1. Section 23 of the Independent Offices Appropriation Act,
1935, so far as it provides for overtime compensation for services
in excess of 40 hours per week, applies to Government employees of
the Panama Canal whose compensation is fixed on a monthly basis. P.
323 U. S.
565.
2. In the case of an employee whose normal work week was six
8-hour days, overtime compensation was properly computed by
multiplying the employee's monthly salary by twelve and dividing
the result by fifty-two to ascertain his weekly salary, then
dividing the weekly salary by five to obtain his pay for an 8-hour
day, and then multiplying the number of weeks in which he had
worked a sixth day by the daily wage plus one-half. P.
323 U. S.
573.
101 Ct.Cls. 237 affirmed.
Certiorari,
post, p. 686, to review a judgment for the
plaintiff in a suit to recover overtime compensation.
Page 323 U. S. 558
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The parties agree that the principal question presented is
whether Section 23 of the Independent Offices Appropriation Act,
1935, [
Footnote 1] insofar as
it provides for overtime compensation for services in excess of 40
hours per week, applies to Government employees of the Canal Zone
whose compensation is fixed on a monthly basis. The Court of Claims
answered in the affirmative. [
Footnote 2] If we take the same view, a subsidiary inquiry
is whether that court adopted the right method for calculating the
overtime compensation.
The section, in full, is:
"The weekly compensation, minus any general percentage reduction
which may be prescribed by Act of Congress, for the several trades
and occupations, which is set by wage boards or other wage-fixing
authorities, shall be reestablished and maintained at rates not
lower than necessary to restore the full weekly earnings of such
employees in accordance with the full-time weekly earnings under
the respective wage schedules in effect on June 1, 1932:
Provided, that the regular hours of labor shall not be
more than forty per week, and all overtime shall be compensated for
at the rate of not less than time and one half."
Between March 28, 1934, and August 31, 1939, the respondent was
employed by the Panama Canal successively as operator, chief
operator, and master of a dredge, and was paid on a monthly basis
at rates fixed by the Governor of the Canal Zone upon
recommendation of a wage board. The respondent's normal work week
consisted of six eight-hour days. He retired August 29, 1939, and
then, for the
Page 323 U. S. 559
first time, asserted that, under the Act, he was entitled to
compensation at the rate of time and one-half for all hours worked
in excess of 40 per week. In prosecution of his claim, he
instituted this suit March 14, 1940.
The Court of Claims held that he was engaged in one of the
"trades and occupations" whose compensation is "set by wage boards
or other wage-fixing authorities" covered by the Act. We think this
conclusion is right, and do not understand the petitioner now to
contest it. The court further held that the statute embraced those
employees of the Canal Zone whose wages are paid on a monthly
basis. This the Government contests, relying on the words of the
Act, on administrative practice, and on legislative history. A
statement of the background of the legislation and its application
seems necessary to decision.
In 1923, Congress adopted the "Classification Act," [
Footnote 3] classifying the employment
and fixing the compensation for different classes of employees of
certain departments of the Government. It excluded from the terms
of the Act certain occupations, including apprentices, helpers, or
journeymen in a recognized trade or craft and skilled or
semi-skilled laborers, among others. Admittedly, certain employees
of the Panama Canal, including the respondent, were not covered by
this Act. Their compensation was to be fixed by the President, or
by his authority, under the Act of August 24, 1912; [
Footnote 4] specifically it was set by the
Governor of the Panama Canal on the advice of a wage board.
The Act of March 28, 1934, with which we are here concerned, was
the last of the so-called Economy Acts intended to decrease
expenses by reduction of compensation
Page 323 U. S. 560
and suspension of privileges of federal employees. By the first
such Act, approved June 30, 1932, [
Footnote 5] a regular schedule of reduction of salaries,
by a system of furloughs or reduction of the work week, was
established.
By the Act of March 20, 1933, [
Footnote 6] Congress superseded the furlough system and
provided for a reduction, not to exceed 15%, in the compensation of
all employees. By the Act of March 28, 1934, this reduction was cut
to 10% for a portion of the fiscal year 1934, and to 5% for the
fiscal year 1935. Possible reductions in compensation imposed on
federal employees were not, however, limited to those prescribed in
the cited statutes. Men were discharged and rehired in lower
classifications at the lower wages applicable, and were furloughed
without pay in order to keep within appropriations.
When the bill which became the Act of March 28, 1934, was under
consideration, a representative of a labor organization appeared
before a subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Appropriations and
advocated legislation to prohibit certain discriminatory reductions
in the wages of
per diem Navy Yard workers. He pointed to
the continuance of the practice of furloughing them one day in each
two weeks, thus reducing the hours worked to 40 per week, and
showed that this, in addition to the 15% reduction of pay required
by the economy act then in force, actually cut their base pay over
22%. He also complained of other practices which had the effect of
reducing their compensation. He expressed the fear that, if
Congress abolished the 15% level cut, wage boards would at once
take action to reduce existing wage scales. He proposed a provision
which would prohibit reduction of wages below the wage scales which
were in effect June 1, 1932, but suggested
Page 323 U. S. 561
no provision concerning hours of work or overtime pay. The draft
he submitted was not embodied in the bill as reported.
Senator Thomas offered the present section 23 on the floor of
the Senate, stating merely [
Footnote 7]
"this amendment is offered to help the employees in the navy
yards, the arsenals, the Panama Canal Zone, the Government Printing
Office, and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. It simply
proposes to put them back on the same status they occupied in July
of 1932. . . . [T]he amendment adopted this afternoon restores
their pay cut, it is true, provided that amendment remains in the
law. This amendment proposes to give the employees of these several
bureaus an increase in their pay even though they do not have to
work an increased number of hours. At the present time, they work
40 hours and get 44 hours' pay. Under the amendment, it is possible
that the board that has control of these employees will let them
work 40 hours and they will possibly get 48 hours' pay, provided
they get an increase of their hourly pay."
The amendment was adopted without further reference to it in
either House of Congress. The President vetoed the bill, which was
passed over his veto. On that occasion, a Senator inquired whether
certain language in the President's veto message referred to the
provisions of Section 23, and the reply was that the Senator
interrogated did not know whether this was so. We shall shortly see
that the section did substantially more than Senator Thomas stated
in his brief explanation.
Prior to the effective date of the Act, the respondent's regular
hours of work were 48 per week, though he was often required to
work 52. Shortly after § 23 became law, the Governor of the
Panama Canal requested the Comptroller
Page 323 U. S. 562
General to decide whether the section applied to employees of
the Canal and whether it required payment of overtime to certain
classes of employees, including the class to which respondent
belonged. The Comptroller General ruled that the section was
applicable to employees paid by the month, as well as to those paid
by the hour. [
Footnote 8] He
did not directly rule on the right of monthly employees to be paid
for overtime, but his opinion indicates the view that they were not
to be so paid, since he stated:
". . . no change in the monthly or annual rate of compensation
other than that required to pay a rate not lower than the rate per
annum or per month paid June 1, 1932, less any applicable
percentage reductions, would be authorized. That is to say, they
are to receive the same monthly or annual compensation, although
their regular hours of duty may be reduced."
Notwithstanding this ruling, the Governor attempted to reduce
the monthly employees' compensation by putting them on an hourly
basis. This he did by dividing the monthly salary paid June 1,
1932, by 224, the number of hours he estimated they worked per
month made up of eight hours per day for six days per week, sixteen
hours per month for occasional overtime, and an allowance for
occasional work on Sundays and holidays. This computation showed
they had been worked 52 hours per week. Having thus ascertained
what he deemed their hourly wages, he added 20% to the hourly wage,
so that they would receive the same amount for a forty-hour week as
they would theretofore have received for a forty-eight hour week,
despite the fact that they had been working and had been paid for
more than forty-eight hours according to his computation of their
prior hourly earnings. The net result was substantially to reduce
their monthly earnings. After complaint by the employees, the
Governor submitted
Page 323 U. S. 563
his action to the Comptroller General and requested
reconsideration of the earlier decision. [
Footnote 9] That official reaffirmed his prior decision
and disapproved the recomputation of monthly wages which the
Governor had adopted. He ruled that the proper procedure was
"to continue the payment of the same monthly rates of
compensation even though there may have been a reduction in the
number of hours per week and no overtime compensation is
authorized,"
and added that "[t]his is the general rule that has been adopted
under the 40-hour week statutory provision for all employees paid
on a monthly or annual basis." The Governor's submission and the
Comptroller General's ruling make it clear that both understood
that employees paid on a monthly basis could not be regularly
worked more than forty hours a week. Several passages in his
decisions also indicate that the Comptroller General was of opinion
that monthly employees should not be paid overtime. The rulings
were definitely that employees whose weekly wages would be reduced
by reducing their work hours must have those wages restored to the
1932 wage level, and that employees who had not had their weekly
wages cut, because they were paid by the month and were worked 52
hours per week, should not have their wages cut as a result of
§ 23 by the reduction of their work week to 40 hours.
Apparently relying on the Comptroller General's statement that
employees on a monthly wage basis were not entitled to overtime,
the Governor continued to work the respondent forty-eight hours a
week, but paid him no overtime. This in spite of his knowledge that
the forty hour week limitation was also applicable to the
respondent if other parts of § 23 were so applicable. In his
second submission to the Comptroller General, he stated his
understanding of the latter's decision that monthly employees
Page 323 U. S. 564
could not be worked more than forty hours a week. There is no
evidence that the question of the legality of working the
respondent overtime without paying him for it was ever submitted to
the Comptroller General.
It seems evident that the Governor's action cannot be justified.
If § 23 applied in the case of the respondent, his work week
should have been forty hours. If, in spite of § 23, his
monthly stipend covered every day and every hour of the month,
whether service was rendered or not, as the Comptroller General had
said, so that respondent could not be paid for overtime, then he
should not have been regularly worked overtime.
With this outline of the situation, we are brought to a
consideration of the Government's contention that § 23 has no
application to the respondent's compensation.
We turn first to the suggestion that the expressions "weekly
compensation" and "weekly earnings" control all of the provisions
of the section, and that hence both the affirmative provisions and
the prohibition contained in the proviso apply only to those
employees who receive weekly wages. As the record, however, fails
to indicate that any of the Government employees were paid by the
week, it is said that the term "weekly" was used as a method of
adjusting the wages of per hour or
per diem employees
because a forty hour work week could easily be calculated in their
case as the measure of weekly work and compensation, whereas it
could not so readily be applied to monthly employees. But we think
this suggestion does not comport either with the provisions or the
obvious purpose of the legislation. The section commanded not only
that wages reduced as a result of furloughs and uncompensated
overtime should be reestablished, but also that, for the future,
such wages should be maintained at the June 1, 1932, level, subject
only to the applicable percentage reductions provided by the
Economy Acts. It sought to forbid indirect reduction of wages by
the provision
Page 323 U. S. 565
that a work week should consist of forty hours and that
overtime, at one and one-half the regular hourly pay, should be
paid for any hours worked beyond that weekly limit. As the test of
what should constitute overtime was more conveniently calculated by
using a work week, and the hours worked during any week, it was
quite natural that Congress should use the phrases "weekly
compensation" and "weekly earnings" in setting a floor under wages.
[
Footnote 10]
If the Government is right, § 23 had no application to
respondent and those in like case, and the Governor could have
maintained a fifty-two hour work week at the old rate of pay, or
could have cut the work week, with a corresponding reduction in
pay. The result would be, as the court below pointed out, that an
Act of Congress, on its face applicable to all employees, including
monthly employees, which declared that the weekly wages of
employees "shall be reestablished and maintained at rates not lower
than" the 1932 rate would, for the first time, have authorized the
cutting of the wages of monthly employees below the 1932 level,
while the wages of all others were being restored to that level. As
we have seen, the Comptroller General ruled that such a cut in
respondent's pay was "in contravention of the plain terms of the
statute."
We are clear that the Comptroller General was right in ruling
that the statute applied not only to
per diem or hourly
employees, but also to employees paid on a monthly basis, such as
respondent, whose compensation was fixed by a wage board. We are
also clear that, on the face of the statute, if the Governor, in
the teeth of the statutory provision, worked such employees more
than forty hours a week, the overtime provision of § 23
required payment
Page 323 U. S. 566
at one and one-half straight time pay for the extra hours
worked.
The Government seeks to avoid such a construction of the Act by
invoking asserted administrative practice and legislative history.
It relies heavily on the statement made to the subcommittee, to
which we have heretofore referred. With respect to this statement,
we think it enough to say that the spokesman was complaining about
discriminations against employees paid by the day or the hour, but
he nowhere suggests the propriety of distinguishing between such
employees and those paid on a monthly basis but worked more than
forty hours per week. He advocates setting the June 1, 1932,
standard as a minimum subject only to percentage reductions
provided by the Economy Act. He envisages the fact that, if the
work week is reduced to forty hours and the June, 1932, standard is
thus reestablished, the result will be an increase in wages to the
employees concerned. The considerations of equity on which he
relies apply quite as much to employees paid by the month as to
those paid by the day or hour. Moreover, as above stated, the draft
he submitted was not adopted. On the contrary, one differently
worded became § 23 of the statute.
The Government next relies on the fact that, prior to the
adoption of § 23, no overtime was paid to employees who were
on a monthly or annual basis. But, as we shall see, the full
application of the principle of a work week limited to specified
hours, and payment of overtime for extra hours, was gradually
adopted by the Congress, and the fact that the old practice was
abolished piecemeal can have little weight in determining whether,
as respects the employees embraced in its terms, § 23
abolished the distinction amongst those embraced in trades and
occupations whose compensation was fixed by wage boards. Moreover,
the section essayed to deal only with a special class of employees
whose working conditions are more
Page 323 U. S. 567
nearly comparable to those of men employed in private industry.
There may therefore have been valid reason for establishing, as
respects all of these employees, a different rule from that
generally followed in Government departments.
The Government also relies on the prior practice in the Canal
Zone, but we think this inconclusive. By the Act of August 24,
1912, [
Footnote 11] the
President was empowered to appoint employees of the Canal Zone. The
Act provided that "the compensation of such persons shall be fixed
by the President, or by his authority, until such time as Congress
may by law regulate the same" (§ 4). By Executive Order of
February 2, 1914, the President established overtime for
per
diem and hourly workers, but forbade overtime for those paid
on a monthly or annual basis. Congress did undoubtedly legislate
further on the subject in § 23 of the Act of 1934. The
administrative practice prior to the adoption of the section is
therefore of no moment.
The Governor's attempt to reduce the compensation of the
respondent by working him overtime and not paying him for his
overtime, in the teeth of the statute and the Comptroller General's
ruling, certainly cannot be accorded weight in construing the
statute.
The Government produced at the trial of the case in the court
below certain letters from the Navy Department, the Government
Printing Office, and the Bureau of Engraving and Printing of the
Treasury Department stating that they had interpreted § 23 as
applying only to
per diem and hourly employees, and that
no overtime had been paid to employees working on a monthly or
yearly basis. These letters do not state, however, that these
branches regularly worked such employees overtime, as did the
Governor of the Canal Zone, without paying for overtime work.
Page 323 U. S. 568
Such evidence as there is in the record would seem to indicate
the contrary.
The Secretary of the Navy submitted certain questions respecting
§ 23 to the Comptroller General immediately after the
enactment of the section. One was whether per annum or per month
employees who worked in excess of 40 hours a week "because of an
extraordinary emergency" should be paid overtime. The Comptroller
answered in the negative, referring to his decision rendered the
Government Printing Office [
Footnote 12] in which he said that the regular hours of
work of employees on an annual basis were required by § 23 to
be fixed at not to exceed forty per week. In the same opinion
rendered to the Public Printer, he had ruled that such employees
were not entitled to overtime. There is no evidence that the
Secretary of the Navy or the Public Printer conceived that they
could work per annum and per month employees more than forty hours
a week without extra compensation except in cases of extraordinary
emergency, or that they ever pursued a practice like that of the
Governor of the Panama Canal. It would seem, therefore, that the
hours of monthly paid mechanical employees in the departments in
question were reduced to 40 without any pay cut. Such action would
be in accordance with the rulings of the Comptroller General. Thus,
the administrative construction of the Governor seems to stand
alone, and in contradiction to that of other heads of departments
and offices of the Government, and, in this respect, worked a
discrimination against the respondent and those in his class as
contrasted with other employees who stood in the same relation.
Certain it is that the Comptroller General never ruled that the
standard of 40 hours a week with overtime could be disregarded in
practice.
Finally, the Government argues that related legislation
indicates Congress did not intend § 23 to apply to
employes
Page 323 U. S. 569
paid by the month or by the year. We think, however, that, on
analysis, the course of legislation, considered as a whole, fails
to sustain the contention. As we have said, adoption of the
principle of limitation of working time and extra pay for overtime,
in respect of Government employment, has been of gradual
development.
As early as 1883, Congress authorized the Public Printer to pay
extra prices in accordance with the customs of the trade and the
justice of the case for extra work ordered in emergencies,
performed on Sundays or legal holidays or at night, if performed by
other than regular night forces. [
Footnote 13] It is assumed that the employees embraced in
this legislation were paid
per diem or per hour. The
provision for payment of overtime in the Public Printer's office
has been continued in the successive statutes. [
Footnote 14]
In 1888, Congress prescribed an eight hour day with payment for
overtime for letter carriers of the United States Postal Service,
[
Footnote 15] who receive
annual salaries.
In 1911, provision was made for overtime pay of employees of the
Customs Service required by the nature of their service to work
after 5 P.M. [
Footnote 16]
Such overtime pay was to be reimbursed the Government by the
steamship companies whose business required such services.
In 1919, the Secretary of Agriculture was authorized to pay
employees of the Bureau of Animal Industry, employed in industrial
establishments in the inspection of meat, for overtime work.
[
Footnote 17] Here again,
the Government was to be reimbursed by the establishment which
required the working of overtime, but the compensation paid the
inspectors was on an annual salary basis.
Page 323 U. S. 570
In 1940, an Act was passed [
Footnote 18] making the regular working hours of the Navy
Department and the Coast Guard, and their field services "eight
hours a day or forty hours per week" during the period of the
national emergency. The Act set a different method of paying the
overtime to monthly,
per diem, hourly, and piecework
employees than that applied to employees paid by the year, but it
is to be noted that the forty hour week and the overtime rate of
one and one-half times the regular rate was applied to monthly
employees.
The Government lays great stress on a report of the Committee on
Naval Affairs reporting this legislation to the Senate. [
Footnote 19] In that report, the
Committee said, referring to the forty hour per week limit, and the
payment for overtime:
"In this regard, the provision for the payment of compensation
[for overtime] to per annum and per month employees is a departure
from the practice heretofore followed. . . ."
A similar statement was made in the House report. [
Footnote 20] The difficulty that
arises in giving weight to these statements of the Congressional
Committees is that the facts already recited show the reports were
wrong in fact, and apparently were based upon an inaccurate
statement which was credited by the Committees.
In the same year, Congress passed another Act on the subject of
overtime. [
Footnote 21] In
this, it was provided:
"notwithstanding the provisions of any other law, compensation
for employment in excess of forty hours in any administrative work
week computed at a rate not less than one and one-half times the
regular rate is hereby authorized to be paid at such places and to
such monthly,
Page 323 U. S. 571
per diem, hourly, and piecework employees of the field
services of the War Department and the field services of the Panama
Canal whose wages are set by wage boards or other wage fixing
authorities. . . ."
Such light as we gain from the discussion in Congress indicates
that Congress already understood that overtime was payable to
certain employees of the Panama Canal by virtue of § 23 of the
Act of 1934, but that it was desired to extend the limitation of
hours per week and the payment of overtime to employees of the
field services of the Army and the field services of the Panama
Canal. Thus, in the debate, Mr. Ramspeck, of the House Committee on
Civil Service, said: [
Footnote
22]
"The Secretary of War and the Assistant Secretary of War . . .
say that they have the legal authority now to pay overtime to
certain employees of the War Department in the arsenals and at the
Panama Canal, but, as to others, they have not this authority, and
this creates a bad administrative situation. They have recommended
this bill, which has passed the Senate, and it is my understanding
we have given the same authority to the Navy Department as to the
Navy yards."
Finally, in 1942, by Joint Resolution, Congress provided for
overtime pay for Government employees generally, [
Footnote 23] including employees of
Government-owned or controlled organizations and those of the
District of Columbia whose positions are subject to the
Classification Act of 1923. The resolution embodies a proviso
excluding
"those whose wages are fixed on a daily or hourly basis and
adjusted from time to time in accordance with prevailing rates by
wage boards or similar administrative authority serving the same
purpose. . . ."
From this proviso, the Government argues that Congress believed
that, up to that time,
Page 323 U. S. 572
those whose monthly compensation was fixed by wage boards had
not been entitled to overtime, and that the resolution granted it
to them for the first time. Whatever Congress may have thought or
intended in respect of the proviso, we cannot ignore the fact that
§ 23 of the Act of March 28, 1934, on its face, applied to
such monthly employees, that the Comptroller had so ruled, and
that, so far as appears, the departments concerned had acted with
that understanding, save only the Governor of the Panama Canal,
who, although so advised, had acted in the teeth of the
statute.
The same misapprehension with respect to the effect and
administration of the Act of 1934 seems to have prevailed when the
War Overtime Pay Act of 1943 [
Footnote 24] was adopted. That Act, by a sweeping
provision, granted overtime pay to all civil employees of the
Government and all employees of Government-owned or controlled
corporations, except those in the Government Printing Office and
the Tennessee Valley Authority. It specifically included officers
and employees whose wages are fixed on a monthly or yearly basis by
wage boards or similar authorities, and excluded employees whose
wages are fixed on a daily or hourly basis by wage boards.
We think this summary of the legislation on the subject is not
conclusive or even strongly persuasive as an aid to the
construction of the Act under consideration as of the time when
Congress adopted it. It seems that there was no very clear and
general policy with respect to the payment of overtime until the
exigencies of the war called for compensation of Government
employees as a class on a basis similar to that adopted in private
industry. When the time came to make such general provision, the
more or less haphazard dealing with the subject theretofore seems
not to have been clearly in mind.
Page 323 U. S. 573
We conclude that the Court of Claims properly held that §
23 applies in respondent's case, and that he is entitled to recover
for the overtime he was required to work.
We reach, then, the question whether the court adopted the
correct method of calculating the overtime compensation. The
respondent submitted a computation whereby he multiplied his
monthly salary by twelve and divided the result by fifty-two to
ascertain his weekly salary. He divided the weekly salary by five
to obtain his daily pay for an eight hour day for each week that he
had worked a sixth day. He took the number of weeks in which he had
worked a sixth day and multiplied that number by the ascertained
daily wage, plus one-half. The Government argued in the court
below, and argues in this court, that the monthly wage of the
respondent covered every day of the month, because the Government
hired his full time. As a result, it is said, his daily pay should
be one-thirtieth of his monthly pay. [
Footnote 25] In this view, he has been paid straight time
not only for the five days, or the forty hours, he should have been
worked under § 23, but also for the sixth day he was required
to serve. The result is that he should be granted only additional
half pay for the sixth day of each week. But, according to this
contention, the respondent will already have been overpaid, for,
according to the argument, he has been paid straight time for the
seventh day of each week, although he only worked six days, and has
therefore received additional overtime pay for the sixth day. The
court below approved the respondent's method of reckoning, and we
think its decision correct. After the adoption of § 23, the
respondent was, in
Page 323 U. S. 574
effect, hired for a work week of forty hours, or a five day
week, and his daily wage was to be determined on that basis. He has
not been paid for the sixth day of each week, and should recover
straight time and one-half for the sixth day. This computation
accomplishes this, and there is authority for resort to it.
[
Footnote 26]
The judgment is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY concurs in the result.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE JACKSON and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE
dissent.
[
Footnote 1]
Act of March 28, 1934, c. 102, 48 Stat. 522, 5 U.S.C. §
673c.
[
Footnote 2]
101 Ct.Cls. 237.
[
Footnote 3]
42 Stat. 1488, 5 U.S.C. § 661
et seq.
[
Footnote 4]
c. 390, 37 Stat. 561, 48 U.S.C. § 1305.
[
Footnote 5]
47 Stat. 382.
[
Footnote 6]
48 Stat. 8, 13.
[
Footnote 7]
78 Cong.Rec. 2977.
[
Footnote 8]
See 14 Comp.Gen. 158.
[
Footnote 9]
See 14 Comp.Gen. 165.
[
Footnote 10]
Compare Overnight Motor Transp. Co. v. Missel,
316 U. S. 572;
Walling v. Helmerich & Payne, Inc., 323 U. S.
37;
St. John v. Brown, 38 F. Supp.
385;
Allen v. Moe, 39 F. Supp. 5;
Nelson v. St.
Joseph & G.I. R. Co., 199 Mo.App. 635, 205 S.W. 870.
[
Footnote 11]
Supra, Note 4
[
Footnote 12]
13 Comp.Gen. 265.
[
Footnote 13]
Act of January 13, 1883, 22 Stat. 402.
[
Footnote 14]
See 44 U.S.C. § 40.
[
Footnote 15]
Act of May 24, 1888, 25 Stat. 157;
cf. United States v.
Post, 148 U. S. 124.
See also 39 U.S.C. § 117.
[
Footnote 16]
Act of Feb. 13, 1911, § 5, 36 Stat. 901.
See United
States v. Myers, 320 U. S. 561.
[
Footnote 17]
Act of July 24, 1919, 41 Stat. 241, 7 U.S.C. § 394.
[
Footnote 18]
Act of June 28, 1940, 54 Stat. 676, 678. This Act expired June
30, 1942.
[
Footnote 19]
S.Rep. No. 1863, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 11, 12.
[
Footnote 20]
H.Rep. No. 2257, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., pp. 3, 4.
[
Footnote 21]
Act of October 21, 1940, 54 Stat. 1205. This Act expired June
30, 1942.
[
Footnote 22]
86 Cong.Rec. 13557.
[
Footnote 23]
56 Stat. 1068.
[
Footnote 24]
Act of May 7, 1943, 57 Stat. 75, § 1.
[
Footnote 25]
The Government relies on the Act of June 30, 1906, 34 Stat. 763,
5 U.S.C. § 84. That statute, however, was not addressed to the
problem of a standard work week of a limited number of hours and
the calculation of overtime for hours worked in excess of the
limit.
[
Footnote 26]
See St. John v. Brown; Allen v. Moe, supra, Note 10