TENA CAMPBELL, District Judge.
In this contempt matter, the court, on July 2, 2019, issued an order entitled "Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law Re: Calculation of Back Wages" (ECF No. 241) ("Order"). The Order followed the court's 2016 finding that Defendants were in contempt of the court's 2007 Injunction barring violations of the child labor laws.
Defendants Paragon Contractors Corporation and Brian Jessop have appealed the Order and now move this court for a stay pending resolution of their appeal. (
When determining whether to issue a stay of an order pending appeal, the court considers four factors: "(1) the likelihood of success on appeal; (2) the threat of irreparable harm if the stay or injunction is not granted; (3) the absence of harm to opposing parties if the stay or injunction is granted; and (4) any risk of harm to the public interest."
In the Order, the court addressed the Proposed Schedule of Payments (ECF No. 189) submitted by the Department of Labor Wage and Hour Division (Wage Hour). The Order was issued after the court held a November 2018 evidentiary hearing "to evaluate the evidence and methods underlying Wage Hour's calculations." (Order at 3-4.)
Because the court had already found contempt, the proceeding was limited to a determination of the contempt remedy, which required reconstruction of back pay owed to the children. The court applied the standard set forth in the "seminal FLSA back wage reconstruction case of
Defendants contend that the court's decision "lacks any clear legal precedent in the context presented here." (Mot. for Stay at 3.) They are referring to what they believe is "the proper approach for calculation of compensatory sanctions in a contempt case involving back wages under the FLSA." (
Defendants repeat arguments they made during the court's reconstruction of the back-pay award. The court has already considered and rejected those arguments.
They cite to
Defendants also disagree with the court's evaluation of Wage Hour's evidence in light of the standards articulated in
In short, Defendants do not present anything new. They have not shown a likelihood of success on the merits. And because the court finds below that they have not shown the remaining three factors "tip decidedly in their favor," the court will not consider their argument that the appeal presents "questions going to the merits so serious, substantial, difficult, and doubtful as to make the issue ripe for litigation and deserving of more deliberate investigation."
Defendants contend that Mr. Jessop will be irreparably harmed absent a stay because the "imposition of a combined total judgment in excess of one million dollars for illegally employing children carries with it a stigma that will be a burden for the rest of Defendant Jessop's life, and will subject him to ridicule and rejection causing great mental anguish, disgrace and ostracism." (Mot. to Stay at 5.) They further conclude that "[e]fforts to compel payment of such a judgment pending appeal only serve to exacerbate the irreparable injury" to Mr. Jessop. (
Defendants do not provide any support for their conclusory assertions. And, as Plaintiff notes, they "have already been found in contempt for illegally employing hundreds of children by clear and convincing evidence, a decision that was upheld by the Tenth Circuit. Any stigma associated with illegally employing children has already attached, regardless of whether the back wage judgment is stayed." (Opp'n to Defs.' Mot. for a Stay of This Court's Order Pending Appeal at 3, ECF No. 248 (internal citation omitted).)
Defendants have not met their burden to show they would be irreparably harmed unless a stay of the Order is imposed.
Defendants next contend that issuance of a stay "will not substantially injure others." (Mot. Stay at 6.) They say that "none of the children were expecting any compensation," the children were not promised or enticed by wage payments, and none "relied upon Defendants for income or to provide for their economic well-being." (
Contrary to Defendants' assertion, both the Plaintiff and those entitled to back pay will be harmed if payment is delayed once again. As Plaintiff notes, the Department of Labor "has an obligation to enforce the provisions of the FLSA and Defendants have been obstructing its ability to do so for over six years." (Opp'n at 4.) In addition, delaying the workers' remedy would "continue to prolong the repayment of back wages" owed to them and would result in "a tremendous injustice." (
Defendants have not satisfied their burden to show that a stay would not harm the opposing parties.
Defendants contend that the standard for calculating FLSA back wages in a contempt case is not clear and "[i]n the absence of such guidance, it would be premature to impose such significant consequences on Defendants or on anyone else, without clear rules[.]" (Mot. Stay at 6.) According to Defendants, the court is "enforcing a newly crafted rule" that must be tested in an appeal before being imposed on future litigants. (
Their position is not persuasive. As noted above, the standard is already set forth in established case law. In fact, denying the stay is in the best interest of the public. As Plaintiff notes in his opposition, "[t]he public has an interest in ensuring that the Court's legitimate authority to impose sanctions for failure to comply with an injunction is not needlessly thwarted or undermined, minor workers are not employed in contravention of the FLSA, unfair competition is eliminated, and the courts are not used as tolls of delay." (Opp'n at 5.)
In short, Defendants have not met their burden on this element.
Defendants have not established that any of the "harm factors" weigh in their favor, much less that those factors "tip decidedly" in their favor. For that reason, the standard for likelihood of success is not relaxed. And they have not established a substantial likelihood of success. Accordingly, they are not entitled to a stay of the court's July 2019 Order.