Categories
News

Bobbit Receives AV Preeminent Rating

Attorney Jonathan Bobbitt has Achieved the AV Preeminent® Rating – the Highest Possible Rating from Martindale-Hubbell®

Bobbitt, an employment lawyer based in Brentwood, TN at the firm of Gilbert Russell McWherter, has earned the prestigious AV Preeminent® rating from Martindale-Hubbell®. Bobbitt joins fellow Gilbert Russell McWherter attorneys Justin Gilbert, Michael Russell, Brandon McWherter and Clint Scott in being recipients of this prestigious award.

The AV Preeminent Rating is Martindale-Hubbell’s highest possible rating for both ethical standards and legal ability, even after first achieving this rating in 1998.

For more than 130 years, lawyers have relied on the Martindale-Hubbell AV Preeminent® rating while searching for their own expert attorneys. Now anyone can make use of this trusted rating by looking up a lawyer’s rating on Lawyers.com or martindale.com. The Martindale-Hubbell® AV Preeminent® rating is the highest possible rating for an attorney for both ethical standards and legal ability. This rating represents the pinnacle of professional excellence. It is achieved only after an attorney has been reviewed and recommended by their peers – members of the bar and the judiciary. Congratulations go to Justin Gilbert, who has achieved the AV Preeminent® Rating from Martindale-Hubbell®.

Categories
FLSA Overtime/Wage & Hour

Warehouse Workers Not Entitled to Overtime for Security Screens

On December 9, 2014, the United States Supreme Court handed down its long awaited decision in Integrity Staffing Solutions, Inc. v. Busk.  That case involved warehouse workers at various Amazon.com facilities. Those workers were required to pass through a security screening after their shift ended. They were not paid for the time that they had to stand in line. The amount of time that took is disputed. The Company said it wasn’t very much. The employees claimed that it was an extended period of time.

The employees lost at the trial court level, but the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed. They ruled that time spent in security screenings to guard against employee theft qualified as compensable time under the Fair Labor Standards Act.

The United States Supreme Court disagreed. In a unanimous opinion authored by Justice Thomas, the Court explained:

We hold that an activity is integral and indispensable to the principal activities that an employee is employed to perform – and thus compensable under the FLSA – if it is an intrinsic element of those activities and one with which the employee cannot dispense if he is to perform his principal activities. Because the employees’ time spent waiting to undergo and undergoing Integrity Staffing’s security screenings does not meet this criteria, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals.

At first blush, this opinion seems a little unfair. Why should an employee not be paid for standing in a line that the employer forces them to stand in? It is important to remember that fairness is not the test. The issue is whether it is compensable under the Portal-to-Portal Act, which was an amendment to the FLSA. As a general rule, time spent traveling to and from work is not compensable. However, is important to understand the limits of this holding.

This case does not overrule the “continuous work day rule.” Under this rule, an employee is entitled to all of his time spent between the first principal activity and the last principal activity. Therefore, even under the Supreme Court’s decision, time spent in security screenings would be compensable if the employees had performed some work-related activity prior to going through them. Therefore, if they had had to attend meetings, fill out paperwork, or do some other clearly compensable work activity, they would be paid for going through the screenings.

Nevertheless, the unfairness of this decision is striking. It could produce draconian results. What if an employer forces employees to stand in a one-hour line? What if they force them to take a two- hour bus ride? These extreme categories clearly cry out for Congressional action, which is probably not forthcoming.

Categories
FLSA Overtime/Wage & Hour

This is a Good Question: Whatever Happened to Overtime?

Whatever happened to overtime? That is the answer that Nick Hanaur of Politco seeks to answer in a recent article. Overtime is protected by the Fair Labor Standards Act, a federal law that dates back to 1938. Under the FLSA, most employees are entitled to 1 ½ their regular rate of pay for any hours worked over forty. There are a few exceptions. Salaried employees who have very specific job duties are exempt from overtime if they make $455.00 per week. This $455.00 per week number has stayed stagnant for a long time. That means that a “manager” or “executive” who works sixty hours per week only has an effective hourly rate of $7.58 per hour if they work a sixty hour work week. As hours have gotten longer and pay has gotten less, this is not unusual. Managers who work especially long hours may make less than minimum wage.

Hanaur’s article makes the argument that the government’s failure to raise the salaried threshold for exempt employees is having a significant impact on the middle class. Indeed, it is decreasing the number of people that are in the middle class. It may come as a surprise that Congress is not the entity that sets this number. Instead, the United States Department of Labor has “rule making” authority to issue regulations that would increase this threshold number. The Obama Administration has signaled that it was going to raise this threshold, but has yet to act. Hanaur makes a persuasive argument that such action is overdue. To read his article, follow this link:

http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/11/overtime-pay-obama-congress-112954.html

Categories
FMLA

A Pioneer of the Family Medical Leave Act Dies

 Marge Roukema was an eleven term congresswoman from New Jersey. She died on Wednesday at the age of 85. She is one of the little known but most significant figures in labor and employment law.

 As a Republican member of Congress, she defied her party in the 1980s and became a driving force behind the Family Medical Leave Act. The FMLA provides unpaid leave for qualified employees if either the employee or certain family members have a serious health condition. Ms. Roukema was motivated by the loss of her son, Todd, to leukemia. Based on her experience with her deceased son, she believed that employees should not have to choose between losing their job and neglecting their family’s welfare.

 As the legislation passed Congress, Roukema urged then-President George H. W. Bush not to veto the bill. In an Op-Ed, she wrote, “As society has changed, we have always adjusted our labor protection standards to meet the new circumstances.” President Bush vetoed the bill, however, on June 29, 1990.

Less than three years later, Congress again passed the FMLA. It became the first piece of legislation signed into law by President Clinton. American workers have been better off as a result.

Categories
News

Attorneys Awarded Super Lawyers Designation

The 2014 Super Lawyers have been announced, and the attorneys of Gilbert Russell McWherter Scott Bobbitt were again recognized for excellence in the fields of employment law and insurance coverage.

Attorneys Clint Scott and Brandon McWherter selected to Super Lawyers Rising Stars Mid-South 2014 for Insurance Coverage.

Jonathan Bobbitt was selected as a Super Lawyers Rising Star  for the Mid-South 2014 for Employment & Labor.

Attorney Michael Russell was named a Mid-South Super Lawyer for Employment & Labor.

Justin Gilbert was named to the prestigious Tennessee Top 100 by Super Lawyers.

The annual selections are made using a patented multiphase process that includes a statewide survey of lawyers, an independent research evaluation of candidates and peer reviews by practice area. Super Lawyers, a Thomson Reuters business, is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement.

Categories
FLSA Overtime/Wage & Hour

SNL NOT LAUGHING: NBC UNIVERSAL PAYS $6.4 MILLION TO SETTLE WAGE AND HOUR CLAIM BY INTERNS

There are more tears than laughs at Saturday Night Live these days. NBC Universal paid $6.4 million to settle a claim by interns who worked on a variety of shows, including SNL. This follows a $110,000 settlement from the producers of the Charlie Rose Show, which also compensated interns for the work they performed.

 In the current job market for college students and new graduates, employers often use the economy as an opportunity to get free work. The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) is clear that most unpaid internships are flat out illegal. If an employer gets the benefit of work from an employee, then the employee probably has to be paid.

Categories
Sexual Harassment

Restaurant Workers are Especially Susceptible to Sexual Harassment

Restaurant workers, especially females servers, tend to be among the most vulnerable employees in the workplace. Because of their wages and work conditions, they are especially susceptible to workplace abuses. Tipped employees can be paid a sub-minimum wage. Either unintentionally or maliciously, employers frequently calculate these wages incorrectly. Moreover, tipped employees are frequently worked “off the clock,” which is illegal. This is often in the form of preparing the restaurant before a shift and cleaning up after a shift.

Now, a new study suggests that 90% of female restaurant workers who rely on tips are victims of sexual harassment. Follow this link for the story.

http://www.tennessean.com/story/money/business/2014/10/07/restaurant-industry-restaurants-sexual-harassment/16826065/

Categories
Uncategorized

A Lesson About Lawyers’ Conduct in Depositions

Today’s blog post does not specifically involve an employment case. It is, however, about conduct that employment lawyers run into far too often. When I was a law student fifteen years ago, I worked as a research assistant for Dean Donald Polden. He was writing a book about employment law with two co-authors. That is when I became acquainted with the Honorable Mark W. Bennett of the United States District for the Northern District of Iowa. Judge Bennett was one of those co-authors. In addition to being a brilliant jurist, Judge Bennett has a very good head on his shoulders. I have followed his opinions carefully during the course of my career.

On July 28, 2014, Judge Bennett issued one of his best. The case was Security Nat’l Bank v. Abbott Laboratories, 2004 WL 3704277 (N.D. Iowa July 28, 2014). It dealt with an issue that trial lawyers wrestle with constantly. Judge Bennett addressed a case where a lawyer at one of the largest law firms in the country repeatedly interrupted his opposing counsel during a deposition and coached the witness. The lawyer repeatedly told the witness that he only had to answer questions “if you know” and constantly rephrased the examiner’s questions.

The offending lawyer’s conduct came to light during the trial, and Judge Bennett sanctioned him sua sponte.  Judge Bennett bemoaned the discovery abuses that are so frequent in civil litigation today. He harshly criticized the lawyer’s frequent interruptions during the deposition, coaching the witness, and rephrasing of questions. As a sanction, Judge Bennett got creative. He sanctioned the attorney by requiring him to write and produce a training video that addressed his improper conduct in the deposition. He ordered that it be distributed to other lawyers in his extremely large law firm. While that didn’t cost the offending lawyer a great deal of money, it was embarrassing.

The following is lengthy quote from Judge Bennett’s opinion. It explains the state of civil litigation that many of us have grown to detest. Those who are reading this blog and try civil lawsuits, like I do, will recognize it far too well. My hope is that all of us will take this more to heart. Judge Bennett wrote:

Something is rotten, but contrary to Marcellus’s suggestion to Horatio, it’s not in Denmark. Rather, it’s in discovery in modern federal litigation right here in the United States. Over two decades ago, Griffin Bell – a former United States Attorney General, United States appeals court judge, and private practitioner – observed: “The criticism of the civil justice system has reached a crescendo in recent years. Because much of the cost of litigation is incurred in discovery, the discovery process has been the focal point of considerable criticism.” How little things have changed.

Discovery – a process intended to facilitate the free flow of information between parties – is now too often mired in obstructionism. Today’s “litigators” are quick to dispute discovery requests, slow to produce information, and all-too-eager to object at every stage of the process. They often object using boilerplate language containing every objection imaginable, despite the fact that courts have resoundingly disapproved of such boilerplate objections. Some litigators do this to grandstand for their client, to intentionally obstruct the flow of clearly discoverable information, to try and win a war of attrition, or to intimidate and harass the opposing party. Others do it simply because it’s how they were taught. As my distinguished colleague and renowned expert on civil procedure Judge Paul Grimm of the District of Maryland has written: “It would appear that there is something in the DNA of the American civil justice system that resists cooperation during discovery.” Whatever the reason, obstructionist discovery conduct is born of a warped view of zealous advocacy, often formed by insecurities and fear of the truth. This conduct fuels the astronomically costly litigation industry at the expense of “the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding.” Fed.R.Civ.P.1. It persists because most litigators and a few real trial lawyers – even very good ones, like the lawyers in this case-have come to accept it as part of the routine chicanery of federal discovery practice.

But the litigators and trial lawyers do not deserve all the blame for obstructionist discovery conduct because judges so often ignore this conduct, and by doing so we reinforce –even incentivize-obstructionist tactics. Most litigators, while often inept in jury trials (only because they so seldom experience them), are both smart and savvy and will continue to do what has worked for them in the past. Obstructionist litigators, like Ivan Pavlov’s dogs, salivate when they see discovery requests and are conditioned to unleash their treasure chest of obstructive weaponry. Unlike Pavlov’s dogs, their rewards are not food but successfully blocking or impeding the flow of discovery information. Unless judges impose serious adverse consequences, like court-imposed sanctions, litigators’ conditional reflexes will persist. The point of court-imposed sanctions is to stop reinforcing winning through obstruction.

While obstructionist tactics pervade all aspects of pretrial discovery, this case involves discovery abuse perpetrated during depositions. Earlier this year, in preparation for a hard-fought product liability jury trial, I was called upon by the parties to rule on numerous objections to deposition transcripts that the parties intended to use at trial. I noticed that the deposition transcripts were littered with what I perceived to be meritless objections made by one of the defendant’s lawyers, whom I refer to here as “Counsel.” I was shocked by what I read. Thus, for the reasons discussed below, I find that Counsel’s conduct warrants sanctions.

I do not come to this decision lightly. Counsel’s partner, who advocated for Counsel during the sanctions hearing related to this case (and who is one of the best trial lawyers I have ever encountered), urged that sanctions by a federal judge, especially on a lawyer with an outstanding career, like Counsel, should be imposed, if at all, with great hesitation and a full appreciation for how a serious sanction could affect that lawyer’s career. I wholeheartedly agree. I am still able to count each of my sanctions I have imposed on lawyers in my twenty years as a district court judge on less than all the fingers of one hand. Virtually all of those sanctions have been imposed on (or threatened to be imposed on) lawyers from out-of-state firms.

Categories
Sex Discrimination Title VII Uncategorized

Michael’s Take on the Hobby Lobby Case

With all the drama that comes from handing down a major decision on the last day of the term, the US Supreme Court issued the much awaited Hobby Lobby decision. Those on the right hailed it as a victory for individual liberty. Those on the left bemoaned the impact that it would have on the healthcare system. In my opinion, the truth lies somewhere in the middle.

The issue was whether a closely held corporation enjoys some or all of the religious protections of the First Amendment. Proponents of the Affordable Care Act argued that companies are not persons. Therefore, they don’t have individual rights. The Supreme Court disagreed. Writing for the majority, Justice Alito said “a corporation is simply a form of organization used by human beings to achieve desired ends.” Therefore, under the First Amendment, closely held corporations cannot be required to provide coverage for contraceptives in their health care plan if that violates their sincerely held religious beliefs.

Sounds simple, right? The implications, however, can be far-reaching. What if a company says it violates their religious beliefs to employ African-Americans? What if the company says it violates their religious beliefs to employ women? What if the company says it is against their religious belief to employ Christians? Taken to an extreme, the reasoning of the Hobby Lobby opinion could produce scary results. At least for now, the decision certainly does not go this far.  It specifically acknowleges that it is a narrow holding.

It does raise a number of questions that those who celebrate the decision might want to consider. There are those with sincerely held religious beliefs who contend it is immoral to have blood transfusions. Does that mean that life-saving blood transfusions should be unavailable to employees of companies who are owned by individuals holding such beliefs? There are religions that believe it is immoral to have virtually any medical care. What happens to their employees?

These are questions that will have to wait for another day. They will surely, at some point, make their way through the courts.

Categories
Uncategorized

REMEMBERING JUDGE JOHN MINOR WISDOM

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.  From time to time this year, we’ll post an entry on this blog about heroes who transformed civil rights law generally and employment law specifically.  Today, we’ll take a moment to remember a giant in the legal profession, the late Judge John Minor Wisdom.

This month would have been the 109th birthday of the legendary Judge Wisdom, who sat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit during the struggles of segregation.

Judge Wisdom, a Tulane Law graduate, was perhaps the jurist most responsible for forcing the South — kicking and screaming — to relegate segregation to the ash heap of history.  Judge Wisdom wrote the opinion that forced Ole Miss to integrate.  He managed the cases that implemented Brown v. Board of Education.  He handed down many of the employment law cases that exposed the racial animus of the Deep South from the 1960s until his death in 1999.

At the time of his death, Xavier University President Norman Francis said, “John Minor was a major force in saving the South.  We were a divided house on the verge of civil dissent.”  Despite death threats and being ostracized in his home state of Louisiana, he was willing to take unpopular positions in the most important cases of his day.  Consequently, Judge Wisdom forged a more just society in his native South.