'Joint Employment' Rulings Face Tests in US Supreme Court, DC Circuit

As the business community awaits a federal appellate court decision on the National Labor Relations Board's definition of joint employer," another key labor case one that also looks at the relationships between companies is moving forward in the U.S. Supreme Court.

The case in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Browning-Ferris International v. NLRB challenges how the agency defines joint employer under the National Labor Relations Act. The outcome could have wide implications for collective bargaining and private sector employers.

Meanwhile, major business groups, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers, weighed in this month at the Supreme Court in a separate change to joint employer under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The groups urged the justices to grant review in DirecTV v. Hall. The justices are scheduled to take their first look at the case at their conference on Sept. 28.

Evan Tager.
Evan Tager.

Mayer Brown s Evan Tager filed the petition, challenging a ruling from the federal appeals court in Richmond, Virginia. The Fourth Circuit in January revived claims from two groups of satellite television technicians who brought labor-law violations based on the joint relationships of their employers.

The Fair Labor Standards Act, or FLSA, unlike the National Labor Relations Act sets minimum wage, overtime pay, recordkeeping, and child labor standards for full-time and part-time, private and public sector workers. The labor relation law, on the other hand, protects the collective bargaining rights of employees.

"There is virtually no industry retail, construction, agriculture, janitorial services, manufacturing, warehousing and logistics, hospitality unaffected by legal disputes over this issue," Jones Day's E. Michael Rossman wrote in the amicus brief for the U.S. Chamber in the high court. "Joint employment liability has become the theory du jour among FLSA plaintiffs in recent years. These sorts of cases have exploded."

To the business advocates who are supporting DirecTV s petition, the Fourth Circuit s test is an outlier among the circuit courts. But it also is an example, they argue, of the proliferation of different multifactor tests that are being used to determine when employers are joined together under the FLSA and other federal statutes.

Business advocates voiced their concerns about those multiple tests and the Browning-Ferris case on July 12 at a hearing of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Satellite Techs Make Their Case

The DirecTV case stems from overtime claims by two groups of satellite installation technicians. Last October, a three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit found the technicians were jointly employed by DirecTV the nation's largest satellite television provider and intermediary companies with whom the company had contracted for work.