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11th Cir.: Nanny Who Worked Overnight Shifts Not “Domestic” Live-In Employee and Thus Overtime Eligible

Blanco v. Anand Samuel

In a reported decision issued on Wednesday, the 11th Circuit reversed the trial Court seemingly applying clear law that a nanny who did not reside on her premises with the family whose children she took care of, and held that such an arrangement was not “domestic” employment. As such, the court reversed the decision of the trial court, which had held that the nanny was exempt from the FLSA’s overtime provisions as a domestic employee. In so doing, the court adopted much of the argument raised by the DOL in its amicus brief in the case. However, the 11th Circuit remanded for further findings regarding whether the parents of the nanny’s charges were here employer, finding that issues of fact precluded a finding on that issue.

Addressing the principal issue of whether the Plaintiff was a “domestic” or not, the court found the issue to be clear-cut: “No doubt Blanco worked at the house and spent significant time there. But that alone does not mean she ‘resided’ there any more than firefighters who sleep in fire-station dormitories while on duty reside at a fire station,” the panel said.

The court further noted that the plaintiff’s job was “hardly a typical arrangement” of a live-in nanny.

The panel noted that while the plaintiff did sleep, at times, when she was on duty to take care of the children, the place she slept was not her own, as she shared the bed she slept in with other nannies, and the room in which she slept with 2 of the couple’s smallest children. Further, the court noted that if/when a child woke up in and/or cried in the middle of the night, she would “immediately respond”. Thus, “though Blanco may have slept sometimes while the children slept, her time was not hers,” the panel said.

The panel also noted as significant that the plaintiff lacked her own key to the house, adding that the mere fact that she had left personal belongings at the residence and some religious decorations, and occasionally had guests over didn’t make the house her own. Likewise, the court noted that the plaintiff maintained her own separate residence and paid rent to live in her aunt’s nearby apartment, where she typically returned at the end of her shifts, so that she could sleep in her own bed.

The court also rejected the defendant-parents’ argument that Blanco would be overtime-exempt under a 2013 U.S. Department of Labor rule that aimed at expanding FLSA protections. While the language of the preamble to the rule seemed to signal that five consecutive nights is the appropriate measuring stick to determine whether a nanny lived at someone’s residence, the court noted that such language was contained in the preamble to the rule and not the text of the actual rule’s text, and thus not a proper source of interpretive guidance.

The court also noted that the defendant-parents’ arguments regarding application of the rule/preamble ignored the context in which the five consecutive nights phrase is included, reasoning that such argument failed to consider the plaintiff’s four off-duty days that preceded the five days on-duty.

As such, the court concluded that the plaintiff was not an exempt domestic service employee as a matter of law. However, the court held that issues of fact regarding application of the “economic realities” test to plaintiff’s employment, required further findings by the trial court as to whether the defendant-parents were plaintiff’s employers under the FLSA.

Among the factual issues the court cited were the fact that: (1) one defendant testified she didn’t give any directions to the nannies on how to care for her children or control or supervise the plaintiff; (2) the defendants’ testimony that they didn’t know how much the nannies received in wages, as the mother testified that she paid about $2,400 per week to Amazing Gracie LLC, one of the two companies the parents used to hire the nannies that was managed by one of the nannies who worked for the family; and (3) the defendant-mother’s testimony that she didn’t know how plaintiff had started working for the family. In light of these factual issue, the court held that the defendants presented enough evidence to show that “they had minimal oversight over the nannies’ care for their children” and thus there remained a question of fact as to whether they were the plaintiff’s employer, upon application of the “economic realities” test.

Click Blanco v. Anand Samuel to read the entire opinion.

Click DOL Amicus to read the DOL’s amicus brief.



This post first appeared on Overtime Law Blog | FLSA Decisions, please read the originial post: here

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11th Cir.: Nanny Who Worked Overnight Shifts Not “Domestic” Live-In Employee and Thus Overtime Eligible

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