12 F. Supp. 2d 305, 310
(S.D.N.Y. 1998), in turn quoting U.S. Dep’t of Labor Wage & Hour Field
Operations Handbook § 30c12(f)) (quotation marks omitted).
In light of this plain language reading of the regulation, the Eleventh
Circuit held that foreign guest workers’ inbound “transportation cost[s] [are] ‘an
incident of and necessary to the employment,’” as their “employment necessitates
that one-time transportation costs be paid.” Arriaga, 305 F.3d at 1242 (quoting 29
C.F.R. § 531.32(a), (c)). Therefore, these costs must be borne by the employer. Id.
at 1242-43. Similarly, the “visa costs here were necessitated by” the employers’
use of the guest worker program. Id. at 1244. “By participating in the . . . program,
the [employers] created the need for these visa costs, which are not the type of
expense they are permitted to pass on to the” workers. Id.
The Eleventh Circuit did hold that the recruitment fees at issue in that case
did not need to be reimbursed. Arriaga, 305 F.3d at 1244-45. However, this was
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only “[b]ecause the principles of agency law d[id] not hold the [employers]
responsible for the recruitment fees.” Id. at 1245. Nonetheless, under the Eleventh
Circuit’s logic, had the recruiters been found to be the employers’ agents, as the
Hotel Workers in the instant case allege and adduce evidence to show, the court
would have held that recruitment costs also must be reimbursed. It would have
been an expense incidental to and incurred for the benefit of the employers.
The majority also would have us ignore the entirety of Arriaga because it
addresses H-2A rather than H-2B workers; “H-2A” denoting that the guest
workers at issue were involved in agricultural work, rather than non-agricultural
work for which H-2B visas are issued. 8 C.F.R. § 214.2(h)(1)(ii) (distinguishing H-
2A from H-2B workers based on whether they were performing “agricultural work
of a temporary or seasonal nature”). Yet this argument fails to recognize relevant
cases and contradictory facts. Specifically, the Eleventh Circuit has adopted and
applied Arriaga’s reasoning in the H-2B context as well. See Morante-Navarro v.
T&Y Pine Straw, Inc., 350 F.3d 1163, 1165-66 & n.2 (11th Cir. 2003). So have
several district courts. See Rosales v. Hispanic Employee Leasing Program, LLC,
No. 1:06-CV-877, 2008 WL 363479 (W.D. Mich. Feb. 11, 2008) (unpublished);
Rivera v. Brickman Group, Ltd., Civ. No. 05-1518, 2008 WL 81570 (E.D. Pa. Jan.
7, 2008) (unpublished); Recinos-Recinos v. Express Forestry Inc., No. Civ. A. 05-
1355, 2006 WL 197030, at *14 (E.D. La. Jan. 24, 2006) (unpublished). Further,
there is no reasoned basis on which to distinguish between H-2A and H-2B
workers. The H-2A/H-2B distinction is a relatively new one. The regulations at
issue were promulgated when the H-2A and H-2B programs were one and the
same. See 29 C.F.R. §§ 531.30, 531.32, 531.35; Glen M. Krebs, H-2B or Not To Be,
56-Jul Fed. Law. 62, 62 (2009). Therefore, Arriaga should be recognized as
pertinent precedent and the majority opinion should be understood as creating a
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circuit split without justification. Moreover, and perhaps most importantly, the
DOL has approved of Arriaga’s analysis of the regulations as being consistent
with its own, while criticizing the panel opinion in this case as being in conflict
with the regulations.29
Sixth, the majority incorrectly asserts that “[t]he first time the Department
specifically spoke to reimbursement in the context of alleged ‘kickbacks’ like those
at issue here was its announcement in 2008.” Majority Op. 12. As quoted above,
the DOL’s 1986 opinion letter stated that “an employee who pays his or her own
transportation must be reimbursed to the extent the wages received the first week
of employment less the transportation costs total less than the minimum wage for
all hours worked.” Wage-Hour Opinion Letter, dated Nov. 28, 1986 (emphasis
added). That is the precise circumstance presented in this case. The majority’s
statement that this letter speaks to deductions, not reimbursements, is belied by
the quoted language. Majority Op. 12 n.10. So is the majority’s contention that
this interpretation is limited to the specific facts presented in the opinion
letter—the interpretation does not refer only to the specific employees of the
employer in that case but to an employee generically. Majority Op. 12 n.10.30
29
Wage and Hour Division, U.S. Dep’t of Labor, Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2009-2,
at 9, 11 n.5 (2009), available at http://www.dol.gov/whd/FieldBulletins/
FieldAssistanceBulletin2009_2.htm.
30
The majority also argues the 1986 letter should be ignored because it was a “post hoc
rationalization” of the agency’s position, unworthy of deference under Auer. Majority Op. 12
n.10 (citing Auer, 519 U.S. at 462). It is unclear why the majority thinks this out-of-context
quotation from Auer is applicable to the 1986 letter. The language from Auer reflected the
Court’s concern with whether and when it should defer to an agency position adopted for the
purposes of the litigation at bar, not with providing deference to an agency position taken
decades before the present litigation was initiated. Auer, 519 U.S. at 462 (noting that the fear
of agency “post hoc rationalization” was in response to the Court possibly deferring to an
agency amicus brief submitted in the case at bar, not deferring to prior agency interpretations
(alteration omitted)). Moreover, the notion that the 1986 letter was developed in response to
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Moreover, the 1986 letter is merely a clear and accurate illustration of the
DOL’s consistent position regarding the meaning of the FLSA. Wage-Hour
Opinion Letter, dated Nov. 28, 1986. The regulation, 29 C.F.R. § 531.35,
promulgated in 1967, prohibits “kick-backs” from the employee to the employer
that reduce the employee’s wage below the statutory minimum. As cited above,
the DOL has also issued numerous other interpretations of the FLSA, all of which,
prior to 2008, are consistent with the 1986 opinion letter. The DOL’s amicus brief
to this court and its 2009 Field Assistance Bulletin state that the agency’s
interpretation of its regulations has been consistent except for the 98 day period
at the turn of 2008-2009; and these consistent interpretations are fully worthy of
deference under the Supreme Court's decisions.
To the extent that the majority means to suggest that these clear and
unequivocal agency interpretations should be disregarded because the DOL was
not, at times, “enforcing” its interpretations, Majority Op. 12, such an argument
is also erroneous. Auer requires us to give deference to an agency’s interpretations
litigation appears baseless. The citations in the letter are to a District Court for the District
of New Jersey judgment entered in October 1979, more than seven years before the letter was
written. See Wage-Hour Opinion Letter, dated Nov. 28, 1986 (citing Marshall v. Glassboro
Servs. Ass’n, Inc., No. 78-377, 1979 WL 1989 (D.N.J. Oct. 19, 1979)).
In a further effort to discredit the 1986 letter, the majority also falls back on some of
its earlier platitudes, arguing the letter should be disregarded because it addressed H-2A, not
H-2B, workers and it is “doubtful that even the most diligent employer could have readily
accessed” the letter to know his or her responsibilities and thus might “not know the amount”
he or she was required to pay the employees. Majority Op. 12 n.10. However, as described
above, the H-2A/H-2B distinction drawn by the majority is a false one, in no way supported
by the majority’s citations or analysis. Moreover, as already noted, an employer need not have
relied upon the letter to discern its employees’ rights to reimbursement for transportation, visa
and recruitment expenses, as there were numerous other interpretations and regulations
supporting employees’ rights to the reimbursements sought in the instant case. The majority’s
concern that the minimum wage might be difficult to calculate is of no moment. Majority Op.
12 n.10. The FLSA imposes a minimum wage requirement upon the defendants-employers and
it must be satisfied.
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of its regulations, not to its enforcement practices. See Long Island Care at Home,
551 U.S. at 171 (quoting Auer, 519 U.S. at 461). The DOL’s regulations, in place
since 1947, state that “administrative practices and enforcement policies differ
from . . . [the] decisions or views which the agency has set forth in its regulations,
orders, rulings, approvals, or interpretations.” 29 C.F.R. § 790.18(a). See also id.
§ 790.18(c) (“An administrative practice or enforcement policy may, under certain
circumstances be at variance with the agency’s current interpretation of the
law.”). Thus, that the DOL chose not to enforce certain regulations or
interpretations in particular cases or periods should in no way be understood as
altering the DOL’s interpretations of the regulations themselves. Id.
§ 790.18(a), (c). Enforcement is a discretionary agency action. See Massachusetts
v. EPA, 549 U.S. 497, 527 (2007) (“As we have repeated time and again, an agency
has broad discretion to choose how best to marshal its limited resources and
personnel to carry out its delegated responsibilities.”). Under the FLSA, these
plaintiffs have an independent right of action that is anchored in the statute’s
rights and responsibilities, as properly interpreted by the Department of Labor.
See 29 U.S.C. § 255.
Seventh, the majority contends that the Hotel Workers “proffered no
evidence to support the concept that Decatur required any recruitment fees to be
paid to the foreign recruiters or that it required the Workers to use these
recruiters to apply to Decatur.” This is not true. Even under the majority’s
incomplete and distorted view of the district court’s order, the majority recognizes
that the district court explicitly stated that additional discovery was required
before it could resolve any of the disputed issues of fact pertaining to Decatur’s
alleged liability for the reimbursement of visa, transportation and recruitment
costs. As demonstrated above, the plaintiffs introduced numerous declarations
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suggesting that the recruiters acted as the defendants’ agents and charged fees
for their recruitment services. Consequently, the majority errs here, in addition
to its errors discussed above, in failing to remand this case in order to allow the
district court to consider and decide this controverted factual issue.
For these reasons, I respectfully but vigorously dissent from the majority
opinion’s refusal to defer to the Secretary’s and DOL’s reasonable interpretations
of the agency’s own valid regulations under the FLSA and from the majority’s
order to the district court to enter a final judgment dismissing the plaintiffs’
claims for unpaid minimum wages without a trial on the merits.
III.
This court of appeals has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) to address
the issue of whether the FLSA applies to H-2B workers; it does not have
jurisdiction to address whether the hotels violated the FLSA, or whether the
hotels owe the workers reimbursement for transportation, visa or recruitment
expenses, because those issues are part of the merits of the case and are not
material to the order issued by the district court that simply held that the FLSA
applies to H-2B workers.
Section 1292(b) provides, in pertinent part:
When a district judge, in making in a civil action an order not
otherwise appealable under this section, shall be of the opinion that
such order involves a controlling question of law as to which there is
substantial ground for difference of opinion and that an immediate
appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate
termination of the litigation, he shall so state in writing in such order.
The Court of Appeals . . . may thereupon, in its discretion, permit an
appeal to be taken from such order, if application is made to it within
ten days after the entry of the order . . . .
28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
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Under § 1292(b), a court of appeals can “exercise jurisdiction over any
question that is included within the order that contains the controlling question
of law identified by the district court.” Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A. v. Calhoun,
516 U.S. 199, 204 (1996) (quoting Yamaha Motor Corp., U.S.A. v. Calhoun, 514
U.S. 1126 (1995)) (internal quotation marks omitted). But to be included within
the order, the question must at least be material to that order. See Note,
Interlocutory Appeals in the Federal Courts Under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), 88 Harv.
L. Rev. 607, 629 (1975) (stating that the “scope of review [includes] all issues
material to the order in question”), quoted in Yamaha, 516 U.S. at 205. As this
court succinctly put it in Adkinson v. International Harvester Co.: “An appeal
under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) is from the certified order of the district court, not from
any other orders that may have been entered in the case.” 975 F.2d 208, 211 n.4
(5th Cir. 1992) (citing United States v. Stanley, 483 U.S. 669, 677 (1987)). “Our
jurisdiction, although not confined to the precise question certified by the district
court, is confined to the particular order appealed from.” Id. (citing Stanley, 483
U.S. at 677). “In short, on a certified interlocutory appeal under section 1292(b),
we have jurisdiction to hear only questions that are material to the lower court’s
certified order.” Id. (citing United States v. Fleet Factors Corp., 901 F.2d 1550,
1554 n.2 (11th Cir. 1990)).
Here, the order issued by the district court simply holds that “H-2B
guestworkers are entitled to the protections of the FLSA,” Castellanos-Contreras
v. Decatur Hotels, L.L.C., 488 F. Supp. 2d 565, 566 (E.D. La.), amended in part by
Castellanos-Contreras v. Decatur Hotels, L.L.C., No. 06-4340, 2007 WL 6867035
(E.D. La. July 19, 2007) (unpublished)—that is, that the FLSA applies to H-2B
workers period. A fair and common-sense reading of the district court’s opinions
shows that this simple holding of law is all the district court judge intended, and
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all the defendants originally intended—that this court review and either affirm
or reverse on interlocutory appeal. No other reading of the district court’s opinions
makes any sense. The district judge said repeatedly that he was not deciding
whether the defendants had violated the FLSA, or whether the defendants owed
the workers reimbursement of any transportation, visa or recruitment expenses.
Id. at 572 n.5 (“[W]hether or not the Defendants have violated the FLSA is a
factual issue that is not appropriate for summary judgment.”); Castellanos-
Contreras, 2007 WL 6867035, at *2 (“[T]he Court . . . refus[es] to determine, as a
matter of law, whether or not the FLSA has been violated in this case . . . .”).
Further, the district court refused to stay further proceedings pending resolution
of this interlocutory appeal, but instead “allow[ed] discovery to proceed
uninhibited.” Castellanos-Contreras, 2007 WL 6867035, at *2. As an experienced
district court judge, he evidently anticipated that this court would affirm his order
that the FLSA applies to this case and that he would have to try the merits issues
of the case, including violations vel non, and, if there were violations,
reimbursements vel non. As a very competent trial judge, he would not have
certified or requested that we review issues that he had not yet tried or decided,
viz., whether the defendants had violated the FLSA and, if so, whether they owed
the plaintiffs reimbursements. His plain intention was to issue an order deciding
the “threshold legal issue in this case, namely whether the FLSA applies to
non-agricultural guestworkers brought to the United States under the H-2B
program,” 488 F. Supp. 2d at 567, and, if this court affirmed, to proceed to trial on
the merits. He did not intend to shirk his duty and allow this court to decide the
case on the merits, including violation and reimbursement issues; he merely
intended to have us resolve the threshold legal issue of FLSA applicability before
expending further significant judicial trial court resources.
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Because the order the district court certified for our review was only the
threshold legal ruling that the FLSA applies to H-2B workers, the questions of the
defendants’ alleged violations and reimbursement obligations plainly are not
material or even relevant to the certified threshold legal order. Once we decide
that the district court correctly held that the FLSA applies, that decision will
stand no matter what the district court ultimately decides in respect to whether
there were violations or whether reimbursements are due. Thus, these questions
going to the merits of this particular case are simply not material or relevant to
the threshold question of whether the FLSA applies to H-2B workers. Accordingly,
the violations and reimbursement issues are not material to the district court’s
certified order and are not properly before us. See Adkinson, 975 F.2d at 211 n.4.
Viewed in this light, the present case is ultimately a simple one in which the
certified order and the certified question are coterminous and virtually identical.
The order that the district court certified was that the FLSA applies to H-2B
workers; the question that the district court certified is whether the FLSA applies
to H-2B workers. However, even in more complicated cases in which the certified
order and the certified question are not closely similar, this court and others have
adhered to the same principle that courts of appeals have jurisdiction under
§ 1292(b) to hear only questions that are material to the district court’s certified
order.
For instance, in Link v. Mercedes-Benz of North America, Inc., the Third
Circuit refused to consider on § 1292(b) interlocutory appeal the issue of “whether
there may be separate juries utilized during the liability and damage phases of a
bifurcated trial” because the portion of the district court decision addressing that
question was not “definitive, effective, and in a posture capable of affirmance or
reversal.” 550 F.2d 860, 861, 863 (3d Cir. 1976) (en banc). The district court had
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opined about the inefficiencies inherent in a bifurcated trial and had contemplated
alternatives. Id. at 863. However, it had “entered no order directing separate
juries and whether it [would do so was] a matter of pure speculation” at the time
of the interlocutory appeal. Id. at 864. Therefore, the appellate court found that
deciding the question of separate juries would not only be improper under
§ 1292(b), but would be an unconstitutional exercise of its jurisdiction because its
judgment would be “an advisory opinion.” Id. at 864-65.
Here, all that has happened with this case is that the district court has
determined that the FLSA applies to H-2B foreign temporary workers. Therefore,
to reach an entirely distinct determination, not resolved by the district court, such
as whether the defendants are liable under the FLSA for the visa, transportation
and recruiter fee reimbursements sought by the plaintiffs, would be improper
under § 1292(b). That question is neither contained within, nor material to our
reviewing of the order appealed from deciding only that the FLSA applies to the
wages of H-2B foreign temporary workers.
Likewise, in Adkinson, our court recognized that the district court had
decided only one legal issue in its order denying summary judgment (namely,
“whether the Mississippi Supreme Court would apply principles of contribution
and indemnity to a breach of implied warranty of merchantability claim,” 975 F.2d
at 211-12), and therefore determined that the other issues the appellant sought
to raise on appeal (timely notification and proximate cause, id. at 211 n.4) were
“not material to the District Court’s order” and hence “not properly before us,” id.
at 211 n.4. The court in Adkinson followed the principle that “we have jurisdiction
to hear only questions that are material to the lower court’s certified order.” Id.
The questions that were “not properly before us” were not material to the question
the district court had decided: whether contribution and indemnity principles
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applied under Mississippi law had nothing to do with whether a party had given
timely notification or whether a party’s breach of warranty had proximately
caused harm to another party. Id. at 211-12 & n.4.
In the instant case, the issues of whether the defendants violated the FLSA
and whether they owe any reimbursements are just like the issues of notification
and proximate cause in Adkinson: They are not properly before us because they
are not material to the district court order from which this interlocutory appeal
was taken. The district court did not need to decide those subsidiary issues in
order to decide whether the FLSA has any application at all to this case, and the
judge explicitly and repeatedly wrote that he was deciding only whether the FLSA
applied. Just as in Adkinson, the additional issues the appellants seek to raise are
not properly before this court.
Again, in Withhart v. Otto Candies, L.L.C., 431 F.3d 840 (5th Cir. 2005), our
court recognized the “limited” nature of “[o]ur appellate jurisdiction under
§ 1292(b)” and did not review additional mixed questions of law and fact that went
beyond the “‘controlling question of law’” that the district court’s order had
decided. Id. at 841 (quoting 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) and Malbrough v. Crown Equip.
Corp., 392 F.3d 135, 136 (5th Cir. 2004)). The legal questions material to the
district court’s order were “whether general maritime law recognizes suits by
vessel owners for property damage caused by negligent seamen,” and if so,
“whether the Jones Act or the FELA precludes” such claims. Id. at 842-43. This
court therefore emphasized that it had jurisdiction to review “only” whether the
appellant could assert such a claim, and not whether the claim could succeed, i.e.,
whether the defendant seaman was liable. Id.
In this case, likewise, the district court decided a “controlling question of
law” (whether the FLSA applies to H-2B workers) in the order certified for
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interlocutory appeal; it expressly did not decide the mixed question of law and fact
concerning whether the defendants are actually liable for reimbursing visa,
transportation and recruitment costs to the plaintiffs under the FLSA. Just as in
Withhart, “our review is limited” to the certified order holding that the FLSA
applies to H-2B workers; we do not have jurisdiction to reach the subsequent,
immaterial questions concerning whether the defendants violated that law and
are liable for reimbursements.
“The manifest purpose of § 1292(b) is to support appeal from orders that
cannot otherwise be reviewed by final judgment appeal or interlocutory appeal
under some other provision of § 1292(b).” 16 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal
Practice and Procedure § 3929.1, at 400 (2d ed. 1996 & Supp. 2010). It is self-
evident that the purpose of § 1292(b) is not to undermine 28 U.S.C. § 1291’s
requirement of final judgment on the merits of a case before it may be appealed
of right. “The basic requirement for interlocutory appeal under § 1292(b) is that
the district court have made an order” that is not otherwise appealable, but has
“some concrete effect.” Id. § 3930, at 416-17. A district court’s mere speculation on
the consequences of one possible trial resolution of disputed factual issues is not
ripe for review under § 1292(b). See id.
No one can reasonably dispute that the district court has never tried the
merits of the present case, which include the issues of FLSA violations and
reimbursement vel non; that the judge in fact stated repeatedly they were not ripe
for trial; and that he therefore refused to stay the trial court proceedings and
allowed full discovery to proceed in preparation for trial. The majority opinion’s
argument that the district court somehow decided or issued an order on the merits
of the case is simply an unfounded assertion that is without merit. The only
concrete legal order made by the district court is the order that the FLSA applies
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to H-2B workers such as the plaintiffs in this case. That is the only order certified
by the district court to this court in the interlocutory appeal. Because no judge on
this court appears to disagree with the order that the FLSA applies to H-2B
workers, it is this court’s duty to affirm that order and to remand the case to the
district court for trial on the merits, including whether the defendants have
violated the FLSA and, if so, whether they owe reimbursements to the plaintiffs.
***
For these reasons, I respectfully but emphatically dissent.
54