Tag Archives: salary/payroll

Court Says Employer Not Liable for Unreported Work Time

        The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed dismissal of a lawsuit under the Fair Labor Standards Act brought by an employee who failed to follow her employer’s policy for reporting uncompensated work time.  In Margaret White v. Baptist Mem’l Health Care Corp., the employer, Baptist Memorial Health Care Corp. (“Baptist”), automatically … Continue Reading

Accurate Timekeeping System Gives Company Win on Overtime Claim

The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals recently found no liability for a company that kept accurate time records in the face of a former employee who claimed that he was not paid for overtime hours that he worked at home.  In Brown v. Scriptpro, the employer, Kansas-based company ScriptPro LLC, had an automated timekeeping system … Continue Reading

The Fifth Circuit Says Employer Can Privately Settle FLSA Claims Without DOL or Court Approval

For over 30 years, the federal courts in Florida (and in other states) have required that settlements of minimum wage and overtime claims under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) be reviewed and approved either by a court or the US Department of Labor.   Now, one court, the Fifth Circuit Court Of Appeals, the federal … Continue Reading

United States Supreme Court Says Pharmaceutical Reps are FLSA Exempt Outside Salespeople

The U.S. Supreme Court handed the pharmaceutical industry a huge victory in the battle over whether pharmaceutical sales representatives are entitled to overtime under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The pharmaceutical industry took the position that its sales representatives were exempt from the FLSA’s overtime requirements as exempt outside salespeople. The sales representatives argued … Continue Reading

Unpaid Internships = Cheap Labor? Think Again.

In the third of three recent wage and hour class actions brought by unpaid interns against  media and entertainment companies (Wang v. The Hearst Corp. and Glatt and Footman v. Fox Searchlight Pictures, Inc.), a former unpaid intern for the “The Charlie Rose Show” has sued Charles Rose and his production company on behalf of all interns … Continue Reading

NLRB Says No to Requiring Employees to Sign Arbitration Agreements Prohibiting Group or Class Action

On January 3, 2012, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) ruled in D.R. Horton, Inc., that requiring employees, as a condition of employment, to sign an arbitration agreement prohibiting them from filing collective or class actions for employment-related claims violates the law.  The decision involved an overtime case brought by Michael Cuda against his employer, … Continue Reading

If an Employee Works Overtime and No One Knows Will the Employer Be Liable? A Recent Case Says, "No."

We have all heard the riddle of whether a tree that falls in a forest with no one present makes a noise. A federal appellate court sitting in Indiana faced a similar question regarding a former employee’s claim for overtime compensation under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). In the case of Kellar v. Summit … Continue Reading

Love That Tender: Mooting an FLSA Action

On September 20, we posted, Was Dionne The FLSA Magic Bullet We Thought?, which discussed recent cases under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) where the employer tried to moot the lawsuit by tendering the back pay and liquidated damages claimed by the former employee.  As a refresher, in Dionne v. Floormasters Enterprises, Inc., the … Continue Reading

Was Dionne The FLSA Magic Bullet We Thought?

Has the Eleventh Circuit Court Appeals provided employers with a means to resolve a Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) lawsuit quickly and avoid paying attorneys’ fees or has the plaintiffs bar already revised its litigation strategy?  The federal appeals court with jurisdiction over Florida, Georgia, and Alabama recently denied attorneys’ fees to a plaintiff suing … Continue Reading

Cutting of H-1B Employees’ Salary Costs Employer More Than a $1 Million

A recent decision from a federal court in Tennessee affirmed an administrative decision awarding more than $1 million in back pay to H-1B physician employees of several clinics owned by Mohan Kutty.  The decision is Kutty v. Department of Labor. Kutty is a physician who operated clinics in Tennessee and Florida.  He hired several foreign … Continue Reading

Federal Appeals Court Agrees with NLRB That a Confidentiality Provision in an Employment Agreement Violated the Law

As discussed in an earlier post (NLRB OKs Employee Bad-Mouthing on Social Media), the National Labor Relations Board is not just in the business of regulating union activity.  According to law, two or more employees (regardless of union affiliation) are protected in acting together to improve the conditions of their employment, including wages and hours. This is … Continue Reading

Employers Take a Hit to the Wallet with the Minimum Wage Increase

Florida’s minimum wage has increased to $7.31 per hour.  The direct wage for tipped employees increased to $4.29 per hour.  The six-cent increase is the result of a successful lawsuit brought by a group of Florida workers against the government claiming that it miscalculated the state minimum wage under the state constitution. While 6 cents … Continue Reading
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