Abbott v. United States , 6 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 1067 ( 1998 )


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  • OPINION

    YOCK, Judge.

    These consolidated civilian pay cases1 are before the Court on the defendant’s motion to dismiss one claim of certain plaintiffs on collateral estoppel grounds and on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ seven claims.2 For the reasons stated below, the defendant’s motion to dismiss one claim of 227 plaintiffs is granted, the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to liability as to one claim, and the defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to six claims.

    Factual Background

    The plaintiffs are 557 current and former members of the Uniformed Division of the United States Secret Service (“UD”).3 The UD consists of a Headquarters Staff and three branches: the White House Branch, the Foreign Missions Branch, and the Program Support Branch. Members of the UD are federal law enforcement officers assigned to protect the President and Vice President and their immediate families; the White House and its grounds; the Treasury Building and its grounds; the official residence of the Vice President and its grounds; and foreign diplomatic missions in the United States, its territories, and possessions. 3 U.S.C. § 202 (1994).

    UD members are generally scheduled to work an eight-hour basic workday, five times each week. In addition to the basic workday, UD members are required to report for roll-call activities. Roll-call time is scheduled for one-half hour each workday and is used for the reading of rolls and other preparation for the daily tom- of duty. By law, roll-call time is uncompensated. Over the course of a two-week pay period, a UD member who works full time, but does not work any overtime, will be scheduled to be on duty for 85 horns, five of those horns being uncompensated roll-call time.

    Members of the UD also work overtime. UD members sign up in their assigned unit’s overtime book to indicate their availability to work specific toms of duty which they are not normally scheduled to work. UD members can place their names in the appropriate overtime book from two to sixteen days prior to the date that the overtime is actually worked. In order to fill vacancies arising from scheduled members reporting sick or from other circumstances yielding a manning shortage for a particular tom of duty, a unit’s scheduling officer consults the applicable *556overtime book to determine if volunteers are available to work. If there are not enough volunteers to fill the vacancies, the UD may cancel a member’s day off to fill a position.

    Under the basic pay authority governing the UD, the Code of the District of Columbia (“D.C.Code”),4 overtime work is compensated at one and one-half times the UD member’s basic hourly rate.5 The D.C.Code places a cap on the maximum total compensation that a member of the UD may receive during each pay period. Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”), which also is applicable to the plaintiffs, overtime must be compensated at a rate of one and one-half times the regular rate at which a UD member is employed. The FLSA does not place a cap on the maximum total compensation that a UD member may receive each pay period. For each pay period, the UD calculates each member’s overtime entitlement under both the D.C.Code and the FLSA. The member is entitled to overtime pay under whichever authority provides the greater entitlement.

    In addition to overtime pay, the D.C.Code authorizes payment of a longevity premium to some UD members. UD members are entitled to longevity pay once they meet length of service requirements specified in the D.C.Code.

    The United States Code also authorizes payment of additional premium pay to UD members. A UD member who is regularly scheduled to work between 6:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. is entitled to a “night differential” amounting to 10 percent of the UD member’s rate of basic pay. In addition, a UD member who performs work dining a regularly scheduled, nonovertime shift, a part of which falls on a Sunday, is entitled to Sunday premium pay amounting to 25 percent of the UD member’s rate of basic pay.

    In their Complaints filed in this Court, the plaintiffs alleged that the UD improperly calculated their pay in violation of several laws. The plaintiffs subsequently filed the instant Motion for Summary Judgment, seeking summary disposition of every claim raised in the Complaints. The plaintiffs assert that the defendant unlawfully: (1) diminishes overtime pay when the members take approved leave (the “Lanehart overtime claim”); (2) diminishes “roll-call pay” when the members take approved leave (the “roll-call claim”); (3) diminishes the members’ pay when their compensation exceeds the pay cap set by the D.C.Code (the “salary cap claim”); (4) failed to include longevity pay when calculating the members’ “regular rate of pay” for overtime purposes during the period of August 8, 1993, through October 27, 1996 (the “longevity pay claim”); (5) refuses to include night differential pay when calculating the members’ “regular rate of pay” for overtime purposes (the “night differential claim”); (6) refused to pay the Sunday premium to plaintiffs who reported for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sundays during the period of February 23, 1992, through October 13, 1995 (the “Sunday night premium pay claim”); (7) refused to pay the Sunday premium to certain plaintiffs who took approved leave rather than report for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sundays during the period of February 23, 1992, through October 13, 1995 (the “Sunday night Armitage claim”); (8) refuses to include the overtime premium in calculating the night differential for the members who work overtime at night (the “night overtime claim”)6; and (9) failed to pay overtime compensation to some plaintiffs holding the rank of sergeant, despite a previous judgment that held that such plaintiffs were entitled to overtime (the “sergeants’ overtime claim.”).7

    The defendant has conceded liability as to claim (4) above and has cross-moved for summary judgment on the remainder of the plaintiffs’ claims. In addition, the defendant has moved to dismiss claim (1) above with *557respect to 227 plaintiffs. The defendant contends that 227 plaintiffs have previously litigated this issue and thus are collaterally estopped from relitigating the overtime issue before this Court. Oral arguments with respect to the motions were heard on April 8, 1998.

    Discussion

    I. Applicable Law

    A. UD Pay Provisions

    The basic pay authority for UD members is the D.C.Code.8 The schedule of salaries used by the Metropolitan Police Department, and thus also by the UD, is published at section 4-406 of the D.C.Code. A UD member’s “basic workweek” is defined as “a 40-hour workweek, excluding roll-call time.” D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(a)(3) (1994). The basic workweek must be scheduled over five days. Id. § 4-1104(b). The “basic workday” is defined as “an 8-hour day excluding roll-call time.” Id. § 4-1104(a)(4). “Roll-call time” is “that time, not exceeding one-half hour each workday, which is in addition to each basic workday of the basic workweek for reading of rolls and other preparation for the daily tour of duty.” Id. § 4-1104(a)(6). “[R]oll-eall time shall be without compensation or credit to the time of the basic workweek.” Id. § 4-1104(b).

    The D.C.Code also outlines the eligibility of UD members for overtime pay. “Overtime work” is defined as “[a]ll officially ordered or approved hours of work (except roll-call time) performed by officers and members in excess of the basic workweek in any administrative workweek.”9 Id. § 4-1104(e). UD members below the rank of lieutenant (all plaintiffs fit this category) usually receive compensation for overtime work “by payment at one and one-half times the basic hourly rate of such officer or member and all such compensation shall be considered premium pay.” Id. § 4-1104(d)(1)(A).

    In four situations, a member of the UD will receive compensatory time off rather than monetary payment for overtime work performed: (1) a first court appearance; (2) a continuation of a regular tour of duty; (3) call back to duty that is not an immediate continuation of a regular tour of duty; and (4) when the member requests compensatory time off in lieu of monetary compensation for overtime work performed. Id. §§ 4-1104(d), (e), (f), (g). Overtime work compensated in this manner “shall be compensated * * * at a rate of 1 hour of compensatory time for each hour of overtime work performed.” Id. § 4-1104(f)(1).

    The plaintiff UD members are nonexempt, ie., covered, under the provisions of the FLSA. United States Secret Service Directives System, Administrative Manual (“Admin. Manual”) § PER-10(8) (Sep. 1, 1989). The FLSA sets a floor for overtime compensation that employers must pay to nonexempt employees. Alexander v. United States, 32 F.3d 1571, 1576-77 (Fed.Cir.1994). The basic FLSA overtime provision provides that:

    Except as otherwise provided in this section, no employer shall employ any of his employees * * * for a workweek longer than forty hours unless such employee receives compensation for his employment in excess of the hours above specified at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed.

    29 U.S.C. § 207(a)(1) (1994). A “tour of duty” provision applicable to law enforcement officers modifies the above provision so that, rather than qualifying for overtime based on a 40-hour workweek, UD members are paid compensation of one and one-half times the regular rate at which they are employed for all hours worked in excess of 85.5 hours in a basic work period of 14 days. Id. § 207(k); 29 C.F.R. § 553.230(b) (1997). For purposes of calculating the FLSA overtime entitlement, “the ‘regular rate’ at which *558an employee is employed shall be deemed to include all remuneration for employment paid to, or on behalf of, the employee,” with the exception of seven enumerated types of compensation which are inapplicable to the instant consolidated cases. 29 U.S.C. § 207(e).

    In determining whether or not a UD member has reached the 85.5-hour threshold for FLSA overtime purposes, roll-call time is considered “hours worked.” Roll-call time must be credited as hours worked because it is “time spent by an employee performing an activity for the benefit of an agency and under the control or direction of the agency.” 5 C.F.R. § 551.401(a) (1997). More specifically, roll-call time must be credited as hours of work because it is a “preparatory activity”:

    If an agency reasonably determines that a preparatory or concluding activity is closely related to an employee’s principal activities, and is indispensable to the performance of the principal activities, and that the total time spent in that activity is more than 10 minutes per workday, the agency shall credit all of the time spent in that activity, including the 10 minutes, as hours of work.

    Id. § 551.412(a)(1).

    Although roll-call time must be credited as hours of work under the FLSA, it need not be considered hours of work under any other pay authority, including the D.C.Code:

    Time that is considered hours of work under this part shall be used only to determine an employee’s entitlement to minimum wages or overtime pay under the [Fair Labor Standards] Act, and shall not be used to determine hours of work for pay administration under title 5, United States Code, or any other authority.

    Id. § 551.401(d). Consequently, even though UD members are not monetarily compensated for five hours of roll-call time during their regularly scheduled two-week pay period, they do receive five hours of credit for that roll-call time to help them reach the 85.5-hour FLSA overtime threshold.

    In addition to the pay entitlements provided by the D.C.Code and the FLSA, UD members are also eligible for premium pay under title 5 of the United States Code. 5 U.S.C. § 5541(2)(C)(iv)(II) (1994). “[A]n employee is entitled to pay for nightwork at his rate of basic pay plus premium pay amounting to 10 percent of that basic rate.” Id. § 5545(a). Nightwork is defined as “regularly scheduled work between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.” Id. The ten percent premium pay provided by this section is commonly referred to as “night differential” pay. Additionally, UD members are eligible for “Sunday pay”:

    An employee who performs work during a regularly scheduled 8-hour period of service which is not overtime work as defined by section 5542(a) of this title a part of which is performed on Sunday is entitled to pay for the entire period of service at the rate of his basic pay, plus premium pay at a rate equal to 25 percent of his rate of basic pay.

    Id. § 5546(a).

    In summary, the instant consolidated cases involve the interpretation and interaction of several statutory provisions codified in titles 5 and 29 of the United States Code and title 4 of the D.C.Code. In addition, these cases require the application of the law of the two prior decisions discussed below.

    B. The Lanehart Decision

    Lanehart v. Homer, 818 F.2d 1574 (Fed.Cir.1987), involved a challenge by federal firefighters to an overtime policy promulgated by the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”). The plaintiff firefighters “normally and regularly work[ed] six twenty-four hour shifts in a biweekly pay period.” Lanehart, 818 F.2d at 1575. Thus, the plaintiffs worked a regularly scheduled tour of 144 hours in a two-week pay period. The FLSA overtime threshold determined to be applicable to federal firefighters, through application of the FLSA “tour of duty” provision, was 106 hours over a two-week pay period. See id. at 1576; 29 U.S.C. § 207(k) (1982). Consequently:

    [F]ederal firefighters, who work a regularly scheduled tour of duty of 144 hours in the two-week pay period, are entitled to receive compensation in the form of: (1) *559the pro rata part of their annual basic pay and annual premium pay under Title 5; and (2) overtime pay under FLSA for thirty-eight hours.

    Lanehart, 818 F.2d at 1576.

    Under the overtime policy promulgated by the OPM, “[o]nly those hours that the employee is actually on duty during the tour of duty shall be included in hours worked under the FLSA.” Id. If a firefighter took authorized “leave with pay,” the hours of leave taken would be subtracted from the 38 hours of FLSA overtime that was regularly scheduled as part of the employee’s tour of duty. Thus, “[o]nee the authorized absence equals or exceeds thirty-eight hours the employee receives no FLSA overtime compensation.” Id. at 1576 n. 8.

    The firefighters brought suit in federal district court, asserting that the OPM overtime policy violated federal “leave with pay” statutes.10 The district court granted the Government’s motion for summary judgment, “[c]oncluding that an employee may not be compensated for overtime work when the employee does not actually work overtime hours.” Id. at 1577.

    On appeal, however, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Federal Circuit”) determined that the OPM policy did violate the title 5 “leave with pay” statutes. The court concluded “that ‘pay’ as used in the ‘leave with pay' statutes has consistently been construed for more than a century as encompassing the total compensation or remuneration normally and regularly received by an employee.” Id. at 1581. Reversing the district court, the Federal Circuit held “that the ‘leave with pay’ statutes in their purpose and effect prevent any reduction in the customary and regular pay of the appellants, including overtime pay under Title 29 to which they would be entitled, when appellants are on authorized leave under [the ‘leave with pay’ statutes].” Id. at 1583. The court also noted:

    We do not consider overtime pay under Title 29 for overtime work that is not on a regularly recurring basis and within the normal scheduled work period to be part of customary and regular pay for this purpose. Thus, Title 29 overtime pay for irregularly or intermittently performed overtime whether administratively scheduled or unscheduled would not be covered.

    Id. at 1583 n. 17.

    C. The Armitage Decision

    Armitage v. United States, 23 Cl.Ct. 483 (1991), aff'd, 991 F.2d 746 (Fed.Cir.1993), involved claims by security officers at various federal facilities based on the holding of Lanehart. The plaintiffs alleged that they were regularly scheduled to work overtime during every shift and that they were not compensated for this regularly scheduled overtime when they took authorized leave with pay during their basic eight-hour workday. The plaintiffs further alleged a Lane-hart violation in their federal employer’s policy of refusing to pay Sunday premium pay to employees who took authorized leave with pay on a regularly scheduled Sunday workday.

    As to the Sunday premium pay claim, the court held that the plaintiffs were entitled to Sunday premium pay if they were regularly scheduled to work on Sunday, took authorized leave with pay on Sunday, and were charged leave by the employer for the hours not worked on Sunday. The Federal Circuit affirmed this holding on appeal. Armitage v. United States, 991 F.2d 746 (Fed.Cir.1993).

    The overtime issue, however, was resolved adversely to the plaintiffs. The Court observed that, when the plaintiffs elected not to work overtime hours that presumably were “regularly scheduled,” the employer did not charge the plaintiffs leave for the overtime that was not worked. The Court concluded that “the leave with pay statutes do not apply unless the agencies actually treated plaintiffs as on annual or sick leave during the regularly scheduled overtime * * * to which they claim entitlement.” Armitage, 23 Cl.Ct. at 488. Because the agency defendants did not treat the plaintiffs as being on leave, ie., did *560not charge leave for the overtime hours during which the plaintiffs were absent, the “leave with pay” statutes did not entitle the plaintiffs to pay for the overtime hours not worked.

    The Court illuminated its decision by comparing the plaintiffs to the firefighter plaintiffs in Lanehart:

    It is important to note that the firefighters in Lanehart earned and used leave at an accelerated rate because of their uncommon tom’ of duty. * * * Moreover, they were required to take leave for any hours of absence during their regular tour of duty, including those hours for which they received FLSA overtime. * * * Thus, when the firefighters took a day of leave, their leave accounts were charged 24 hours of leave; when they took leave for an entire pay period, they were charged 144 hours of leave.
    s*i ;Js #
    Unlike firefighters, the plaintiffs in this case were not placed in a leave status and their leave account was not charged when they were excused from working regularly scheduled overtime on days which they took eight hours of annual or sick leave. Their attendance was excused, and they simply did not work. Their nonappearance for overtime was authorized and they were not paid for those overtime hours that they did not work. For these employees, unlike the firefighters in Lanehart, the leave with pay statutes do not come to bear, unless plaintiffs can demonstrate that they should be treated as actually on leave. In the absence of such a showing, the precise holding of Lanehart does not assist plaintiffs with respect to regularly scheduled overtime. Lanehart held only that an employee is entitled not to have his pay reduced when “on authorized leave under [5 U.S.C.] sections 6303, 6307, 6322, and 6323.” 818 F.2d at 1583.

    Id. at 487, 488-89. Because the plaintiffs were not charged leave for overtime hours not worked, the Court held that neither the leave with pay statutes nor the overtime pay statutes entitled the plaintiffs to pay for overtime hours not worked. Id. at 492. The plaintiffs did not appeal this adverse decision.

    D. Summary Judgnoent Standard

    Summary judgment is properly granted when there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”), Rule 56(e); see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247-49, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986). The moving party has the burden of proving that there are no genuine issues of material fact. Celotex Corp., 477 U.S. at 317, 106 S.Ct. 2548. This burden “may be discharged by ‘showing’— that is, pointing out to the [Court] — that there is an absence of evidence to support the non-moving party’s case." Sweats Fashions, Inc. v. Pannill Knitting Co., 833 F.2d 1560, 1563 (Fed.Cir.1987). If there is any doubt as to factual issues, they must be resolved in favor of the nonmoving party, and all presumptions and inferences should be drawn in favor of the nonmovant. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587, 106 S.Ct. 1348, 89 L.Ed.2d 538 (1986).

    In challenging a motion for summary judgment, the nonmovant may not merely rest upon the complaint but must point to probative evidence tending to support its version of the disputed material facts. See Anderson, 477 U.S. at 248, 106 S.Ct. 2505. “If the evidence [presented by the nonmovant] is merely colorable, or is not significantly probative, summary judgment may be granted.” Id. at 249-50,106 S.Ct. 2505 (citations omitted). Furthermore, if disposition of a case hinges on a question of statutory interpretation, summary judgment may be granted because statutory interpretation is a question of law. See Nissho Iwai Am. Corp. v. United States, 143 F.3d 1470, 1472-73 (Fed.Cir.1998); City of Tacoma, Dep’t of Pub. Utils. v. United States, 28 Fed.Cl. 637, 642 (1993).

    II. The Plaintiffs’ Claims

    After briefing and oral arguments, seven claims remain the subject of the instant cross-motions for summary judgment. In *561addition, the defendant’s partial defense of collateral estoppel remains to be addressed with respect to one of the plaintiffs’ claims.11

    A. The Lanehart Overtime Claim

    The plaintiffs in the instant cases contend that they, like the Lanehart plaintiffs, work “regularly scheduled” overtime, the compensation for which should be considered “customary and regular pay” which cannot be diminished when the plaintiffs take authorized leave with pay. The defendant disputes this claim on three grounds. First, the Government asserts that 227 of the plaintiffs in the instant cases are barred from asserting the Lanehart-styled overtime claim, because those 227 plaintiffs have already litigated that issue in the consolidated cases styled as Amshey v. United States, 26 Cl.Ct. 582 (1992), vacated, 35 Fed.Cl. 358 (1993). Second, the defendant contends that none of the plaintiffs fit into the Lanehart situation because overtime worked by the plaintiffs is not “regularly scheduled” and thus compensation for overtime is not “customary and regular” pay. Finally, the Government asserts that the plaintiffs are not charged leave for overtime not worked and thus the plaintiffs’ claim fails under the rationale of Armitage. The Court will address each of the defendant’s challenges in turn.

    1. Amshey and Collateral Estoppel

    A total of 227 of the plaintiffs in the instant consolidated cases were also plaintiffs in Amshey. In that case, the parties cross-moved for summary judgment on the issue of whether or not the plaintiffs worked regularly scheduled overtime within the meaning of Lanehart. In granting the Government’s motion for summary judgment, Senior Judge Harkins held, in an Order dated August 29, 1990:

    Plaintiffs do not work regularly scheduled overtime, and Lanehart does not consider overtime pay under Title 29 for overtime work that is not on a regularly recurring basis and within the normal scheduled work period.
    Unlike the firefighters in Lanehart, plaintiffs’ assigned tours of duty do not include any hours of overtime that would qualify as regularly scheduled. Plaintiffs’ overtime is not shown to be part of customary and regular pay, and plaintiffs are not entitled to overtime under Lanehart.

    The remaining issues in the case subsequently went to trial, and an opinion on liability was issued in that case on June 30, 1992. On May 6, 1993, the parties filed a Joint Stipulation for Entry of Final Judgment. The stipulation was conditioned upon the Court entering an order vacating its entire June 30, 1992 opinion. On May 7, 1993, the Court issued an order vacating its June 30, 1992 opinion and directing the clerk to enter final judgment pursuant to the terms of the stipulation. Amshey v. United States, 35 Fed.Cl. 358 (1993). The pertinent provisions of the Joint Stipulation for Entry of Final Judgment provided:

    On or about August 29, 1990, the court granted defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment finding that the overtime worked by plaintiffs was not regularly scheduled and rejecting plaintiffs’ argument that the Uniformed Division had failed to properly credit them with periods of paid absence (annual leave, holidays, etc.) in calculating their overtime.
    The parties now resolve any and all remaining claims in these consolidated cases and agree as follows:
    i'fi # * %
    3. Accordingly, without their constituting an admission of liability upon the part of either plaintiffs or defendant, the parties stipulate that judgment be entered in the *562amount of $1,300,000.00 in favor of all named plaintiffs as a group. * * *
    * * * *
    5. For the period up to and including May 1, 1993, plaintiffs release, waive, and abandon all claims against the United States, or its officers, agents or employees, that are set forth in count 1 and 3 of the complaints in nos 583-86C, 703-86C, 296-87C and 197-88C, and in count 1 of the complaint in 196-88C, including any claim for interest, or liquidated damages.
    6. Any claims that plaintiffs may have for pay for work performed on or after May 2, 1993 are excluded from this agreement.
    7. The parties waive and abandon all rights of appeal in this lawsuit, including any right to appeal from the Court’s entry of partial summary judgment in favor of defendant on or about August 29, 1990.
    ^ ^ ^
    10. This stipulation is conditioned upon the Court’s entering an order vacating its entire opinion issued on June 30, 1992.
    11. This stipulation is made solely for the purpose of enabling the Court to enter the judgment referred to in paragraph 3 above, if the Court vacates its entire opinion issued on June 30,1992.

    The defendant contends that the final, stipulated judgment entered in Amshey precludes the plaintiffs in that case from arguing the Lanehart regularly scheduled overtime issue again before this Court. The plaintiffs retort that they are permitted to reargue this issue because the judgment in Amshey does not control any claims for pay after May 1, 1993.

    The doctrine of collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, “relieve[s] parties of the cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits, conserve[s] judicial resources, and, by preventing inconsistent decisions, eneourage[s] reliance on adjudication.” Allen v. McCurry, 449 U.S. 90, 94, 101 S.Ct. 411, 66 L.Ed.2d 308 (1980). “The principle of collateral estoppel dictates that an issue that is fully and fairly litigated, is determined by a final judgment, and is essential to that judgment, is conclusive in a subsequent action between the same parties.” Bingaman v. Department of the Treasury, 127 F.3d 1431, 1436-37 (Fed.Cir. 1997).

    In Amshey, the Court ruled, after full and fair btigation of the issue, that the “plaintiffs’ assigned tours of duty do not include any hours of overtime that would qualify as regularly scheduled. Plaintiffs’ overtime is not shown to be part of customary and regular pay, and plaintiffs are not entitled to overtime under Lanehart.” Order of Aug. 29, 1990, at 3. The determination that the plaintiffs’ overtime was not regularly scheduled and thus not part of customary and regular pay was essential to the Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the Government on the Lanehart overtime issue. Indeed, the determination completely resolved Count 2 of the Amshey plaintiffs’ complaint.

    The Court eventually issued an opinion on liability on the remaining claims in Amshey. That opinion was vacated and replaced by a stipulated judgment. However, the fact “that a judgment is entered by stipulation does not in and of itself remove the effect of a court’s prior determination of specific issues in the litigation.” Hartley v. Mentor Corp., 869 F.2d 1469, 1472 (Fed.Cir.1989). Rather, the stipulated judgment “must be construed to determine its effect in bght of all of the circumstances.” Id.

    Nothing in the stipulated judgment in Amshey conflicts with the earlier regularly scheduled overtime ruling by Judge Harkins. The stipulated judgment itself, while vacating the opinion on babibty with respect to two issues, does not profess to vacate the prior summary judgment ruling on the Lanehart overtime issue. To the contrary, the stipulated judgment expressly recognizes that “[o]n or about August 29, 1990, the Court granted defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment finding that the overtime worked by plaintiffs was not regularly scheduled,” and provides that “[t]he parties waive and abandon all rights of appeal in this lawsuit, including any right to appeal from the Court’s entry of partial summary judgment in favor of defendant on or about August 29, 1990.”

    *563It is clear from the plain language of the stipulated judgment that the parties manifested an intention to be bound by Judge Harkins’ ruling that the “plaintiffs’ assigned tours of duty do not include any hours of overtime that would qualify as regularly scheduled. Plaintiffs’ overtime is not shown to be part of customary and regular pay, and plaintiffs are not entitled to overtime under Lanehart.” Amshey Order of Aug. 29, 1990, at 3. If a stipulated judgment, “by its terms, indicates that the parties thereto intend to preclude any challenge to [an issue decided by summary judgment during the course of litigation], even in subsequent litigation involving a new cause of action, then that issue can be precluded.” Foster v. Hallco Mfg. Co., 947 F.2d 469, 480-81 (Fed.Cir.1991); see also Hartley v. Mentor Corp., 869 F.2d 1469 (Fed.Cir.1989) (holding that issue decided on summary judgment had preclusive effect in subsequent litigation, where stipulated judgment did not conflict with or vacate the summary judgment ruling and where parties voluntarily relinquished the right to appeal the summary judgment ruling).

    A total of 227 of the plaintiffs in the instant consolidated cases were also plaintiffs in Amshey. Those plaintiffs agreed, through the stipulated judgment in Amshey, to be bound by the summary judgment ruling that they “do not work regularly scheduled overtime” and that their overtime is not part of “customary and regular pay.” Yet those 227 plaintiffs have now brought the same issue before this Court. It is this precise vice, the endless relitigation of the same issue by the same parties, that the doctrine of collateral estoppel is designed to prevent.

    The 227 plaintiffs in question argue that the stipulated judgment limits the Amshey summary judgment ruling to claims arising prior to May 2, 1993. The plain language of the stipulated judgment, however, undercuts the plaintiffs’ argument. The preamble of the stipulated judgment recognizes that “[o]n or about August 29, 1990, the court granted defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment finding that the overtime worked by plaintiffs was not regularly scheduled.” The preamble then recites that the terms of the stipulated judgment are intended to “resolve any and all remaining claims in these consolidated cases.” (Emphasis added.) The agreement expressly pertains only to claims that remained after the Court granted the defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment on the Lanehart overtime issue. Thus, the May 2, 1993 date recited in paragraph 6 of the agreement pertains only to claims that remained after the Lanehart overtime issue had been resolved by summary judgment. To adopt the plaintiffs’ view that the stipulated agreement allows for relitigation of the regularly scheduled overtime issue would be to adopt an interpretation that renders meaningless the agreement’s preamble. This Court must reject such an unreasonable construction. See W.M. Schlosser Co. v. United States, 767 F.2d 870, 874 (Fed.Cir.1985) (deeming unreasonable an interpretation that would render contract language superfluous); United States v. Johnson Controls, Inc., 713 F.2d 1541, 1555 (Fed.Cir.1983) (reciting the maxim that “an interpretation that gives a reasonable meaning to all parts of the contract will be preferred to one that leaves portions of the contract meaningless.”).

    The summary judgment ruling was not vacated, altered, or date-restricted by the stipulated judgment. Consequently, the 227 plaintiffs in the instant cases, who also were plaintiffs in Amshey, are collaterally es-topped from arguing the Lanehart regularly scheduled overtime issue before this Court. The defendant’s motion to dismiss this claim by the 227 former Amshey plaintiffs is granted.12

    2. Regularly Scheduled Overtime

    Even if issue preclusion did not apply in the instant cases, however, the 227 plaintiffs addressed above, like the other 330 plaintiffs, would not succeed on the regularly scheduled overtime issue. For the reasons stated below, this Court, consistent with the Court in Amshey, concludes that the plaintiffs do not work regularly scheduled overtime that yields “customary and regular” pay under Lanehart.

    *564Lanehart addressed the unique work schedule of federal firefighters. Firefighters “work a regularly scheduled tour of duty of 144 hours in the two-week pay period.” Lanehart, 818 F.2d at 1576. The FLSA overtime threshold applicable to federal firefighters was 106 hours in a two-week pay period. Thus, 38 FLSA overtime hours were built into the firefighters’ regularly scheduled tour of duty. Accordingly, 38 hours of overtime pay were built into the customary and regular pay that a firefighter would receive for working a regularly scheduled 144-hour tour of duty. The Federal Circuit held that this built-in, customary and regular 38 hours of overtime pay that a firefighter received for working his regularly scheduled tour of duty could not be diminished when a firefighter took authorized leave; to do so would violate the title 5 “leave with pay” statutes.

    The tours of duty of UD members are much different than those of the firefighters in Lanehart. For FLSA purposes, UD members work regularly scheduled tours of duty amounting to 85 hours in a two-week pay period. The FLSA threshold applicable to UD members is 85.5 hours in a two-week pay period. Thus, no FLSA overtime hours are built into a UD member’s regularly scheduled tours of duty. Accordingly, no FLSA overtime pay is included in the regular and customary pay that a UD member receives for working a tour of duty. Because there is no overtime pay to be diminished, the UD does not violate the title 5 “leave with pay” statutes by not paying UD members overtime pay when they take authorized leave over the course of their regularly scheduled tours of duty.

    The plaintiffs, however, assert a theory that may best be described as “constructive” regularly scheduled overtime. They contend that most UD members work some amount of overtime during each two-week pay period and that the UD could regularly schedule this overtime if it so desired. The plaintiffs assert that the UD violates the “leave with pay” statutes by not paying overtime compensation for overtime hours that the plaintiffs theoretically might have worked had they not taken leave.

    This Court declines to extend Lanehart to cover the constructive overtime theory advanced by the plaintiffs. The overtime worked by the plaintiffs is not “regularly scheduled” in the sense that term was used in Lanehart. The firefighters’ regularly scheduled tours of duty regularly incorporated 38 hours of overtime. The instant plaintiffs’ regularly scheduled tours of duty incorporate no hours of overtime. While the pay records introduced by the plaintiffs tend to support their contention that, in addition to their regularly scheduled 85-hour tours of duty, each plaintiff works some overtime during most pay periods, the records fail to show any regularity in the amount of overtime worked by each plaintiff. Over the course of a year, each plaintiff works several administrative workweeks without putting in any overtime hours. During the remaining weeks of the year, each plaintiff works a variable amount of overtime that defies any guise of regularity.13 The overtime worked by each plaintiff is irregularly performed, not regularly recurring, and thus outside the scope of the Lanehart holding. See Lanehart, 818 F.2d at 1583 n. 17.

    Moreover, unlike the Lanehart firefighters, the plaintiffs in the instant cases are not regularly required to work any amount of overtime. Rather, as the plaintiffs make clear in their Motion for Summary Judgment and the declarations in support thereof, overtime is worked by those UD members who *565volunteer to work extra hours. (See Decl. of Richard Cook at ¶ 17 (“Uniformed Division Officers signing up in the overtime book state their availability to work, on a particular day, or during a specific tour of duty which they are not normally scheduled to work.”); Mem. in Support of Pis.’ Mot. for Summ. J. at 28 (“The available overtime sign-up books contain the names of officers ready and willing to perform the overtime.”). See also Decl. of [former UD Chief] Clark Benson at ¶ 7 (“Currently, more members of the Uniformed Division volunteer for overtime than there are vacancies to fill.”).) Cf. Aviles v. United States, 151 Ct.Cl. 1, 8, 1960 WL 8530 (1960) (in this pre-Lanehart case, the plaintiffs’ overtime was deemed regularly scheduled where “[t]he plaintiffs had no choice but to work the overtime.”). The fact that a UD member has the opportunity to volunteer for large quantities of overtime does not translate into a Lanehart entitlement to overtime pay when that member chooses not to volunteer for overtime.

    The plaintiffs also allege that the UD could practically and efficiently schedule overtime in advance if it so desired, and thus their overtime should be deemed “regularly scheduled.” The plaintiffs ground this argument in the language of Buchan v. United States, 33 Fed.Cl. 513 (1995), which states that “[i]f the [agency] could have scheduled the overtime because the work was habitual and routine, but failed to do so, the [employees] would be eligible for regularly scheduled overtime.” Buchan, 33 Fed.Cl. at 514. However, the plaintiffs have not alleged that the work they perform during overtime hours is habitual and routine, so that it could be regularly scheduled in advance. Nothing in the plaintiffs’ appendix in support of their motion disputes the defendant’s assertion that overtime “generally cannot be scheduled more than one or two days in advance, and projected at the earliest three days in advance, because of the changing protective demands placed upon the UD.” (Decl. of Richard Friedman at ¶ 10.) While the plaintiffs make much of the fact that the White House Easter Egg Roll is a foreseeable annual event at which overtime will most likely be required, they neither allege that the duties they perform at the event are habitual or routine nor allege that the UD could practically schedule this overtime by presaging the number of members who will take sick or annual leave or otherwise absent themselves from their shifts on the day of the Easter Egg Roll. The plaintiffs’ appendix contains no colorable evidence that the UD could regularly schedule overtime in advance of a member’s administrative workweek.

    3. The Armitage Holding

    Finally, the plaintiffs’ Lanehart claim for constructive overtime fails under the Armitage rationale. The trial court in Armitage held that “the leave with pay statutes do not apply unless the agencies actually treated plaintiffs as on annual or sick leave during the regularly scheduled overtime * * * to which they claim entitlement.” Armitage, 23 Cl.Ct. at 488. As explained above, the plaintiffs in the instant cases do not meet even the threshold requirement of Armitage that they work regularly scheduled overtime.14 Moreover, even if their overtime hours were considered “regularly scheduled,” it is undisputed that the plaintiffs are not charged annual or sick leave for overtime hours that they choose not to work. (Friedman Decl. at ¶ 6.) Their absence from overtime hours is simply excused, and their leave accounts are not charged. This Court finds persuasive the rationale of the Armitage trial court and *566agrees that the “leave with pay” statutes at issue in Lanehart do not come into play if an employee is not charged leave for hours of overtime not worked.

    In summary, the Court agrees with the finding of Judge Harkins in his Amshey Order dated August 29, 1990, that, “[u]nlike the firefighters in Lanehart, plaintiffs’ assigned tours of duty do not include any hours of overtime that would qualify as regularly scheduled. Plaintiffs’ overtime is not shown to be part of customary and regular pay, and plaintiffs are not entitled to overtime under Lanehart.” In addition, the Court agrees with the decision of the Armitage trial court and concludes that the plaintiffs are not entitled to overtime pay under Lanehart because they are not assessed leave when they do not work overtime hours. Accordingly, as there are no genuine issues of material fact in dispute, the Government is entitled to summary judgment on the Lanehart overtime claim.

    B. The Roll-Call Claim

    The plaintiffs contend that they receive compensation for roll-call time that constitutes “customary and regular pay.” They assert that they “are entitled to pay for roll call every pay period in which they work over 85.5 hours.” (Mem. in Support of Pls.’ Mot. for Summ. J. at 24.) At oral argument, the plaintiffs’ counsel explained this assertion to mean that, if a member works over 85.5 hours in a two-week pay period, the UD pays the member five hours of “straight time” pay for the five hours of roll-call time that comprised part of the member’s 85-hour basic work period. (Tr. at 13-14.) The plaintiffs complain that the UD, in violation of Lane-hart, reduces this five hours of roll-call compensation when they take authorized leave.

    In support of their claim that UD members are entitled to pay for their five hours of roll-call time whenever they work at least one-half hour of overtime, the plaintiffs offer the declarations of two plaintiffs. The first declaration states:

    Officers are paid for the first 80 hours of their work schedule at their base hourly rate. Officers get credit for the 5 hours of roll call but they are not paid for this time unless they work at least 85.5 hours in a pay period. However, since plaintiffs work overtime virtually every pay period, officers are entitled to pay for this roll call time for virtually every pay period of each year.

    (Richard Cook Deck at ¶ 19.) The second declaration states:

    I receive one-half hour credit for roll call time each work shift. If I work over 85.5 total hours in the work period (including roll call time), I am entitled to pay for these roll call hours. Since my base schedule is 85 hours, any overtime over one-half hour will result in a work schedule exceeding 85.5 hour [sic] a pay period.

    (Stephen Ridder Deck at ¶ 8.) These declarations recite the declarants’ legal conclusion that officers are entitled to pay for roll-call time. The defendant takes the position that UD members are not entitled to compensation for roll-call time, citing the D.C.Code. The parties’ dispute presents a question of entitlement to pay under existing law, a legal question which may be resolved on a motion for summary judgment.

    Under Lanehart, an employee’s regular and customary pay cannot be diminished when the plaintiff takes authorized leave; to reduce regular and customary pay solely because an employee takes authorized leave would be to violate the “leave with pay” statutes. If pay for roll-call time is part of a UD member’s regular and customary pay, then the member is entitled to receive this roll-call compensation when he or she takes authorized leave.

    Over the course of a basic two-week pay period, each plaintiff is regularly scheduled to be on duty for 85 hours. Each plaintiff receives “straight time” pay for 80 of those hours. Five hours of each pay period constitute roll-call time, which is uncompensated. The plaintiffs do not dispute that they are not entitled to compensation for these five hours if they work no overtime in a two-week pay period. The plaintiffs contend, however, that if they work more than one-half hour of overtime in any pay period, the FLSA overtime provisions entitle them to be compensated for the five hours of roll-call time that *567comprised part of their basic 85-hour pay period. (Tr. at 16.) The plaintiffs further contend that the defendant violates Lanehart by refusing to pay them for these five hours of roll-call time if they take authorized leave during a fourteen-day pay period. The Court finds no support in law or in the record for the plaintiffs’ position.

    The statute governing the pay of UD members defines roll-call time as “that time, not exceeding one-half horn’ each workday, which is in addition to each basic workday of the basic workweek for reading of rolls and other preparation for the daily tour of duty.” D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(a)(6). That statute also mandates that roll-call time “shall be without compensation or credit to the time of the basic workweek.” Id. § 4-1104(b). The D.C.Code does not authorize an “overtime exception” to this rule. Nothing in the basic pay authority of the UD supports the plaintiffs’ contention that they are entitled to compensation for their five hours of basic roll-call time whenever they work more than one-half hour of overtime in a pay period.

    Similarly, nothing in the overtime provisions of the FLSA support the roll-call pay entitlement that the plaintiffs claim. Incorporating the special “tour of duty” provision applicable to law enforcement personnel, the FLSA mandates that the UD cannot employ a member for more than 85.5 hours in a 14-day period “unless such employee receives compensation for his employment in excess of the hours above specified at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed.” 29 U.S.C. §§ 207(a)(1), (k); 29 C.F.R. § 553.230(b). The FLSA overtime provisions only address compensation for hours worked above the 85.5-hour threshold. Nothing therein requires that the UD monetarily compensate members for the five hours of roll-call time that helped the members reach that 85.5-hour threshold. Consequently, no provision of law cited by the plaintiffs entitles them to receive compensation for the five hours of roll-call time that constitutes part of their regularly scheduled 85-hour pay periods. Although roll-call is undisputedly a regularly recurring event, it does not yield customary and regular pay that would be covered by Lanehart.

    The statements of earnings and leave submitted by the plaintiffs further show that UD members are not entitled to compensation for roll-call time. The plaintiffs point to a line item on these statements entitled “FLSA UD Roll Call” to support their assertion that roll-call is an item of pay that they customarily and regularly receive. However, not one of the statements submitted by the plaintiffs shows that any pay was allotted to the roll-call line item, regardless of the number of hours of overtime worked. While the number of hours of roll-call time credited to each plaintiff is recorded on the statements, no dollar amounts are allocated to the roll-call line item. This is in stark contrast to 20 or so other line items that appear on each statement, all of which list a dollar amount in the “Amount” section. These records, submitted by the plaintiffs, fully support the Government’s position that UD members do not, under any circumstances, receive compensation for the five hours of basic roll-call time that comprises part of their regularly scheduled 85-hour pay periods. Indeed, compensation for this basic roll-call time would violate the express prohibition on compensation for roll-call time set out in the UD's basic pay authority, the D.C.Code.

    In summary, nothing in the D.C.Code, the FLSA, the “leave with pay” statutes, or Lanehart supports the plaintiffs’ assertion that they are entitled to compensation for their basic five hours of roll-call time during pay periods in which they work more than one-half hour of overtime and take no leave. Because the plaintiffs are not entitled to compensation for their five hours of basic roll-call time when they work their regularly scheduled 85 hours, work overtime, and take no leave, it necessarily follows that they are not entitled to compensation for that roll-call time when they work their regularly scheduled 85 hours, work overtime, and take leave. The entitlement claimed by the plaintiffs simply does not exist in the cited legal authorities. Accordingly, the defendant’s motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to the roll-call claim.

    *568C. The Salary Cap Claim

    The basic pay authority for the UD provides that the aggregate of a member’s basic pay and premium pay (including overtime pay) cannot exceed the compensation of the Chief of Police of the District of Columbia in any pay period. D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(h)(2). Thus, the D.C.Code effectively caps the total amount of overtime pay that may be attained by UD members every pay period. As previously mentioned, however, members of the UD are also covered by the provisions of the FLSA. The FLSA does not cap an employee’s level of compensation. In calculating a member’s biweekly compensation under the D.C.Code, the UD must apply the salary cap required by that pay authority. When calculating a member’s entitlement to compensation under the FLSA, however, “[t]he maximum biweekly limitation on an employee’s aggregate rate of pay * * * does not apply to employees COVERED under FLSA.” Admin. Manual § PER 10(8). “To the extent that the FLSA provides the greater pay benefit [as compared to the calculation under the D.C.Code], the employees must be paid under the FLSA.” Id. The plaintiffs allege, in this claim, that the defendant has improperly capped overtime entitlement under the D.C.Code rather than provide them with the greater benefit of the FLSA. In support of their position, the plaintiffs have submitted the earnings and leave statements of three plaintiffs15 whose overtime entitlements have allegedly been wrongfully capped.

    The defendant responds that two of the three plaintiffs offered as examples were paid overtime under the FLSA, and thus their compensation was not capped. As to the third plaintiff, Mr. Lewis C. Fox, the defendant admits that his pay was incorrectly capped during one pay period. The defendant has also submitted an earnings and leave statement showing that the error was subsequently corrected.

    At oral argument, the plaintiffs’ counsel did not dispute the defendant’s position that two of the three plaintiffs’ overtime entitlements had been calculated under the FLSA or that Mr. Fox’s pay had been corrected.16 In addition, the pay records submitted by the plaintiffs offer no support for their position that UD members are wrongfully paid under the capped D.C.Code when FLSA would provide them with a greater benefit. The plaintiffs have not disputed the defendant’s showing that all three of the allegedly harmed plaintiffs were paid overtime under the FLSA rather than under the D.C.Code. The defendant has met its burden of proving that there are no genuine issues of material fact “by ‘showing’ — that is, pointing out to the [Court] — that there is an absence of evidence to support the [plaintiffs’] case.” Sweats Fashions, Inc., 833 F.2d at 1563. Accordingly, the Government’s motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to the plaintiffs’ salary cap claim.

    D. The Longevity Pay Claim

    Under the D.C.Code, some of the plaintiffs are entitled to longevity pay. D.C.Code Ann. § 4-415. Under the overtime provision of the FLSA, UD members must be paid for overtime hours at a rate of not less that one and one-half times the “regular rate” at which they are employed. The plaintiffs contend that longevity pay should be included in their “regular rate” of pay for purposes of calculating their overtime entitlement under the FLSA. The defendant agrees that longevity pay should be included in determining the FLSA overtime entitlement and concedes that the UD did not include longevity pay in the FLSA calculations between August 8, 1993, and October 27, 1996. Consequently, there is no dispute that an FLSA violation occurred: by the defendant’s own admission, *569some plaintiffs were not paid one and one-half times their “regular rate” for overtime hours worked between August 8, 1993, and October 27, 1996.

    The parties disagree, however, over the applicable statute of limitations on this FLSA claim. An action for unpaid overtime compensation under the FLSA:

    may be commenced within two years after the cause of action accrued, and every such action shall be forever barred unless commenced within two years after the cause of action accrued, except that a cause of action arising out of a willful violation may be commenced within three years after the cause of action accrued.

    29 U.S.C. § 255(a). The plaintiffs bear the burden of demonstrating that a violation was willful. Bankston v. State of Illinois, 60 F.3d 1249, 1253 (7th Cir.1995).

    The defendant included longevity pay in the calculation of FLSA overtime pay prior to August 8, 1993. However, a Comptroller General decision dated May 28, 1993, instructed that longevity pay should not be included in the calculation of FLSA overtime pay. Comp.Gen.Dec. B-251235 (May 28, 1993). It is apparent that the defendant changed its position in reliance on a decision of the Comptroller General. Such reliance negates the plaintiffs’ unsupported contention that the UD’s failure to properly calculate overtime pay constituted a willful violation of the FLSA See Doyle v. United States, 931 F.2d 1546, 1549 (Fed.Cir.1991) (concluding that trial court correctly ruled on summary judgment that the two-year statute of limitations applied where the Government relied in good faith on FLSA overtime rules). Accordingly, the two-year statute of limitations applies to the plaintiffs’ longevity pay claim.17

    In addition, the plaintiffs’ request for liquidated damages must be denied as a matter of law. That the Government is hable to the plaintiffs on the longevity pay claim does not automatically entitle the plaintiffs to liquidated damages. “Rather, the defendant can [avoid liquidated damages by] show[ing] that its actions were in good faith with ‘an honest intention to ascertain what the Fair Labor Standards Act requires and to act in accordance with it.’ ” Amos v. United States, 13 Cl.Ct. 442, 451 (1987) (citations omitted). The defendant here has shown that its action with respect to longevity pay was in good faith, having been predicated upon the reasonable ground of a Comptroller General decision issued in response to the UD’s request for guidance on the matter.

    Consequently, the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to liability on the longevity pay claim. The plaintiffs are entitled to compensatory, but not liquidated, damages, subject to a two-year statute of limitations. See Conclusion, infra, pp. 572-573.

    E. The Night Differential Claim

    In this claim, the plaintiffs allege that the UD incorrectly calculates their overtime under the D.C.Code by not including night differential pay in their “basic hourly rate.”

    The parties agree that the UD includes night differential pay in calculating overtime entitlement under the FLSA. The parties also agree that the UD does not include night differential pay in calculating overtime entitlement under the D.C.Code. The dis-positive issue, then, is whether or not night differential pay must be considered as part of a UD member’s “rate of basic compensation” when calculating overtime entitlement under the D.C.Code. The issue is one of statutory interpretation, which is a question of law amenable to disposition by summary judgment. City of Tacoma, 28 Fed.Cl. at 642.

    Again, there are two distinct authorities governing the overtime compensation of UD members, the D.C.Code and the FLSA. The FLSA establishes a floor for overtime compensation. Alexander, 32 F.3d at 1576. At the end of a two-week pay period, a UD member’s overtime compensation is calculat*570ed under the basic pay authority, the D.C.Code. If the member has been credited with more than 85.5 hours for the pay period, the member’s overtime compensation is also calculated under the provisions of the FLSA to determine whether or not the overtime compensation calculated under the D.C.Code meets the requisite overtime “floor.” If the FLSA calculation is greater than the D.C.Code calculation, the member is paid overtime in accordance with the FLSA calculation. If the D.C.Code calculation exceeds the floor calculated under the FLSA, the member is paid overtime in accordance with the D.C.Code calculation. The result is that, for each pay period, the member is paid overtime compensation in accordance with whichever authority provides the greater overtime benefit. Admin. Manual § PER 10(8).

    The two calculations can yield different amounts because each authority requires different elements to be included in the overtime calculation. The D.C.Code provides that “overtime work shall be compensated for by payment at one and one-half times the basic hourly rate of such officer or member and all such compensation shall be considered premium pay.” D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(d)(1)(A). The D.C.Code does not define “basic hourly rate.” It does, however, define “rate of basic compensation.” “. ‘Rate of basic compensation’ means the rate of compensation fixed by law for the position held by an officer or member exclusive of any deductions or additional compensation of any kind.” Id. § 4-1104(a)(7). From this definition, the Court interprets “basic hourly rate” to mean a member’s rate of basic compensation expressed in an hourly fashion.18 Accordingly, a UD member’s “basic hourly rate” under the D.C.Code means the rate of compensation fixed by law for the member’s position, expressed in an hourly fashion, exclusive of any deductions or additional compensation of any kind. A UD member is entitled to one and one-half times this basic hourly rate for each hour of overtime worked.

    In contrast, the FLSA provides that overtime work shall be compensated “at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed.” 29 U.S.C. §§ 207(a)(1). The FLSA definition of “regular rate” is much more expansive than the D.C.Code’s definition of “rate of basic compensation.” The FLSA “regular rate” includes “all remuneration for employment paid to, or on behalf of, the employee,” with the exception of seven types of compensation enumerated in the statute. 29 U.S.C. § 207(e).

    Nightwork by UD members is compensated at a member’s “rate of basic pay plus premium pay amounting to 10 percent of that basic rate.” 5 U.S.C. § 5545(a). This 10 percent premium is referred to as a “night differential.” When the UD calculates overtime entitlement under the FLSA, night differential must be included in the calculation because the differential is part of “all remuneration for employment paid to, or on behalf of, the employee.” 29 U.S.C. § 207(e) (emphasis added). Under the D.C.Code, however, night differential is not authorized to be included in the calculation of overtime entitlement. Overtime under the D.C.Code is paid at a rate of one and one-half times the member’s basic hourly rate, which excludes “additional compensation of any kind.” D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(a)(7). Night differential, by definition, is “premium pay,” i.e., additional compensation paid on top of a member’s basic pay, and thus is not part of a member’s basic hourly rate for purposes of calculating overtime entitlement under the D.C.Code.

    In summary, the UD has not improperly calculated overtime compensation under the D.C.Code by excluding night differential from the D.C.Code overtime calculation. Night differential is not part of a UD member’s “basic hourly rate” as that term is used in the D.C.Code. Accordingly, the Government’s motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to the plaintiffs’ night differential claim.

    *571F. The Sunday Night Premium, Pay Claim

    The Sunday “midnight” shift is scheduled to begin at 11:00 p.m. on Sunday night. UD members scheduled for this shift are required to report for roll-call one-half hour earlier, at 10:30 p.m. UD members who work the Sunday midnight shift that begins at 11:00 p.m. are entitled to Sunday pay for all eight hours of their shift:

    An employee who performs work during a regularly scheduled 8-hour period of service which is not overtime work as defined by section 5542(a) of this title a part of which is performed on Sunday is entitled to pay for the entire period of service at the rate of his basic pay, plus premium pay at a rate equal to 25 percent of his rate of basic pay.

    5 U.S.C. § 5546(a). In addition, UD members who are regularly scheduled to work on Sunday, but who take authorized leave instead, are entitled to Sunday premium pay for the hours of leave taken. Armitage, 991 F.2d at 746.19

    Occasionally, a UD member who works an earlier shift on a Sunday is also scheduled to work the Sunday midnight shift. On February 23, 1992, the UD implemented a special policy applicable to this situation. Members who had worked an earlier Sunday shift, and thus had already received Sunday pay for a shift, were directed to report for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sunday, rather than at 10:30 p.m.20 By directing these members to report for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. for a basic workday that began at midnight, the UD apparently sought to minimize payment of Sunday premium pay. See Order of the Chief — Uniformed Division dated Oct. 13, 1995 (Def's.App. at 68). It is undisputed that members who reported for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. were not paid Sunday pay for the basic workday that began at midnight. The UD rescinded this policy on October 13, 1995, and since that time all members have reported for roll-call at 10:30 p.m. on Sunday for the Sunday midnight shift that begins at 11:00 p.m.

    The plaintiffs contend that the two members, who were directed to report for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. while the special policy was in effect, are entitled to Sunday pay for the entire eight-hour workday that began at midnight and ended at 8:00 a.m. on Monday morning. The plaintiffs base this claim on the plain language of the Sunday premium pay statute, 5 U.S.C. § 5546(a). Statutory interpretation is a question of law amenable to disposition by summary judgment.

    The Sunday pay statute entitles a member to a 25 percent premium for an entire eight-hour workday if any part of the member’s “regularly scheduled 8-hour period of service” is performed on Sunday. 5 U.S.C. § 5546(a). It is undisputed that the members in question reported for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sunday for a workday that ended at 8:00 a.m. on Monday. The dispositive question, therefore, is whether or not the members’ one-half hour of roll-call time constitutes part of their “regularly scheduled 8-hour period of service.”

    The UD’s basic pay authority defines the “basic workweek” as “a 40-hour workweek, excluding roll-call time.” D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(a)(3) (emphasis added). The basic workweek of 40 hours must be scheduled on five days. Id. § 4-1104(b). A UD member’s “basic workday” “means an 8-hour day excluding roll-call time.” Id. § 4-1104(a)(4) (emphasis added). “Roll-call time” is “that time, not exceeding one-half hour each workday, which is in addition to each basic workday of the basic workweek for reading of rolls and other preparation for the daily tour of duty.” Id. § 4-1104(a)(6) (emphasis added). “[R]oll-call time shall be without compensation or credit to the time of the basic workweek.” Id. § 4-1104(b).

    *572The Sunday pay statute and the D.C.Code, both of which were enacted by the United States Congress, each pertains to pay entitlements for members of the UD. “The two statutes being in pari materia, the interpretation is preferred which best harmonizes them.” Yosemite Park and Curry Co. v. United States, 231 Ct.Cl. 393, 398, 686 F.2d 925, 928 (1982). See also Haig v. Agee, 453 U.S. 280, 300-01, 101 S.Ct. 2766, 69 L.Ed.2d 640 (1981). The Sunday pay statute and the D.C.Code can best be harmonized by equating the phrase “regularly scheduled 8-hour period of service” in the Sunday pay statute to the phrase “basic workday” in the D.C. statute. Under this reasonable construction, the Sunday pay statute entitles a UD member to a 25 percent premium for an entire eight-hour workday if any part of the member’s “basic workday” is performed on Sunday. A “basic workday” is eight hours, excluding roll-call time. If only roll-call time is performed on Sunday, then no part of the eight-hour “basic workday” is performed on Sunday, and a UD member is not entitled to Sunday pay for that “regularly scheduled 8-hour shift.”

    That is the precise situation at hand. The UD members in question reported at 11:30 p.m. on Sunday for one-half hour of roll-call, in preparation for their basic workday. Their basic workday of eight hours began at midnight and ended at 8:00 a.m. on Monday. Because none of the “basic workday” was performed on Sunday, the UD members are not entitled to Sunday pay for any portion of that “regularly scheduled 8-hour shift.” In addition, the plaintiffs’ assertion that they are entitled to Sunday pay for roll-call time scheduled on Sunday ignores their pay authority’s mandate that roll-call time shall be without compensation. Accordingly, the Government’s motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to the plaintiffs’ Sunday night premium pay claim.

    G. The Sunday Night Armitage Claim

    In this claim, the plaintiffs allege that, between the dates of February 23, 1992, and October 13, 1995, some plaintiffs were scheduled to report for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sundays, but took leave instead. They contend that, under the holding of Armitage, they are entitled to Sunday pay for the leave taken during the basic workdays that would have begun at midnight and ended at 8:00 a.m. on Monday.

    As explained in Part II. F., supra, those members who reported for roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sunday for a basic workday that began at midnight are not entitled to Sunday pay for either their roll-call time or their regularly scheduled eight-hour shift. Consequently, those UD members who were scheduled to appear at roll-call at 11:30 p.m. on Sunday, but who took leave instead, are not entitled to Sunday pay for either the roll-call time or the basic workday during which they were absent. If a member would not have received Sunday pay had he actually worked a regularly scheduled eight-hour shift, he is certainly not entitled to Sunday pay if he takes leave during that shift. The plaintiffs’ argument finds no support in Armitage or the “leave with pay” statutes, and, therefore, the Government’s motion for summary judgment is granted with respect to the Sunday night Armitage claim.

    CONCLUSION

    For the foregoing reasons, the defendant’s motion to dismiss the Lanehart overtime claim with respect to 227 plaintiffs on collateral estoppel grounds is granted. The 227 affected plaintiffs are listed in Appendix A of this Opinion. The defendant’s motion for summary judgment with respect to the Lane-hart overtime claim of the remaining plaintiffs is granted. The defendant’s motion for summary judgment is also granted with respect to the following: the roll-call claim, the salary cap claim, the night differential claim, the Sunday night premium pay claim, and the Sunday night Armitage claim. See supra p. 556. The night overtime claim and sergeants’ overtime claim, having been withdrawn by the plaintiffs, are to be dismissed with prejudice. See supra notes 6 and 7. There being no just reason for delay, the Clerk of the Court is directed to enter final judgment, dismissing with prejudice the eight aforementioned claims with respect to all 557 of the plaintiffs in these consolidated *573eases. See RCFC 54(b). All 557 plaintiffs are listed in Appendix B of this Opinion.

    With respect to the longevity pay claim, the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is granted, subject to a two-year statute of limitations and limited to compensatory damages only. The defendant has represented that it has requested the National Finance Center to calculate the back pay entitlement for those plaintiffs who were affected by the UD’s failure to include longevity pay in the FLSA overtime calculations between August 8, 1993, and October 27, 1996. (Tr. At 94-95.) The parties are directed to file a joint status report, or individual status reports if agreement cannot be reached, with this Court no later than 60 days after the date of this Opinion. In the report(s), the parties shall express their views regarding the acceptability of the results of the National Finance Center calculations and the necessity of further judicial intervention required in resolving the quantum of damages. Final judgment, with respect to this longevity pay claim only, shall be held in abeyance pending this Court’s assessment of the status report(s) called for above.

    APPENDIX A

    Abbott v. United States, No. 94-651 C

    Plaintiffs Estopped from Arguing Lanehart Overtime Issue

    Abbott v. United States, No. 94-651C

    1. Bruce E. Abbott

    2. William D. Ayers

    3. Philip M. Baird

    4. Michael W. Baker

    5. Daniel J. Barnwell

    6. Leo J. Barton

    7. Jeffrey L. Bazin

    8. Claude Edward Beacht

    9. Robert A. Bonasia

    10. Thomas Brady

    11. Cecil G. Bradshaw

    12. Richard H. Branch

    13. Seth A. Breger

    14. David G. Butz

    15. Kenneth J. Calder

    16. Larry C. Carbone

    17. Martin T. Carbone

    18. William J. Carlson

    19. John Casucci

    20. Terrence C. Chambers

    21. John Chieoski

    22. Stanley R. Cisiewicz

    23. Kevin P. Cleary

    24. Robert A. Clements

    25. Dale M. Cockayne

    26. Manfred R. Cody

    27. Louis M. Condatore

    28. Richard A. Cook

    29. C. Andrew Cudahy

    30. Richard S. Dana

    31. Garry H. Dargan

    32. Earl L. Davy

    33. J. David Deardorff

    34. Anthony P. Debellis

    35. Anthony R. DeMasi

    36. Arthur A. Denman, Jr.

    37. Richard Depriest

    38. Earl A. DiLulio

    39. Ronald J. Elie

    40. Michael J. Emrick

    41. Charles E. Faulconer

    42. Anthony J. Ferrara

    43. Lewis C. Fox

    44. Stephen J. Franchak

    45. Robert P. Franz

    46. Sherrine E. Freeman

    47. Bernard K. Garrettson, Jr.

    48. Raymond J. Gillespie

    49. Lewis M. Greenberg

    50. Rita C. Hamon

    51. Anthony B. Heider

    52. Jeffrey J. Herzog

    53. Jeffrey A. Hill

    54. Mark D. Horsley

    55. Bernard W. Jones, Jr.

    56. Mark S. Joyce

    57. G. Wayne Koenig

    58. Christopher Kopf

    59. Vincent W. Kosich

    60. Douglas F. Kravos

    61. George A. Kurutz

    62. William C. Lind

    63. Warren L. Loveland

    64. John Robert Lowe

    65. William P. Ludtke III

    66. James E. Luensman

    67. Thomas E. Mach

    68. Harley J. Manchester

    69. Camillo Mascio

    70. Gary L. Matcheson

    71. William D. Mattingly, Jr.

    72. Michael McAllister

    73. Marshall Wayne McCall

    *57474. Stephen G. McCormack

    75. Dennis G. McCullough

    76. Peter D. McRae

    77. Clifton C. Mills

    78. Joseph C. Molinaro

    79. Richard L. Morse

    80. Ronald A. Musolino

    81. Gary S. Niedzwiecki

    82. James W. O’Hanley

    83. Manuel R. Ovalle

    84. Joseph M. Potaek

    85. John O. Quesinberry

    86. Eliqio Quirindongo

    87. Donald F. Racine

    88. Terry D. Register

    89. Ronald Phillip Regulski

    90. Michael W. Rice

    91. William S. Rick

    92. James M. Ricks

    93. Richard G. Ruel

    94. Hector L. Santiago

    95. Mary V. Santoro

    96. Thomas C. Santoro

    97. Keith B. Sapack

    98. Charles Paul Scherer

    99. Alfred H. Schoonmaker

    100. Arnold N. Schwartz

    101. Henry L. Sergent

    102. James J. Shea, Jr.

    103. William Shegogue

    104. John M. Sibenik

    105. Aan L. Skinner

    106. John S. Skyles

    107. Herman A. Sloan

    108. Steven C. Smith

    109. Richard W. Snowden

    110. Linda M. Suarez

    111. Scott T. Summerford

    112. William P. Supples, Sr.

    113. Richard C. Surles

    114. Stephen P. Suter

    115. Joseph John Syreika

    116. Henry Thomas

    117. Charles E. Thompson

    118. Lonnie R. Tincher

    119. Joseph A. Toriskie, Jr.

    120. Rodger W. Touw

    121. Douglas W. Tuxbury

    122. August Vagnini, Jr.

    123. Jamie X. Velasco

    124. William J. Wallace

    125. Afred D. West

    126. Lynn M. Whisler, Jr.

    127. Stephen F. White

    128. Henry B. Williams, Sr.

    129. Wesley D. Williams

    130. Floyd W. Willis

    131. Jerry W. Winstead

    132. James L. Woodland

    133. Stanley J. Wzientek

    Acosta v. United States, No. 95-4-75C

    1. Lamont S. Baxter

    2. Franklin C. Beal

    3. Joseph T. Boyer

    4. John P. Braddy

    5. John P. Brophy

    6. Ronald B. Caldwell

    7. James W. Canby

    8. Cynthia T. Carter

    9. H.L. Carter

    10. John D. Cooper

    11. James E. Courtney

    12. Joseph F. Crato

    13. Ronald Q. Crossman

    14. Bruce Neal Curtis

    15. William H. Curtis

    16. Clifton C. Cusick

    17. Danny L. Day

    18. Daniel J. Diefenbaeh

    19. Robert H. Doe

    20. James Domowicz

    21. Kevin L. Duncan

    22. Eugene Edward Ellington, Jr.

    23. Rickey A Flowers

    24. Terry A. Gavazzi

    25. Rodney K. Gillette

    26. Jerry A. Giovinazzo, Sr.

    27. Michael E. Hatfield

    28. Melvin C. Jackson

    29. Nicole Wilhite Jones

    30. Robert A. Jones

    31. Lawrence A. Julian

    32. William A Keaveney

    33. David K. Kielbasa

    34. Earl E. Knickelbein, Jr.

    35. Richard Krason

    36. William E. Kreiger

    37. Thomas W. Kurtz

    38. Aoysius F. Lanahan

    39. John J. Langan

    40. Orlando J. Lawson

    41. Louis A. Mason

    42. John A. Mayer

    43. Jeffrey L. McQuain

    44. Dennis M. Moore

    45. George E. Morris

    46. Jack D. Motley, Jr.

    47. Andrew J. Mutcher

    48. Ernest A. Navarra, Jr.

    49. Francis D. Nerdahl

    50. Lorenzo Nichols, Jr.

    51. John Anthony Parker

    *57552. Samuel N. Parker

    53. Michael T. Piepoli

    54. Paul W. Pilkerton

    55. James A. Powell

    56. Peter Gerard Regan

    57. Robert W. Ridgeway, Sr.

    58. Steven R. Rouseher

    59. Charles M. Sabruno

    60. James E. Scott

    61. Francis Sheehan

    62. Paul D. Sibenik

    63. Earl L. Silverstein

    64. David M. Simpson

    65. Kevin Smith

    66. Raymond F. Snyder

    67. James A. Steward

    68. Randall R. Sweetland

    69. Robert F. Taylor

    70. Charles E. Team

    71. Cheryl L. Thompson

    72. Michael Patrick Thompson

    73. Charles Transou

    74. John D. Trent

    75. William M. Vucci

    76. Kathy A. Wiest

    77. Robert T. Worrier

    78. Charles R. Wood

    79. Seottie R. Wright

    Adams v. United States, No. 96-92C

    1. Nancy L. Anderson

    2. John David Biejan

    3. Mark A Buchholz

    4. Robert G. Gustin

    5. Patrick Frank Kurtz

    6. George M. Lee, Jr.

    7. John F. McRoberts

    8. Robert E. Nixon

    9. Henry P. O’Neill, Jr.

    10. Ronald L. Quarto

    11. William Shegogue

    12. Tommy L. Taylor

    13. Deon M. Thompson

    14. Victor P. Tomsko

    15. Edward W. Warzywak

    APPENDIX B

    Plaintiffs to the Consolidated Cases

    Abbott v. United States, No. 9Í-651C

    1. Bruce E. Abbott

    2. Anthony M. Angerome

    3. William D. Ayers

    4. Philip M. Baird

    5. Michael W. Baker

    6. Eric N. Balch

    7. Daniel J. Barnwell

    8. Leo J. Barton

    9. Jeffrey L. Bazin

    10. Claude Edward Beaeht

    11. Michael G. Belasco

    12. Nicholas J. Bock

    13. Robert A. Bonasia

    14. Thomas Brady

    15. Cecil G. Bradshaw

    16. Richard H. Branch

    17. Seth A. Breger

    18. Jose AM. Brown

    19. David G. Butz

    20. Kenneth J. Calder

    21. John J. Campbell

    22. Larry C. Carbone

    23. Martin T. Carbone

    24. William J. Carlson

    25. John Casucci

    26. Terrence C. Chambers

    27. John Chicoski

    28. Stanley R. Cisiewiez

    29. Kevin P. Cleary

    30. Robert A. Clements

    31. Dale M. Cockayne

    32. Manfred R. Cody

    33. Louis M. Condatore

    34. Richard A. Cook

    35. Michael A. Corcione

    36. Carlos M. Cruz

    37. C. Andrew Cudahy

    38. Jeffrey DAlessio

    39. Richard S. Dana

    40. Garry H. Dargan

    41. Earl L. Davy

    42. J. David Deardorff

    43. Anthony P. Debellis

    44. Wilfredo Dejesus

    45. Michael V. Delcoco

    46. Ronald R. Delfidio

    47. Anthony R. DeMasi

    48. A’thur A. Denman, Jr.

    49. Richard Depriest

    50. Richard C. DeTamble

    51. Earl A. DiLulio

    52. Daniel F. Dluzneski

    *57653. Steven J. Dwyer

    54. Ronald J. Elie

    55. Michael J. Emrick

    56. Michael P. Farran

    57. Charles E. Faulconer

    58. Anthony J. Ferrara

    59. William H. Finigan, Jr.

    60. Lewis C. Fox

    61. Mark Frantzen

    62. Stephen J. Franchak

    63. Robert P. Franz

    64. Sherrine E. Freeman

    65. Bernard K. Garrettson, Jr.

    66. Raymond J. Gillespie

    67. Lewis M. Greenberg

    68. James L. Guidry

    69. William M. Gunter

    70. Rita C. Hamon

    71. Martin L. Hanna

    72. Anthony B. Heider

    73. Jeffrey J. Herzog

    74. Jeffrey A. Hill

    75. Mark D. Horsley

    76. Thomas R. Howie

    77. Ralph D. Huffstickler

    78. Derrick J. Jeanmarie

    79. Lance K. Johnson

    80. Barnard W. Jones, Jr.

    81. Mark S. Joyce

    82. Bruce K. Keller

    83. Paul Michael Kmiotek

    84. Richard T. Knox

    85. G. Wayne Koenig

    86. Christopher Kopf

    87. Vincent W. Kosich

    88. Douglas F. Kravos

    89. George A. Kurutz

    90. Edward A. Lavalle

    91. William C. Lind

    92. Warren L. Loveland

    93. John Robert Lowe

    94. William P. Ludtke III

    95. James E. Luensman

    96. Thomas E. Mach

    97. Harley J. Manchester

    98. Camillo Maseio

    99. Gary L. Matcheson

    100. Max T. Mattern

    101. William D. Mattingly, Jr.

    102. Michael McAllister

    103. Marshall Wayne McCall

    104. Stephen G. McCormack

    105. Dennis G. McClullough

    106. James J. McGuire

    107. Richard W. McLarney

    108. Peter D. McRae

    109. Charles S. Miller

    110. Clifton C. Mills

    111. Joseph C. Molinaro

    112. Richard L. Morse

    113. Samuel H. Murray, Jr.

    114. Ronald A. Musolino

    115. William W. Nelson

    116. Gary S. Niedzwiecki

    117. James W. O’Hanley

    118. Manuel R. Ovalle

    119. Neftalí Pabon

    120. Steven P. Pape

    121. Carl A. Persons

    122. Kevin S. Porter

    123. Joseph M. Potak

    124. John O. Quesinberry

    125. Eliqio Quirindongo

    126. Donald F. Racine

    127. Terry D. Register

    128. Ronald Phillip Regulski

    129. Michael W. Rice

    130. Williams. Rick

    131. James M. Ricks

    132. Stephen R. Ridder

    133. Richard G. Ruel

    134. Thomas H. Salzer

    135. Hector L. Santiago

    136. Ismaei Diaz Santiago

    137. Mary V. Santoro

    138. Thomas C. Santoro

    139. Keith B. Sapack

    140. Charles Paul Scherer

    141. Alfred H. Schoonmaker

    142. Arnold N. Schwartz

    143. Henry L. Sergent

    144. Teresa S. Sergent

    145. James J. Shea, Jr.

    146. William Shegogue

    147. John M. Sibenik

    148. Harris Silverstein

    149. Kevin S. Simpson

    150. Alan L. Skinner

    151. JohnS. Skyles

    152. Herman A. Sloan

    153. Steven C. Smith

    154. Richard W. Snowden

    155. Linda M. Suarez

    156. Scott T. Summerford

    157. William P. Supples, Sr.

    158. Richard C. Surles

    159. Stephen P. Suter

    160. Joseph John Syreika

    161. John J. Tarr

    162. Gary A. Therkildsen

    163. Henry Thomas

    164. Charles E. Thompson

    165. Lonnie R. Tincher

    166. Joseph A. Toriskie, Jr.

    167. Rodger W. Touw

    168. Douglas W. Tuxbury

    *577169. August Vagnini, Jr.

    170. Jamie X. Velasco

    171. Paul D. Verna

    172. William J. Wallace

    173. Alfred D. West

    174. Lynn M. Whisler, Jr.

    175. Stephen F. White

    176. Henry B. Williams, Sr.

    177. Wesley D. Williams

    178. Floyd W. Willis

    179. Jerry W Winstead

    180. James L. Woodland

    181. Stanley J. Wzientek

    182. Donald F. Zywiolek

    Acosta v. United States, No. 95-Í75C

    1. Juan R. Acosta

    2. Richard B. Alexander

    3. Eric T. Alston Jr.

    4. Christopher Jay Anglim

    5. Jeffrey Anglim

    6. Trevor Martin Antolik

    7. John F. Arnold

    8. Shaun Brian Aslaksen

    9. John Bain, Jr.

    10. Steven B. Baker

    11. Gregory W. Ballard

    12. Robert J. Barrett

    13. Lamont S. Baxter

    14. Franklin C. Beal

    15. William J. Bednarek

    16. Phillip M. Barnal

    17. Rebecca A. Barnal

    18. Dennis G. Berry

    19. Mark David Bibelhauser

    20. Timothy Bines

    21. Brandon Blucher

    22. James Bolding

    23. Laurence Allan Boorom

    24. Kenneth J. Bouley

    25. Joseph T. Boyer

    26. John P. Braddy

    27. Sid A. Branham

    28. Michael Braun

    29. Carla F. Broddie

    30. John P. Brophy

    31. Jose A. Macklin Brown

    32. Gary Scoff Buwalda

    33. Ronald B. Caldwell

    34. James W. Canby

    35. Robert Caraballo

    36. James V. Carpenter

    37. Cynthia T. Carter

    38. H.L. Carter

    39. Jarrod Cassetta

    40. William Cavallaro

    41. Daniel P. Chearney

    42. William S. Cherry

    43. Robert B. Chick

    44. Donald J. Clark

    45. Paul R. Cole

    46. George W. G. Colvin III

    47. Christopher A. Cook

    48. Michael D. Cooley

    49. John D. Cooper

    50. James E. Courtney

    51. Joseph F. Crato

    52. Ronald Q. Crossman

    53. Bruce Cummings

    54. Dante Cunningham

    55. Ralph L. Cunningham

    56. Bruce Neal Curtis

    57. William H. Curtis

    58. Clifton C. Cusick

    59. Craig M. Cygan

    60. Allan C. Dale

    61. Danny L. Day

    62. Timothy K. Davis

    63. Everett K. Deanes

    64. John J. DelPilar

    65. Eliezer Diaz

    66. Daniel J. Diefenbach

    67. Robert H. Doe

    68. James Domowicz

    69. James Driscoll

    70. Mark A. Dudurich

    71. Kevin L. Duncan

    72. Nelson M. Durham

    73. Alfonso M. Dyson, Sr.

    74. Eugene Edward Ellington, Jr.

    75. Mark Embrey

    76. Sammy Alvin Escamilla

    77. Thomas K. Fante

    78. Timothy F. Flicker

    79. Rickey A. Flowers

    80. Steven J. Forrester

    81. Paul F. Foster

    82. Wade N. Fournier

    83. Marvin L. Fowlkes, Jr.

    84. Jeffrey Lynn Fox

    85. Aldo E. Frascoia II

    86. Gwendolyn Freeman

    87. Todd D. Gabryszak

    88. Nicholas V. Garland

    89. Patrick J. Gawlik

    90. Terry A. Gavazzi

    91. Scott R. Giambattista

    *57892. William J. Gibson

    93. Rodney K. Gillette

    94. Jerry A. Giovinazzo, Sr.

    95. David K. Grant

    96. Reginald Green

    97. Darryl J. Grogan

    98. Thomas M. Gula

    99. Jerry A. Hales

    100. John Michael Hammersla

    101. Joseph N. Hamrick

    102. JillM. Hanley

    103. Michael A. Hanlon

    104. James B. Harper

    105. Michael B. Hatfield

    106. Charles C. Herman

    107. Edward A. Herrmann

    108. Robert E. Heverly, Jr.

    109. Harvey Wayne Hines

    110. James Hitchcock, Jr.

    111. Michael A. Hodapp

    112. Tara L. Horne

    113. Charles A. Howell

    114. Henry B. Hubbard III

    115. Melvin C. Jackson

    116. Michael H. Jervis

    117. David E. Jezioro, Jr.

    118. Allen B. Jones

    119. Johnny Calvin Jones

    120. Nicole Wilhite Jones

    121. Robert A. Jones

    122. Thomas M. Jones

    123. Larry W. Joyce

    124. Virginia C. W. Joyce

    125. Lawrence A. Julian

    126. Eric E. Kandrashoff

    127. Martin J. Karlavage, Jr.

    128. William A. Keaveney

    129. Thomas J. Kelly

    130. Trent L. Keltner

    131. David K. Kielbasa

    132. Steven I. Kimble

    133. Roger W. Kingston

    134. Jeffrey E. Kleinsmith

    135. Earl E. Knickelbein, Jr.

    136. Henry A. Koontz

    137. Richard Krason

    138. William E. Kreiger

    139. Thomas W. Kurtz

    140. Anthony M. LaBosco

    141. Aloysius F. Lanahan

    142. John J. Langan

    143. Michael L. Laury

    144. William J. LaValley

    145. Jeffrey M. Lavorgna

    146. Orlando J. Lawson

    147. Gregory Alan Leidner

    148. David Bruce Levine

    149. Brian C. Lippert

    150. Tamara D. Little

    151. James R. Lockrow, Jr.

    152. Earnest Braxton Lomax

    153. Naomi Lou Lyons

    154. Patrick Thomas Lyons

    155. David Marsh

    156. Gregory W. Martin

    157. George L. Mason

    158. Louis A. Mason

    159. Joseph Matos

    160. John A. Mayer

    161. Jeffrey T. Mayo

    162. Christen L. McBeth

    163. Karnel D. McMahan

    164. Paul B. MeNorris, Jr.

    165. Jeffrey L. McQuain

    166. Michael T. Merritt

    167. Terrence D. Minor

    168. Steven Mitchell

    169. James R. Monskie

    170. Dennis M. Moore

    171. Steven Moore

    172. George E. Morris

    173. Brian E. Morrissey

    174. Arthur L. Motley

    175. Jack D. Motley, Jr.

    176. Thomas M. Muldoon

    177. Wayne J. Mullins

    178. Laura L. Murray

    179. Andrew J. Mutcher

    180. Todd M. Nassoiy

    181. Ernest A. Navarra, Jr.

    182. Paul W. Neal

    183. Francis J. Nedeau-Slattery

    184. Francis D. Nerdahl

    185. Garry Nichols

    186. Lorenzo Nichols, Jr.

    187. Norine Nightingale

    188. James D. Oman

    189. Enrique Ortiz

    190. Israel Ortiz

    191. Michael Overstreet

    192. Thomas F. Owens

    193. John Anthony Parker

    194. Samuel N. Parker

    195. Francis E. Peckay

    196. Edward G. Phillips

    197. Jeffrey A. Pickard

    198. Michael T. Piepoli

    199. Paul W. Pilkerton

    200. Danny P. Plaisance

    201. James A. Powell

    202. Jack H. Powers

    203. Thomas M. Radtke

    204. David K. Rath

    205. Peter Gerard Regan

    206. Dennis W. Richardson

    207. Robert W. Ridgeway, Sr.

    *579208. Michael C. Rife

    209. Richard A. Roberts

    210. Ronald E. Rockefeller, Jr.

    211. Kim Rohlfs

    212. William George Roode

    213. Robert James Ross, Jr.

    214. Robert W. Ross

    215. Steven R. Rouscher

    216. William J. Ryan

    217. Charles M. Sabruno

    218. Anthony K. Saltaformaggio

    219. Luigi P. Salvi

    220. Timothy E. Sampson

    221. Trent A, Sanders

    222. James C. Sartor

    223. Samuel C. Schrader

    224. Anthony J. Scott, Jr.

    225. James E. Scott

    226. James F. Shallow, Jr.

    227. Francis Sheehan

    228. Colin E. Shipley

    229. Paul D. Sibenik

    230. Earl L. Silverstein

    231. David M. Simpson

    232. Teeka Singh

    233. Kevin T. Smith

    234. William R. Snow

    235. Dale L. Snyder

    236. Raymond F. Snyder

    237. Francis C. Sobol

    238. Ted H. Sparks

    239. James A. Steward

    240. J. Kelly Stewart

    241. John Albert Stockwell

    242. William W. Streaker

    243. Stephen J. Stretmater

    244. James J. Stumpf

    245. Randall R. Sweetland

    246. Bradley T. Taylor

    247. Cynthia E. Taylor

    248. David M. Taylor

    249. Robert F. Taylor

    250. Charles E. Team

    251. Henry Tejada

    252. D.J. Ternovan

    253. Jeffrey T. Them

    254. Edward G. Thomas, Jr.

    255. Brenda Thompson

    256. Cheryl L. Thompson

    257. Michael Patrick Thompson

    258. Jeffrey Thomsen

    259. Arthur J. Tomlin

    260. Todd Tracy

    261. Charles Transou

    262. John D. Trent

    263. Donald E. Tringali

    264. Jeffrey R. Trudel

    265. Antonio Trujillo

    266. Christopher A. Tutka

    267. Philip M. Tylicki

    268. Steven Tyner III

    269. Eric J. Ukleja

    270. Michael P. Ursiny

    271. Sandra J. Verna

    272. Michael A. Vigorito

    273. James E. Voelker

    274. William M. Vucci

    275. Neil Wagoner

    276. Carmen Lynn Walker-Ortiz

    277. Darryl R. Ward

    278. Diane M. Warrenfeltz

    279. Daryl L. Warrenfeltz

    280. Eddie B. Weathers

    281. Glenn R. Webb

    282. Daniel D. Wehrmeyer

    283. Kathy A. Wiest

    284. Harry O. Wilson

    285. John J. Wojtanowski

    286. Robert T. Womer

    287. Charles R. Wood

    288. Scottie R. Wright

    289. Kevin Allan Yentz

    Adams v. United States, No. 96-92C

    1. Nancy L. Anderson

    2. Michael T. Appleby

    3. Shaun Brian Aslaksen

    4. Michael E. Baltzley

    5. Laura A. Bell

    6. John David Bicjan

    7. Stephen V. Bittner, Jr.

    8. Harold E. Bondurant

    9. James A. Brazill, Jr.

    10. Miles D. Brey

    11. Stephen W. Brown

    12. Mark A. Buchholz

    13. William M. Cahill

    14. Robert B. Conley

    15. Ronald L. Craig

    16. Judson J. Dengler

    17. David M. Dumont

    18. Daryl Duncan

    19. Keith M. Finzel

    20. Anthony R. Flippo

    *58021. Sherrine E. Freeman

    22. David L. Garrett

    28. Robert W. Gibson

    24. Joan W.K. Greenberg

    25. Ruben S. Gresham

    26. Robert G. Gustin

    27. William F. Healy

    28. George A. Heitz

    29. Glenn Hooper

    30. Nancy A. Hopkins

    31. Dawn A. Hovington

    32. Keith R. Johnson

    33. Francis J. Kenny

    34. David M. Kohl

    35. Christopher T. Kreisher

    36. Patrick Frank Kurtz

    37. Gregory John La Dow

    38. George M. Lee, Jr.

    39. Patrick Joseph Lesiak

    40. William C. Lindsey

    41. Benita Antoinette Lyons

    42. Michael J. McAleer

    43. Robert P. McCabe

    44. James McGinn

    45. John F. McRoberts

    46. Mark T. Moody

    47. William A. Mullen

    48. Larry Murdock

    49. Yolanda H. Nelson

    50. Robert E. Nixon

    51. Henry P. O’Neill, Jr.

    52. Joe B. Overstreet

    53. Edward M. Pacich

    54. Michael D. Parise

    55. Ramen Perez

    56. Ronald L. Quarto

    57. Paul A. Rappa

    58. Richard Rosa

    59. Donald S. Roscoe

    60. Scott K. Scherer

    61. Damian W. Schwartz

    62. William Shegogue

    63. Marjorie C. Smith

    64. Leroy E. Snyder

    65. Christian Stanton

    66. Wallace Crown Strong

    67. Joseph E. Stump

    68. Thomas J. Sullivan

    69. Tommy L. Taylor

    70. Deon M. Thompson

    71. Victor P. Tomsko

    72. Carlos Antonio Torres

    73. Jill E. Turner-Dumont

    74. Sheila M. Tyson-Price

    75. Edward B. Valente

    76. Johnny Vasquez

    77. W. Gary Walker

    78. Edward W. Warzywak

    79. Eugene K. Weedon

    80. William M. Webster

    81. Scott R. Wenham

    82. Danny I. White

    83. Derek D. Williams

    84. Thomas A. Williams

    85. William B. Winans

    86. Renee M. Wolfer

    APPENDIX C

    Former Plaintiffs Dismissed With Prejudice Pursuant to RCFC 37 and 41(b)

    Abbott v. United States, No. 94--651C

    1. William R. Burke

    2. William R. Castle

    3. Ronald C. Dame

    4. William R. Dykes, Jr.

    5. Stephen Hanley

    6. Joseph K. Holloman

    7. John E. Howard

    8. Edward T. Hruneni

    9. Peter T. McElhinney

    10. Russell C. Mortiz

    11. Samuel M. Yarosh

    Acosta v. United States, No. 95-4.75C

    1. Terri D. Blocker

    2. Yvette Burwell

    3. Robert J. Goewey III

    4. Andre K. Gray

    5. Tyrus E. Harris

    6. Oliver R. Hemsley

    7. Timothy James Hennessey

    8. Michael w. Herndon

    9. Richard Thomas Hresko

    10. Burton F. Jackson

    *58111. John E. King

    12. Manuel Lopez, Jr.

    13. Robert J. Marshall

    14. Lawrence Martin

    15. Edward A. MelersM

    16. Patricia Myers

    17. Freeman Myles, Jr.

    18. Keith D. Olive

    19. Thomas E. Russell

    20. Alexander Sandoval

    21. Joseph R. Tutka

    22. Donald K. Vann

    23. Jacqueline D. Varner

    24. Hugh E. Wilkerson

    25. Mathew H. Wilson

    26. Ross L. Wuthrich

    Adams v. United States, No. 96-92C

    1. Cleveland Adams, Jr.

    2. Roger L. Blankenship

    3. Brent J. Chinery

    4. Bernard O. Hackney

    5. Danny Hauk

    6. Timothy Jacobs

    7. Terryll C. Montgomery

    8. Valerie Szabo

    9. Garrick P. Valdes

    10. Frank E. Walkup

    11. Bryant O. Withrow, Jr.

    . The three cases consolidated for purposes of this Opinion are Abbott v. United States, No. 94-651C; Acosta v. United States, No. 95-475C; and Adams v. United States, No. 96-92C.

    . The Complaints originally asserted nine claims. The plaintiffs have withdrawn two of these claims. See infra notes 6 and 7.

    . Originally, 605 plaintiffs were listed in the Complaints in these cases. By Orders dated March 11, 1996, and March 10, 1997, 48 plaintiffs were dismissed from these cases, with prejudice, pursuant to Rules 41(b) and 37 of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims ("RCFC”). Those 48 former plaintiffs are listed in Appendix C of this Opinion.

    . The D.C.Code was enacted by the United States Congress. Congress authorized compensation for overtime work by members of the UD in 1965. Pub.L. No. 89-282, 79 Stat. 1013.

    . In some situations, UD members receive compensatory time off in lieu of monetary compensation for overtime hours worked.

    . The plaintiffs withdrew this claim during oral arguments. (Tr. at 117.)

    . The plaintiffs have withdrawn this claim. (See Pls.' Resp. to Def.'s Mot. to Dismiss and Cross-Mot. for Summ. J. and in Reply to Def.’s Opp’n to Pls.’ Mot. for Summ. J. at 3 n. 5.)

    . "A member of the United States Secret Service Uniformed Division shall receive a salary at the rate provided for the corresponding grade in the Metropolitan Police force (including longevity increases provided by section 401 of the District of Columbia Police and Firemen's Salary Act of 1958)' * 3 U.S.C. § 204(b) (1994).

    . An "administrative workweek” is "a period of 7 consecutive calendar days.” D.C.Code Ann. § 4-1104(a)(2).

    . The federal “leave with pay" statutes are codified at 5 U.S.C. §§ 6303, 6307, 6322, 6323 (1994).

    . Citing the stipulated judgment that resolved Amshey v. United States, 26 Cl.Ct. 582 (1992), vacated, 35 Fed.Cl. 358 (1993), the defendant has asserted that the doctrine of res judicata bars certain plaintiffs in these cases from asserting claims for overtime pay arising prior to May 2, 1993. The plaintiffs agree that the stipulated judgment bars the overtime claims of those plaintiffs who were also plaintiffs in Amshey for periods prior to May 2, 1993. Overtime claims by such plaintiffs, then, are limited to periods after May 1, 1993. The defendant also has asserted laches as a defense to overtime claims by plaintiffs who were not parties to the Amshey case. Because many plaintiffs in the instant consolidated cases were not employed by the UD at the time of the Amshey judgment, and because laches is generally disfavored in overtime pay cases, Manning v. United States, 10 Cl.Ct. 651, 656 (1986), the Court finds that defense unavailing.

    . The 227 collaterally-estopped plaintiffs are listed in Appendix A of this Opinion.

    . The time cards submitted by the plaintiffs in support of their Motion for Summary Judgment reveal the extent of the irregularity of overtime worked by the plaintiffs. The following numbers represent the hours of overtime worked each week by five representative plaintiffs over the first 10 weeks of 1995. Plaintiff Gary Niedzwiecki: week of 1/1—0; 1/8—7.4; 1/15—28.2; 1/22—15.4; 1/29—7.4; 2/5—23.4; 2/12—1; 2/19—9.4; 2/26—0; 3/5—0. Plaintiff Steven Smith: week of 1/1—15; 1/8—0; 1/15—0; 1/22—0; 1/29—11.2; 2/5—14.2; 2/12—0; 2/19—31.2; 2/26—0; 3/5—0. Plaintiff Richard Cook: week of 1/1—0; 1/8—0; 1/15—7.4; 1/22—0; 1/29—0; 2/5—0; 2/12—18.4; 2/19—10.2; 2/26—16; 3/5—7.4. Plaintiff Robert Franz: week of 1/1—32.2; 1/8—4; 1/15—23.4; 1/22—0; 1/29—0; 2/5—0; 2/12—0; 2/19—0; 2/26—12; 3/5—24. Plaintiff Bruce Abbott: week of 1/1—0; 1/8—4; 1/15—8; 1/22—4; 1/29—4; 2/5—0; 2/12—4; 2/19—0; 2/26—4; 3/5—4.

    . It is not disputed that some plaintiffs assigned to the Foreign Missions Branch were required to work 12-hour shifts during three periods in 1996, apparently due to increased travel by the President during the campaign season. Even if this Court were to accept the plaintiffs’ contention that the overtime worked during these brief periods was regularly scheduled, the Lanehart overtime claim of these plaintiffs would still fail under the Armitage rationale adopted by this Court. The defendant has asserted, in its cross-motion and at oral arguments, that these plaintiffs were only charged eight hours of leave when they took a day of leave during these periods of required extended duty. They were not charged additional leave for the four hours of overtime not worked. The plaintiffs have not disputed the defendant’s assertion. Because the Foreign Missions Branch plaintiffs were not charged leave for missing presumably regularly scheduled overtime during these brief periods in 1996, “the leave with pay statutes do not apply.” Armitage, 23 Cl.Ct at 488.

    . The three allegedly harmed plaintiffs are Mr. Lewis C. Fox, Mr. Gary S. Niedzwiecki, and Mr. Charles E. Thompson.

    . Rather, counsel changed his argument. The plaintiffs’ Complaints and Motion for Summary Judgment alleged that the UD wrongfully paid overtime under the capped D.C.Code provision instead of the uncapped FLSA provision. At oral argument on the salary cap claim, however, the plaintiffs’ counsel argued that the defendant's interpretation of the FLSA resulted in underpayment of overtime in violation of Lanehart. (Tr. at 78-84.) The argument addressed neither the salary cap allegations asserted in the Complaint and the Motion for Summary Judgment nor the defendant’s responses thereto.

    . The two-year statute of limitations only affects the plaintiffs in one of the instant consolidated cases, Adams v. United States, No. 96-92C. The plaintiffs in that case filed their Complaint on February 14, 1996, and thus their damages are limited to the period of February 14, 1994, through October 26, 1996.

    . Rates of basic compensation are expressed in an annual fashion in the D.C.Code. D.C.Code Ann. § 4-406(a). Because overtime is paid on an hourly basis, the "rate of basic compensation” must be translated into a "basic hourly rate” in order to calculate overtime entitlement.

    . However, Congress effectively eviscerated the Armitage decision in fiscal year 1997: "Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no part of any appropriation contained in this Act for any fiscal year shall be available for paying Sunday premium or differential pay to any employee unless such employee actually performed work during the time corresponding to such premium or differential pay." Pub.L. No. 104-208, § 101f (§ 630).

    . Of the 557 plaintiffs, 2 fall into this category'. (Tr. at 102.)

Document Info

Docket Number: Nos. 94-651C, 95-475C, 96-92C

Citation Numbers: 41 Fed. Cl. 553, 6 Wage & Hour Cas.2d (BNA) 1067, 1998 U.S. Claims LEXIS 172, 1998 WL 427343

Judges: Yock

Filed Date: 7/24/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/7/2024