MISREPRESENTATION.
See Contracts XX.
MONTHLY PAY.
See Overtime Pay I, II, III, IV, V, VI. MUTUAL MISTAKE.
See Contracts XIV XV. XVI.
NATIONAL BANK.
See Damages I, II.
NEGLIGENCE.
See Contracts XVI.
OPA CEILING PRICES.
See Just Compensation II, III, IV, V, VII. OVERTIME PAY.
I. The situation of the plaintiff in the instant case is identi- cal with that of the plaintiff, who was given a judg- ment, in Townsley v. United States, 101 C. Cls. 237, which was affirmed, 323 U. S. 557, and under ordinary circumstances the plaintiff would be entitled to recover under the precedent of the Townsley decision, but in order to permit the Government to present evidence and argument which were not presented fully, if at all, in the Townsley case, and because of the importance of the question, the court has given a complete re- consideration to the issues involved, in the right of addi- tional evidence and the new or modified arguments presented by the Government; and upon such reconsid- eration the decision in the Townsley case is reaffirmed. Hearne, 335.
II. Plaintiff, an employee of the Panama Canal, who worked on floating equipment and who was paid on the basis of an annual salary, is entitled to recover overtime compensation at the rate of time and one-half for hours of work in excess of 40 hours per week, under the provisions of Section 23 of the Act of March 28, 1934 (48 Stat. 522; 5 U. S. C. 673c). Id.
III. Where there was a wage board, appointed by the Governor of the Canal Zone to advise him as to what should be the wages of workmen whose wages were not set by or pursuant to statutory classifications; and where this board, pursuant to the Governor's order creating it, only made recommendations to the Governor, who him- self fixed the wages; and where in this respect the board's function was identical with that of the various wage boards set up in governmental establishments in the United States where persons were employed in the mechanical trades and were not covered by the Classification Act; it is held that the wage board ap- pointed by the Governor was a wage board within 736172-47-vol. 107- -50
OVERTIME PAY-Continued
the meaning of Section 23 of the Act of March 28, 1934, and its recommendations with respect to plain- tiff and other "floating equipment" employees were within the contemplation of the Act. Id.
IV. The ruling of the Comptroller General, which was fol- lowed by the Governor of the Canal Zone, to the effect that Section 23 was not applicable to floating equip- ment employees, on the ground that their compensa- tion was not fixed by a wage board, was based on a misapprehension of the facts and is not controlling. Id. V. The contention of the Government that Section 23 is not applicable to employees, otherwise within its scope, whose compensation is fixed on a monthly basis was vigorously presented to the Court of Claims in the Townsley case (101 C. Cls. 253-263) and to the Su- preme Court (323 U. S. 563-573) and did not per- suade either court; and has no administrative con- struction nor practice to support it. Id.
VI. Where the rulings of the Judge Advocate General of the Army, the Comptroller General of the United States and the United States Attorney for the Canal Zone, as to the interpretation of Section 23 of the Act of March 28, 1934, were confusing and unclear; and where the Government itself in the instant case and in the Towns- ley litigation has found it difficult to analyze the prob- lems and produce the evidence sufficient to determine whether or not plaintiff had rights under the statute; it would be quite unfair to hold that a workman such as the plaintiff did not see his statutory rights with sufficient clarity to insist upon them promptly and continuously. Id.
VII. Under the terms of the Act of 1942, the Act of 1943, and regulations issued thereunder, providing for overtime pay at time and one-half in certain circumstances and additional compensation in lieu of overtime in certain cases; it is held that plaintiffs are not entitled to re- cover overtime compensation in excess of the amounts which have been allowed and paid them for the periods involved. 56 Stat. 1068; 57 Stat. 75. Conn et al, 422. VIII. Plaintiffs were employed as civilian firefighters at an Army Air Base and their salaries were fixed on an annual basis. During the periods covered by the claims for additional overtime pay, plaintiffs worked under the two-platoon system, which consisted of regular scheduled tours of duty of 24 hours on duty, followed by 24 hours off duty, but in each 24 hours on duty 8 hours was designated for rest and sleep except when
interrupted by fire drills and by fire alarms. interruptions were irregular and were compensated for by additional time for rest and sleep. The evidence shows, upon analysis, that plaintiffs were actually working approximately 381⁄2 hours during each week while on their tours of 24 hours on duty and 24 hours off duty. It is held that under the applicable statutes and regulations the plaintiffs were properly classified as employees whose "hours of duty" were intermittent or irregular and were paid overtime accordingly. Id. IX. Congress prescribed the standards for the classification of employees for overtime pay purposes but left the decision as to what specific groups should come within the respective classifications to be determined by "necessary and proper" regulations to be prescribed by the President, the Civil Service Commission and the heads of departments; and regulations so prescribed have the force and effect of law unless clearly beyond the authority conferred or unless they produce a result clearly different from that intended by Congress. Id. OYSTERS AND OYSTER BEDS.
Under the provisions of the Act of August 30, 1935, the Court finds that plaintiff's oysters were in part destroyed and in part dam- aged by dredging operations and mine-testing operations car- ried on by the Government in the Patuxent River, and dam- ages are awarded in the nature of a jury verdict. Seipp, 210. PATENTS.
I. Plaintiffs, executors respectively, of Bunn and Richard- son, attorneys, produced evidence to show that the in- ventor, Garand, in 1919, made a contract with Bunn and Richardson, agreeing to give them a certain per- centage of sums realized for assignment, sale or li- cense of any patents relating to an automatic rifle, which he might obtain during the life of the contract. In 1936 and subsequently, Garand, then an employe of the Government, without the knowledge of Bunn and Richardson, made assignments to the Government of all his rights in patents obtained by him, and to be obtained, under certain applications for patents on inventions relating to automatic rifles. Plaintiffs claim this constituted a taking by the Government of the interest of Bunn and Richardson in the patents. It is held that the proof fails to show that defendant had proper notice of Garand's contract of 1919 with Bunn and Richardson at the time it accepted assignments of of the patents. Being ignorant of plaintiffs' rights, a promise to pay them compensation as for a taking
cannot be implied by the defendant's acceptance of the assignments from Garand. Tempel v. United States, 248 U. S. 121. Burke and Herbert Bank and Trust Co., Adm., 106.
II. Not only were the assignments from Garand, in 1936, taken in actual ignorance of plaintiffs' rights, if any, but there was nothing to charge the defendant with knowledge of the contract of 1919 between Garand and Bunn and Richardson. Id.
III. Knowledge acquired by one agent of a principal will not be imputed to the principal in a subsequent transac- tion negotiated by another agent unless it was the duty of the first agent to transmit the knowledge to his principal. Id.
IV. In the instant case, notice to a subordinate officer of the War Department in 1919 is not sufficient to bind the Department in a transaction in 1936, unless there was a duty on the officer receiving the notice to make a record of the fact in such a way as to bring it to the attention of the officers in later years who might be called to deal with the matter; and there is no proof that there was any such duty. Id.
V. When, after the assignment in 1936 to the War Depart- ment by Garand, the Department received notice of the 1919 contract, and the Department thereafter regis- tered the assignment with the Patent Office; the regis- tration of the assignment could not give rise to an implied promise to pay to the plaintiffs compensation for the taking of their interests in the patents, be- cause at the time the assignment was recorded the defendant held the patents under a claim of right arising from the assignment by Garand. The regis- tration of the assignment was not an acquistion of any rights in the patents but was merely notice of rights already acquired. Id.
VI. The court having held that for want of notice, the defend- ant is not liable for the taking of plaintiffs' interest, if any, in the Garand patents; the court does not decide whether or not the contract of 1919 with Garand gave plaintiffs an interest in the patents, for the taking of which the defendant would have been obligated to pay to plaintiffs just compensation. Id.
I. Plaintiff, an unmarried officer of the United States Coast Guard, without dependents, who was performing the duties of an aviator engaged in antisubmarine warfare in the Gulf of Mexico, and whose planes were land-
PAY AND ALLOWANCES-Continued
based, and who had certain shore duties which were incidental to his duties in combat; although he had received an increase in pay on the ground that he was performing sea duty as such duty was defined by the head of his department, under section 2 of the Pay Readjustment Act of 1942, was entitled to rental allowance under section 6 of the Pay Readjustment Act and the Executive Order 9255 prescribing regulations pursuant to said section 6; and is entitled to recover. Schuh, 88.
II. The determination of the head of the department, under which the plaintiff received increased pay for sea duty, was final, under section 2 of the Pay Readjust- ment Act. Id.
III. Under Executive Order 9255, issued pursuant to section 6 of the Pay Readjustment Act, providing that "the term 'sea duty' shall mean service at sea by an officer on a vessel under orders," etc., the plaintiff, who was not performing service at sea on board a vessel, was not on sea duty as regards rental allowance. Id. IV. "Sea Duty" is not a self-defining term and neither the President nor the head of the department was defining the term in a universal sense. Their definitions were in authorized aid of separate statutory provisions, one directed to the housing of an officer and the other to the hazardous nature of his duties. Id.
V. An officer in the Coast Guard who occupied a house furnished to him by the Government, the rental of which was deducted from his pay, is entitled to re- tired pay based on his salary without deductions, under the provisions of the Act of March 3, 1926 (44 Stat. 161), reenacted and made permanent by the Act of March 5, 1918 (45 Stat. 162, 193). Ockenfels, 150. PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT.
See Taking I, II, III, IV.
PREVAILING WAGES.
See Contracts XLIV.
QUANTUM MERUIT.
See Rental of Property by Government VI. REFORMATION OF CONTRACT.
See Contracts XV, XVI.
REFORMATION OF RELEASE. See Contracts XIV, XV, XVI.
See Contracts XIV, XV, XVI.
RENT, DEDUCTION FOR.
See Pay and Allowances V.
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