By Evan J. Spelfogel

In recent years employees have asserted claims for time allegedly worked away from their normal worksites, on their Blackberries, iPhones or personal home computers.  Until now, employers have been faced with the nearly impossible task of proving that their employees did not perform the alleged work.  The US Department of Labor and plaintiffs’ attorneys have taken advantage of the well-established obligation of employers to make and maintain accurate records of the hours worked by their non-exempt employees, and to pay for all work “suffered or permitted” to be performed.

Now, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit has issued a decision holding that an employer is shielded from an employee’s FLSA overtime claim where it has an automated time keeping system that the employee failed to utilize, to report the hours allegedly worked at home.  Frank Brown v. ScriptPro LLC, Case No. 11-3293 (10th Cir. Nov. 27, 2012).

The three judge panel held that a plaintiff has the burden of proving that he performed work for which he was not properly compensated, citing earlier Tenth Circuit and US Supreme Court precedent:  Baker v. Barnard Construction Co., Inc., 146 F 3d. 214, 220 (10th Cir. 1998); Anderson v. Mt. Clements Pottery Co., 328 US 680, 687 (1946).  It was plaintiff’s burden, the Tenth Circuit held, to produce evidence to show the actual amount and extent of his work.

Here, the Court held, plaintiff had failed to set forth the specific facts showing there was a genuine issue for trial, and granted the company’s summary judgment motion. 

In so doing, the Tenth Circuit acknowledged that plaintiff had produced to the district court in opposition to the company’s motion for summary judgment, “uncontroverted evidence that he actually worked overtime.”  This evidence, the Appeals Court said, included plaintiffs own testimony, his wife’s testimony and certain discussions between plaintiff and one of his supervisors concerning plaintiff’s work at home. 

However, plaintiff failed to show the actual amount of overtime by any justifiable or reasonable inference. 

The key to the Tenth Circuit’s decision was that ScriptPro kept accurate records of employees’ time worked, and had installed an automated recordkeeping system that allowed employees to access the timekeeping system from home and enter their daily time onto that system.  The burden on individual employees to show the amount of overtime worked is only relaxed, the Tenth Circuit held, where an employer fails to keep accurate records. 

In this case, the Court held, there was no failure by ScriptPro to keep accurate records, only a failure by plaintiff to comply with ScriptPro’s timekeeping system.  In summary, the Court concluded, where the employee fails to report time to the employer through the established overtime recordkeeping system, the failure by an employer to pay overtime is not an FLSA violation. 

In view of the Tenth Circuit’s ScriptPro decision, employers should review their recordkeeping and timekeeping systems, and may be well advised to implement systems that allow employees to enter asserted home work time into the systems directly.  Of course, this will require monitoring by employers to ensure employee accuracy and honesty in time reporting. 

Many employers utilize employee time recording systems for employees who spend significant amounts of their workdays away from a centralized jobsite.  Such a system could be easily be adapted to include time reporting for employees who legitimately spend time working from home or at other remote jobsite locations. 

The remedy historically available to employers where employees assert they are working unauthorized overtime hours (against company policy or in direct and flagrant disregard of orders from supervisors) has been to discipline the employee and, if necessary, terminate the employment relationship – but the employer has always been required to pay for the asserted overtime work. 

The Tenth Circuit’s ScriptPro decision is a wakeup call to employers to review their timekeeping systems and, where appropriate, to implement new techniques that would apply to employees allegedly working at home.

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