[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR790.18]

[Page 685-687]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
         CHAPTER V--WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
 
PART 790_GENERAL STATEMENT AS TO THE EFFECT OF THE PORTAL-TO-PORTAL ACT 
OF 1947 ON THE FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT OF 1938--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 790.18  ``Administrative practice or enforcement policy.''

    (a) The terms ``administrative practice or enforcement policy'' 
refer to courses of conduct or policies which an agency has determined 
to follow \111\ in the administration and enforcement of a statute, 
either generally, or with respect to specific classes of situations. 
\112\ Administrative practices and enforcement policies may be set forth 
in statements addressed by the agency to the public. \113\ Although they 
may be, and frequently are, based upon decisions or views which the 
agency has set forth in its regulations, orders, rulings, approvals, or 
interpretations, nevertheless administrative practices and enforcement 
policies differ from these forms of agency action in that such practices 
or policies are not limited to matters concerned with the meaning or 
legal effect of the statutes administered by the agency and may be based 
wholly or in part on other considerations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \111\ The agency may have determined to follow the course of conduct 
or policy for a limited time only (see paragraphs (c) and (f), this 
section) or for an indefinite time (see paragraph (b), this section), or 
for a period terminable by the happening of some contingency, such as a 
final decision in pending litigation.
    \112\ See United States v. Minnesota, 270 U.S. 181 (1926); United 
States v. Boston & Maine R.R. Co., 279 U.S. 732 (1929); Lucas v. 
American Code Co., 280 U.S. 445 (1930); Estate of Sanford v. 
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 308 U.S. 39 (1939). See also Final 
Report of Attorney General's Committee on Administrative Procedure in 
Government Agencies, pp. 26-29; 1 Von Baur, Federal Administrative Law 
(1942), p. 474.
    As to requirement that practice or policy be one with respect to a 
``class of employers,'' see paragraph (g) of this section.
    \113\ Pursuant to section 3 of the Administrative Procedure Act, 
statements of general policy formulated and adopted by the agency for 
the guidance of the public are published in the Federal Register. An 
example is the statement of the Secretary of Labor and the Administrator 
of the Wage and Hour Division, dated June 16, 1947, published in 12 FR 
3915.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (b) To illustrate this distinction, suppose the Administrator of the 
Wage and Hour Division issues a general

[[Page 686]]

statement indicating that in his opinion a certain class of employees 
come within a specified exemption from provisions of the Fair Labor 
Standards Act in any workweek when they do not engage in a substantial 
amount of nonexempt work. Such a statement is an ``interpretation'' 
within the meaning of sections 9 and 10 of the Portal Act. Assume that 
at the same time, the Administrator states that for purposes of 
enforcement, until further notice such an employee will be considered as 
engaged in a substantial amount of nonexempt work in any workweek when 
he spends in excess of a specified percentage of his time in such 
nonexempt work. This latter type of statement announces an 
``administrative practice or enforcement policy'' within the meaning of 
sections 9 and 10 of the Portal Act.
    (c) An administrative practice or enforcement policy may, under 
certain circumstances be at variance with the agency's current 
interpretation of the law. For example, suppose the Administrator 
announces that as a result of court decisions he has changed his view as 
to coverage of a certain class of employees under the Fair Labor 
Standards Act. However, he may at the same time announce that in order 
to give affected employers an opportunity to make the adjustments 
necessary for compliance with the changed interpretation, the Wage and 
Hour Division will not commence to enforce the Act on the basis of the 
new interpretation until the expiration of a specified period.
    (d) In the statement of the managers on the part of the House, 
accompanying the report of the Conference Committee on the Portal-to-
Portal Act, it is indicated (page 16) that under sections 9 and 10 ``an 
employer will be relieved from liability, in an action by an employee, 
because of reliance in good faith on an administrative practice or 
enforcement policy only (1) where such practice or policy was based on 
the ground that an act or omission was not a violation of the (Fair 
Labor Standards) Act, or (2) where a practice or policy of not enforcing 
the Act with respect to acts or omissions led the employer to believe in 
good faith that such acts or omissions were not violations of the Act.''
    (e) The statement explaining the Conference Committee Report goes on 
to say, ``However, the employer will be relieved from criminal 
proceedings or injunctions brought by the United States, not only in the 
cases described in the preceding paragraph, but also where the practice 
or policy was such as to lead him in good faith to believe that he would 
not be proceeded against by the United States.''
    (f) The statement explaining the Conference Committee Report gives 
the following illustrations of the above rules:

    An employer will not be relieved from liability under the Fair Labor 
Standards Act of 1938 to his employees (in an action by them) for the 
period December 26, 1946, to March 1, 1947, if he is not exempt under 
the ``Area of Production'' regulations published in the Federal Register 
of December 25, 1946, notwithstanding the press release issued by the 
Administrator of the Wage and Hour Division of the Department of Labor, 
in which he stated that he would not enforce the Fair Labor Standards 
Act of 1938 on account of acts or omissions occurring prior to March 1, 
1947. On the other hand, he will, by reason of the enforcement policy 
set forth in such press releases, have a good defense to a criminal 
proceeding or injunction brought by the United States based on an act or 
omission prior to March 1, 1947.

    (g) It is to be noted that, under the language of sections 9 and 10, 
an employer has a defense for good faith reliance on an administrative 
practice or an enforcement policy only when such practice or policy is 
``with respect to the class of employers to which he belonged.'' \114\ 
Thus where an enforcement policy has been announced pertaining to 
laundries and linen-supply companies serving industrial or commercial

[[Page 687]]

establishments the operator of an establishment furnishing window-
washing service to industrial and commercial concerns, who relied upon 
that policy in regard to his employees, has no defense under sections 9 
and 10. The enforcement policy upon which he claimed reliance did not 
pertain to ``the class of employers to which he belonged.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \114\ This provision, which appeared for the first time in the 
conference bill, to which the term ``practice'' was restored after 
elimination by the Senate, was apparently designed to meet some of the 
objections which led to elimination of the word ``practice'' from the 
bill reported by the Senate judiciary Committee. Cf. remarks of Senator 
Murray, 93 Cong. Rec. 2238; remarks of Senator Johnston, 93 Cong. Rec. 
2373; colloquy between Senators Lucas and Donnell, 93 Cong. Rec. 2185; 
remarks of Senator McGrath, 93 Cong. Rec. 2254-2256.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (h) Administrative practices and enforcement policies, similar to 
administrative regulations, orders, rulings, approvals and 
interpretations required affirmative action by an administrative agency. 
\115\ This should not be construed as meaning that an agency may not 
have administrative practices or policies to refrain from taking certain 
action as well as practices or policies contemplating positive acts of 
some kind. \116\ But before it can be determined that an agency actually 
has a practice or policy to refrain from acting, there must be evidence 
of its adoption by the agency through some affirmative action 
establishing it as the practice or policy of the agency. \117\ Suppose, 
for example, that shoe factories in a particular area were not 
investigated by Wage and Hour Division inspectors operating in the area. 
This fact would not establish the existence of a practice or policy of 
the Administrator to treat the employees of such establishments, for 
enforcement purposes, as not subject to the provisions of the Fair Labor 
Standards Act, in the absence of proof of some affirmative action by the 
Administrator adopting such a practice or policy. A failure to inspect 
might be due to any one of a number of different reasons. It might, for 
instance, be due entirely to the fact that the inspectors' time was 
fully occupied in inspections of other industries in the area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \115\ See Union Stockyards & Transit Co. v. United States, 308 U.S. 
213, 223 (1939); and United States v. American Union Transport, Inc., 
327 U.S. 437, 454 (1946). Cf. Federal Trade Commission v. Bunte 
Brothers, Inc., 312 U.S. 349, 351 (1941). See also President's message 
of May 14, 1947, 93 Cong. Rec. 5281.
    \116\ See, for example, Mintz v. Baldwin, 289 U.S. 346, 349 (1933), 
where the Department of Agriculture announced ``its policy for the 
present is to leave the control (of Bang's disease) with the various 
States.'' See also in this connection the statement of June 23, 1947, by 
the Senate Committee on the Judiciary regarding the President's message 
of May 14, 1947, on the Portal-to-Portal Act, 93 Cong. Rec. 5281.
    \117\ Union Stockyards & Transit Co. v. United States, supra. It may 
be noted in this connection that examples given by the sponsors of the 
legislation, in discussing the terms ``administrative practice or 
enforcement policy,'' involved situations in which affirmative action 
had been taken by the agency. Conference Report, p. 16; 93 Cong. Rec. 
2185, 2198, 4389-4391.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (i) It was pointed out above that sections 9 and 10 do not offer a 
defense to the employer who relies upon a regulation, order, ruling, 
approval or interpretation which at the time of his reliance has been 
rescinded, modified or determined by judicial authority to be invalid. 
The same is true regarding administrative practices and enforcement 
policies. \118\ However, a plea of a ``good faith'' defense is not 
defeated by the fact that after the employer's reliance, the practice or 
policy is rescinded, modified, or declared invalid.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \118\ See Sec. 790.17 (h) and (i), and footnotes 111 and 112.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------