Allen Co. v. Eden
Allen Co. v. Eden
Opinion of the Court
The Allen Company has moved for an appeal from a judgment awarding Enoyce Eden $937 for the difference between wages paid him by the Allen Company during 1949 and 1950, and wages which he claimed should 'have been paid him by reason of KRS 337.510 and KRS 337.550. - We are granting the appeal and reversing the judgment because we think the trial court erred in holding that a part- of the work performed by Eden for the Allen Company came within the scope of KRS 337.510 through KRS 337.550.
In February, 1949, the Allen Company established an asphalt mix plant at Lawton, in Carter County, and began producing asphalt mix materials. At that time the Company had no contract with the State of Kentucky or any public authority where-under the product of the Lawton plant could be used. All of the materials produced at Lawton by the Company were sold until August, 1949. During the summer of 1949 the Company was awarded two contracts for resurfacing highways in Carter and Rowan Counties. Four additional resurfacing contracts in those counties were awarded the Company in April ánd June, 1950.
Eden went to work for the Company at the Lawton plant the latter part of March, 1949. He was first employed as a common laborer at 95 cents an hour. He was paid time and a half for overtime. On May 1, he started operating a 40 HP International TD-40 tractor, with blade' attached. This tractor was used in- mixing materials at the L'awton plant. He operated the tractor most of the time until July 19, 1950, and was paid $1.15 an hour. He received time and a half for overtime. During 1949 Eden worked 1,237 hours for the Company. During 226 hours of Eden’s work a part of the materials produced at the Lawton plant were being used by the Company on highway resurfacing projects. A part of the materials produced at. the Lawton plant were being'used by the Company on highway resurfacing work during the 616 hours Eden was operating the tractor in 1950.
The Allen Company’s plant at Lawton was located on property belonging to the Standard Slag and Stone Company, adjacent to its quarry, and from which the Allen Company obtained the limestone for its mix product. All of Eden’s work whs done at the Lawton plant. At no time did he work in any capacity on a road or highway resurfacing project, and his foreman and fellow workers worked only at that plant. During all of the time Eden was employed the Standard Slag arid 'Storie Company had in effect with a local A.F.L. Union representing its -employees a collective bargaining contract. That contract called for $1.15 an hour for the operation of a tractor of the type operated by Eden. The wage rates attached to the invitation for highway bids in 1949 called for 80 cents an-hour: for common labor',!.$1.70 an' hour for “Operator of Tractor of less, than .50 HP,” and $2.15- an : hour for “Bulldozer Operator.”' The' corresponding rates for 1950 were 90:cents, $1.75'and $2.20. The judgment awarded Eden wages based on those for a bulldozer operator for the hours worked by-him wheri any part of the -materials produced at the Lawton plant by • the Company were used on its highway resurfacing projects.
KRS'337.510 provides that, before enter* nig into contracts, public authorities shall ascertain-the'prevailing rates of wages ff or the work called for in the construction of the public work in the locality where the work is to be performed. KRS 337.520 provides that the public authority shall establish wages at the same rate prevailing in the same trade or occupation in the same locality where the work is to be performed. The prevailing wages shall be at the same rate in the locality' prevailing under collective agreements or understandings between bona .fide labor organizations and their employers. Wages on public projects shall not be less, than the prevailing wages in the locality where the work is to be performed.
We think the work carried on by the Company at the Lawton plant was an enterprise independent and separate from its highway construction and resurfacing contracts. The Company had no highway contracts when Eden began working at the Lawton plant. He received the same wages called for in the contract negotiated by the A. F. L. with the Standard Slag and- Stone Company and its employees. When the Company established its plant at Lawton it may have hoped to obtain highway contracts in that part of the State, but it can not be said that that was1 its primary reason for establishing'the plant because it sold commercially one-half of its output during 1949 and 1950. Furthermore, the - jilant had been.in operation several months before the Company received its first resurfacing contract. Each of the highway projects was set up as a public enterprise and wages established by the public authority in ac
Judgment reversed, with directions to set it aside, and for the entry of a judgment in conformity with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALLEN CO., Inc. v. EDEN
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published