Keith Coffin v. Blessey Marine Services, In , 771 F.3d 276 ( 2014 )


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  •      Case: 13-20144      Document: 00512835754        Page: 1     Date Filed: 11/13/2014
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT   United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    November 13, 2014
    No. 13-20144
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    KEITH COFFIN, on behalf of himself and others similarly situated; ERIC
    JONES; JOSE L. RANGEL; JOSH FOX; GREGORY ROBINSON; JASON J.
    VILLAREAL; DUSTIN AKINS; MASON FULKERSON; ZACHARY
    LATIOLAIS,
    Plaintiffs - Appellees
    v.
    BLESSEY MARINE SERVICES, INCORPORATED,
    Defendant - Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before JOLLY, HIGGINBOTHAM, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
    E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:
    Blessey Marine Services, Inc. (“Blessey”) brings this interlocutory appeal
    challenging the district court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment. The
    district court declined to decide as a matter of law whether nine individual
    plaintiffs (collectively the “Plaintiffs”), former vessel-based tankermen on
    Blessey barges, who brought suit under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”)
    seeking overtime pay, were exempt from the FLSA as seamen. 1 Although the
    1The appeal is properly before us because the district court certified its order for
    immediate appeal, and we subsequently granted Blessey’s petition for leave to appeal. See
    28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
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    district court conditionally certified a class action, only eleven individuals
    joined, and the parties decided to proceed individually.
    Blessey produced extensive evidence during discovery suggesting that
    the Plaintiffs’ loading and unloading duties were done as part of the vessel
    crew and aided the seaworthiness of the vessel, and at the close of discovery it
    moved for summary judgment. In response, the Plaintiffs largely ignored
    responding to Blessey’s evidence and arguments, and countered that loading
    and unloading a vessel is nonseaman work as a matter of law, a question that
    was decided by our opinion in Owens v. SeaRiver Maritime, Inc., 
    272 F.3d 698
    (5th Cir. 2001).     The Plaintiffs argued that Owens forecloses any factual
    inquiry into the nature and character of loading and unloading duties. The
    district court accepted this interpretation of Owens and concluded that loading
    and unloading the vessel was in and of itself, without regard to attachment to
    a specific vessel as seamen for other purposes, nonseaman work as a matter of
    law. It set the case for trial so that a jury could determine whether those duties
    were a substantial amount of the Plaintiffs’ overall work.
    Our review of the applicable law and record evidence leads us to a
    contrary conclusion; we believe that the district court misapplied Owens.
    Furthermore, the record establishes that these vessel-based tankermen
    performed only seaman work, making them exempt from the FLSA’s overtime
    provisions. Accordingly, we VACATE the district court’s denial of summary
    judgment and REMAND the case to the district court for entry of judgment in
    favor of Blessey.
    I.
    We begin with a discussion of the relevant facts, which are largely
    undisputed. Blessey’s business primarily consists of shipping liquid cargo
    along inland and oceanic waterways. Blessey uses a system of equipment
    2
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    called a unit tow, which consists of a towboat and two tank barges, to ship the
    liquid. The towboat contains the navigation controls, machinery space, and
    propulsion, and it pushes the barges through the waterway. Meanwhile, the
    barges are connected to the towboat through a series of lines and wires. Each
    Blessey barge consists of several separate tanks that can be used for storing
    liquid, and loading and unloading such a barge is a complex process.
    The unit tow is manned by a crew that lives and works on the towboat
    for a designated period of time (called a hitch). Typically, crew members work
    for 20 days on a unit tow followed by 10 days off (called a 2-for-1 day hitch).
    Each day, a crew member generally works two six-hour shifts. Crew sizes may
    vary from as few as four to as many as ten people.
    The crew consists of a “wheelman,” a pilot, tankermen, and deckhands.
    The “wheelman” is usually a captain or relief captain, and all members of the
    crew work at his or her direction.            A “tankerman” has gained deckhand
    experience and received required training in the loading and unloading of
    liquid cargo from a barge. Blessey’s tankermen are vessel-based and share the
    nineteen duties that deckhands perform along with various additional tasks
    related both to the maintenance of the barges and the loading and unloading
    process.    The parties agree that most of these tasks are seaman work. 2
    Relevant here, Blessey requires its tankermen to perform the loading and
    unloading process for the unit tow. Thus, the tankermen both load and unload
    2 Tankermen have nineteen deckhand duties, and the parties agree that all of them
    are seaman work: (1) cleaning, (2) handling lines, (3) standing watch, (4) making locks, (5)
    putting out lights, (6) handling running lights, (7) cooking, (8) changing engine filters, (9)
    radio communications, (10) repairing lines, (11) troubleshooting barge engines, (12)
    troubleshooting boat engines, (13) painting, (14) changing oil in engines, (15) purchasing
    supplies, (16) chipping, (17) changing oil in generators, (18) tying off to docks, and (19)
    building tow. Similarly, the parties agree that three tankerman duties are also seaman work:
    (1) pumping out bilge water, (2) fueling the vessels, and (3) adding lube oil.
    3
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    the barges and perform other tasks related to the loading and unloading
    process. 3 The Plaintiffs argue that these categories of duties are nonseaman
    work, while acknowledging their many other duties are seaman work.
    The Plaintiffs typically worked as seamen aboard a vessel for
    approximately 84 hours during a seven-day period and were paid a “day rate,”
    or a flat daily sum. They were not paid overtime for any work, as is customary
    and lawful with respect to seamen.
    II.
    A.
    We review the district court’s decision to deny summary judgment de
    novo and apply the same standards as the district court. Lawyers Title Ins.
    Corp. v. Doubletree Partners, L.P., 
    739 F.3d 848
    , 856 (5th Cir. 2014). Summary
    judgment is appropriate “if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute
    as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). We may consider the record evidence before the
    district court, but we may not assess credibility or weigh evidence. Lawyers
    Title Ins. 
    Corp., 739 F.3d at 856
    . The motion for summary judgment in this
    case is based on the FLSA exemption for seamen, and the “ultimate
    determination of whether an employee is exempt . . . is properly characterized
    as a conclusion of law, subject to plenary review.” Dalheim v. KDFW–TV, 
    918 F.2d 1220
    , 1226 (5th Cir. 1990).
    B.
    3 The Plaintiffs identified a number of these related tasks. Tankermen are responsible
    for “lubing the barge,” which requires: (1) oiling grease-fittings on the barges, (2) changing
    the oil and oil-filters on the barge engines, (3) cleaning the barges of oil spots and debris, (4)
    making sure all hatches and dogs are tightly secured, and (5) doing an overall readiness
    inspection of the barge. Additionally, the tankermen must (1) check pressure gauges for
    heated fuel, (2) check outgoing or incoming temperature of heating oil, (3) maintain the
    generator, (4) drain water from the expansion tank, and (5) fuel the barge. Tankermen also
    perform a variety of other tasks related to loading and unloading while the barge is docked.
    4
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    To decide whether the Plaintiffs are exempt seamen, we turn to the
    relevant statutory and regulatory language setting out obligations with respect
    to the FLSA. The FLSA generally forbids employing workers for a workweek
    longer than forty hours “unless such employee receives compensation for his
    employment . . . 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). An employee is not protected
    by this broad prohibition, however, if he falls within an exemption from
    statutory coverage. Meza v. Intelligent Mexican Mktg., Inc., 
    720 F.3d 577
    , 580–
    81 (5th Cir. 2013). Relevant here, the FLSA exempts from overtime “any
    employee employed as a seaman.” 29 U.S.C. § 213(b)(6). Congress did not
    define “seaman,” and it is left to us to interpret the term to resolve this appeal.
    For guidance, we turn primarily to the Department of Labor (“DOL”)
    regulations, which we have held to be “entitled to great weight.” Dole v.
    Petroleum Treaters, Inc., 
    876 F.2d 518
    , 521 (5th Cir. 1989) (citing Tony &
    Susan Alamo Found. v. Sec’y of Labor, 
    471 U.S. 290
    , 297 (1985)). Generally, a
    vessel’s crew members are seamen, so long as they meet the criteria in 29
    C.F.R. § 783.31. 29 C.F.R. § 783.32. Section 783.31 outlines these criteria as
    follows:
    [A]n employee will ordinarily be regarded as “employed as a
    seaman” if he performs, as master or subject to the authority,
    direction, and control of the master aboard a vessel, service which
    is rendered primarily as an aid in the operation of such vessel as a
    means of transportation, provided he performs no substantial
    amount of work of a different character.
    
    Id. § 783.31.
    The regulations provide that work other than seaman work
    becomes substantial “if it occupies more than 20 percent of the time worked by
    the employee during the workweek.” 
    Id. § 783.37.
          The use of the word “ordinarily” in § 783.31 evinces that the FLSA
    eschews a fixed meaning of the term seaman. The regulations emphasize
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    flexibility, indicating that the term’s “meaning is governed by the context in
    which it is used and the purpose of the statute in which it is found.” 
    Id. § 783.29(c).
    Similarly, we must evaluate an employee’s duties based “upon the
    character of the work he actually performs and not on what it is called or the
    place where it is performed.” 
    Id. § 783.33.
    As we have recognized, the FLSA
    as a whole is “pervaded by the idea that what each employee actually does
    determines its application to him.” Walling v. W. D. Haden Co., 
    153 F.2d 196
    ,
    199 (5th Cir. 1946). Accordingly, the application of the seaman exemption
    generally depends on the facts in each case. See McLaughlin v. Bos. Harbor
    Cruise Lines, Inc., 
    419 F.3d 47
    , 51–52 (1st Cir. 2005) (recognizing that
    application of the seaman exemption is a fact-intensive question that can be
    answered in many cases only after a trial).
    III.
    With this framework guiding us, we will address both categories of duties
    at issue in this suit, beginning with the loading and unloading duties and
    concluding with those responsibilities related to loading and unloading.
    A.
    1.
    The district court concluded, and the Plaintiffs urge on appeal, that our
    decision in Owens establishes that loading and unloading a vessel is always
    nonseaman work. We consider this reading of Owens to be erroneous.
    First, Owens involves significantly different facts from this case. The
    plaintiff in Owens only sought overtime pay for his work loading and unloading
    barges as a member of SeaRiver’s land-based Strike Team. Although he had
    previously worked as a vessel-based tankerman, he did not pursue any
    overtime for that work. We emphasized that during the relevant time period
    Owens was not a crew member of a tow and not tied to a particular vessel for
    a 
    voyage. 272 F.3d at 700
    . Similarly, Owens worked “on unattended or ‘tramp’
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    barges that were neither towed by SeaRiver boats nor attended by SeaRiver
    crews.” 
    Id. By contrast,
    the Plaintiffs here were members of a unit tow crew,
    were assigned to particular vessels for a voyage, and were expected to perform
    work on barges that were towed by Blessey’s boats and crews.
    Although the Plaintiffs contend that these factual differences are
    irrelevant, this contention is inconsistent with our analysis in Owens. The
    Plaintiffs point to several DOL regulations that purportedly suggest that
    loading and unloading duties are not seaman work. See 29 C.F.R. § 783.32
    (suggesting that loading and unloading freight is nonseaman work but may
    not change a seaman’s classification if the work is insubstantial); 29 C.F.R. §
    783.36 (explaining that barge tenders who primarily or substantially load and
    unload cargo are not seamen). We acknowledged such language in Owens, but
    we noted with some caution that “[w]orkers who are primarily concerned with
    loading and unloading cargo are not, generally speaking, seamen within the
    meaning of the 
    FLSA.” 272 F.3d at 704
    (emphasis added). Our inclusion of
    the words “generally speaking” is significant because we explicitly
    acknowledged through this language that we always consider the factual
    context when deciding whether an employee is exempt.          While the DOL
    regulations suggest that in many cases loading and unloading duties are
    nonseaman work, we recognized that such a rule cannot be categorical in the
    light of the DOL’s crucial qualification that the application of the seaman
    exemption “depends upon the character of the work [an employee] actually
    performs and not on what it is called or the place where it is performed.” 29
    C.F.R. § 783.33 (emphasis added).
    We also recognized in Owens that the character of loading and unloading
    duties might change when a member of a vessel-based crew performs such
    duties. In a footnote, we indicated that rigid application of the DOL’s twenty
    percent rule, which it uses to determine whether nonseaman work is
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    substantial or insubstantial, could create an absurd result where an employee
    works primarily at sea but is a nonseaman for a brief period when he loads or
    unloads at 
    port. 272 F.3d at 702
    n.5. This footnote further underscores the
    limits of our decision in Owens, as we left open the question of loading and
    unloading duties for vessel-based employees.
    Finally, the Plaintiffs contend that we rejected in Owens the type of
    evidence that Blessey relies upon today, to wit, evidence connecting loading
    and unloading duties to the navigational integrity of the unit tow. SeaRiver
    argued, as Blessey argues now, that improper loading or unloading of a barge
    could render it unsafe or cause it to break apart. We concluded that the duties
    in that case only prepared the vessel for navigation but did not actually aid its
    operation. 
    Id. at 704.
    Our primary concern, though, was that accepting such
    evidence as dispositive would expand the definition of seaman to encompass
    many land-based personnel. Again in a footnote, we expounded that “[f]or
    example, a land-based worker who installs navigation equipment on vessels
    would be a seaman, as would a worker at a refueling dock.” 
    Id. at 704
    n.6
    (emphasis added). Although the evidence in Owens was insufficient to suggest
    that loading and unloading assisted the vessel’s operation, we did not
    categorically reject the relevance of such evidence in other cases, particularly
    when the work in question is performed by a member of the vessel’s crew.
    We conclude that the district court erred when it determined that Owens
    required it to hold that loading and unloading duties performed by vessel-
    based tankermen were nonseaman duties as a matter of law.
    2.
    Instead, our review of the relevant law and undisputed facts leads us to
    the conclusion that loading and unloading was seaman work when done by
    these vessel-based Plaintiffs. We turn first to § 783.31, which provides that an
    employee is a seaman if two criteria are met: (1) the employee is “subject to the
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    authority, direction, and control of the master;” and (2) the employee’s service
    is primarily offered to aid the “vessel as a means of transportation,” provided
    that the employee does not perform a substantial amount of different work. 29
    C.F.R. § 783.31. Both parties agree that the Plaintiffs were subject to the
    master’s control. As to the second prong, the Seventh Circuit persuasively
    notes that this provision “just means that the employee must be a (more or
    less) full-time member of the marine crew, that is, the crew that is responsible
    for operating the ship.” Harkins v. Riverboat Servs., Inc., 
    385 F.3d 1099
    , 1104
    (7th Cir. 2004). This reading is consistent with our own precedent in which we
    attempt to give the term seaman “its ordinary meaning.” 
    Dole, 876 F.2d at 523
    .
    We have early-on recognized that vessel-based barge tenders who
    maintain and service a barge are exempt seamen under the FLSA. Gale v.
    Union Bag & Paper Corp., 
    116 F.2d 27
    , 29 (5th Cir. 1940). In Gale, the
    plaintiffs slept on the barges and attended the lines, put out running and
    mooring lines, pumped out bilge water, and performed other tasks.             We
    concluded that they were exempt seamen and reasoned that “[t]hey were
    necessary for the operation, welfare and safety of the barges” and that they
    performed many duties “necessary and usual to the navigation of the barges.”
    
    Id. at 28.
    We recognized, for example, “[i]f the tow line had parted at any time
    on a voyage the barge would have been helpless and might have become a total
    loss if the barge tender was not there to drop the anchor and otherwise look
    out for its safety.” 
    Id. In Owens,
    we cited to Gale and emphasized that the
    workers in Gale “worked, ate, and slept on board their assigned 
    barges.” 272 F.3d at 701
    .
    In our view, the reasoning of Gale controls this case. It is undisputed
    that the Plaintiffs ate, slept, lived, and worked aboard Blessey’s towboats.
    They were members of the crew and worked at the direction of the captain. As
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    to the loading and unloading duties, the district court recognized that the
    “Plaintiffs do not contest [Blessey’s] argument that improper loading and
    unloading can compromise the seaworthiness of the barge.” Coffin v. Blessey
    Marine Servs., Inc., No. 4:11–214, 
    2013 WL 244918
    , at *3 (S.D. Tex. Jan. 22,
    2013). Martin Creel, a Blessey captain, and James Clendenon, a Blessey
    executive, both submitted declarations evincing that proper loading and
    unloading is essential to the efficient, safe movement of the unit tow. The
    Plaintiffs also testified that safe loading and unloading contributed to the
    efficient movement of the barge.
    We note that Gale applied to barge tenders, and the DOL has also
    promulgated a regulation regarding such employees and categorized them as
    exempt seamen in many cases. That regulation also provides, however:
    [T]here are employees who, while employed on vessels such as
    barges and lighters, are primarily or substantially engaged in
    performing duties such as loading and unloading or custodial
    service which do not constitute service performed primarily as an
    aid in the operation of these vessels as a means of transportation
    and consequently are not employed as “seamen.”
    29 C.F.R. § 783.36. Although the Plaintiffs urge us to interpret this statement
    to preclude any finding that loading or unloading duties are seaman work, we
    do not interpret the regulation so narrowly. As we noted above, we already
    rejected such a categorical rule in Owens. 
    See 272 F.3d at 704
    (emphasizing
    that workers who primarily load and unload barges are generally speaking not
    seamen under the FLSA).       Moreover, this statement appears merely to
    recognize the presumption that loading and unloading duties are nonseaman
    work because those duties are usually performed by harbor-based personnel
    who have little to no role in the barge’s navigational mission. See McCarthy v.
    Wright & Cobb Lighterage Co., 
    163 F.2d 92
    (2d Cir. 1947) (concluding that a
    shore-based bargee was not a seaman because his maritime duties consumed
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    only a few minutes of his day and he primarily supervised and facilitated the
    loading or unloading of cargo); see also Anderson v. Manhattan Lighterage
    Corp., 
    148 F.2d 971
    (2d Cir. 1945) (determining that workers were not seamen
    when they transferred cargo in New York Harbor and were rarely on board the
    vessel during the tow).
    By contrast, in this case vessel-based tankermen performed the loading
    and unloading duties as members of a unit tow’s crew. The Plaintiffs’ presence
    aboard the vessels naturally affected the nature of their loading and unloading
    duties. 4 Critically, the context in which work is done can affect whether it is
    seaman or nonseaman work. See Martin v. Bedell, 
    955 F.2d 1029
    , 1035 (5th
    Cir. 1992). In Martin, the Secretary of Labor brought suit to compel a company
    to pay overtime to cooks who worked aboard boats that provided offshore
    maintenance to oil companies. We recognized that a vessel-based “cook is
    usually a seaman because he usually cooks for 
    seamen.” 955 F.2d at 1036
    . We
    remanded that case for further factual findings, however, so that the district
    court could determine whether the cooks spent a significant amount of time
    preparing food for nonseamen. 
    Id. Our distinction
    underscores the important
    point that food preparation is neither inherently seaman nor nonseaman work,
    and its character depends on the context in which it is performed.
    In Martin, we were aided by a DOL regulation providing that “[t]he term
    ‘seaman’ includes members of the crew such as . . . cooks . . . if, as is the usual
    4 Of course, we recognize that an employee is not a seaman merely because he works
    on a boat. See 29 C.F.R. § 783.33. Indeed, we have recognized that employees on a dredge
    boat may aid in the operation of the vessel while still performing primarily nonseaman
    duties. Walling v. W. D. Haden Co., 
    153 F.2d 196
    , 199 (5th Cir. 1946). Our decision in W. D.
    Haden is readily distinguishable from this case, however, because we concluded there that
    the workers on the dredge boat were employed primarily in industry because they harvested
    shells from the ocean. Here, the Plaintiffs worked on a vessel that shipped cargo on inland
    and oceanic waterways. Their work on the water was fundamentally seaman work, and their
    presence on the water was not incidental to the primary purpose of their employment.
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    case, their service is of the type described in § 783.31.” 29 C.F.R. § 783.32. The
    presumption that members of the crew are seamen is not limited to cooks, as
    the regulation includes the broad terms “includes” and “such as” to indicate
    that the enumerated positions are exemplary, not exclusive. See Christopher
    v. SmithKline Beecham Corp., 
    132 S. Ct. 2156
    , 2170 (2012) (explaining in the
    context of another FLSA regulation that use of the verb “includes” indicates
    “that the examples enumerated in the text are intended to be illustrative, not
    exhaustive”). As with § 783.36, this provision indicates that a crew member
    does not lose his status “simply because, as an incident to such employment,
    he performs some work not connected with operation of the vessel as a means
    of transportation, such as assisting in the loading or unloading of freight at the
    beginning or end of a voyage.” 29 C.F.R. § 783.32. Again, the Plaintiffs urge
    us to decide that this statement means that loading and unloading duties are
    never seaman work.
    It appears to us that this statement only means that in some, perhaps in
    many, situations and circumstances involving loading and unloading duties,
    the work is nonseaman. Blessey’s evidence demonstrates that the loading or
    unloading of its liquid cargo requires precision so that the barge can operate
    safely. Naturally, when an individual lives aboard the vessel that he or she
    loads or unloads, this living situation will affect the character of his or her
    duties. In Owens, the tankerman duties were divorced from the subsequent
    navigation of the barge. 
    See 272 F.3d at 704
    (noting that the plaintiff did not
    move or moor the barge and only prepared it for navigation). By contrast, the
    Plaintiffs here recognized that their loading and unloading duties were
    integrated with their many other duties. Indeed, the plaintiff in Owens chose
    not to sue for the time he was a tankerman in navigation. 
    Id. at 700.
    For
    example here, Plaintiff Joshua Fox testified that he would regularly walk his
    barge to make certain that the barge was level because doing his job improperly
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    could mean that the barge would get stuck when traveling down a river or
    canal. Eric Jones and Zachary Latiolais, two other Plaintiffs, testified that
    performing their loading and unloading duties effectively made their jobs and
    the captain’s job easier. Thus, the Plaintiffs are instead seamen because, like
    a cook, they are a member of the crew and perform work that meets the
    definition of § 783.31.
    We conclude that Blessey’s tankermen are seamen while loading and
    unloading the vessel because these duties were integrated within their many
    other duties. Inquiries into FLSA exempt status “remain[] intensely factbound
    and case specific,” and we have cautioned that “[e]ach case must be judged on
    its own peculiar facts.” 
    Dalheim, 918 F.2d at 1226
    –27. The DOL applies this
    principle to the seaman exemption, emphasizing that the exemption’s
    application “depends upon the character of the work.” 29 C.F.R. § 783.33.
    Blessey has produced undisputed evidence evincing that these vessel-based
    tankermen performed their loading and unloading duties with an eye toward
    navigation and were required to perform such duties safely so that the vessel
    could safely operate on inland and oceanic waterways. We see no basis for
    distinguishing their loading and unloading duties from the many other duties
    the vessel-based barge tenders performed in Gale. 5 See Jordan v. Am. Oil Co.,
    
    51 F. Supp. 77
    , 78–79 (D.R.I. 1943) (applying the seaman exemption to vessel-
    based tankermen based on our decision in Gale).
    5 The Plaintiffs contend that cases like Gale and Jordan are inapposite because they
    were decided before the DOL adopted the twenty percent rule used to determine whether
    nonseaman duties are substantial. This argument is unavailing for two reasons. First, we
    continue to recognize Gale in cases concerning the seaman exemption. See 
    Owens, 272 F.3d at 701
    . Second, we cautioned in Owens against the rigid application of the twenty percent
    rule. 
    Id. at 702
    n.5. It appears to us that a careful evaluation of the nature and character of
    the work in question assuages our concerns in Owens.
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    Finally, we consider that the policies of the FLSA support our decision
    today. The FLSA’s exemptions were designed to apply to
    a kind of work that was difficult to standardize to any time frame
    and could not be easily spread to other workers after 40 hours in a
    week, making compliance with the overtime provisions difficult
    and generally precluding the potential job expansion intended by
    the FLSA’s time-and-a-half overtime premium.
    
    Christopher, 132 S. Ct. at 2173
    (internal quotation marks omitted). As the
    American Waterways Operators explained in its amicus brief, generally
    speaking, tankermen devote varying amounts of time to loading and unloading
    on each hitch. On some hitches, workers may spend as little as ten percent of
    their time loading and unloading, while others may spend fifty percent or more.
    Thus, a tankerman could be a seaman on some hitches and not on others,
    making it disruptive and disputatious on the vessel. See 
    Owens, 272 F.3d at 702
    n.5. Similarly, Blessey’s tankermen work aboard a vessel with limited
    space for other workers, making the unit tow an environment where “working
    more than 40 hours a week is an appropriate work norm.” 
    Harkins, 385 F.3d at 1102
    . Thus, the policy objectives of the FLSA support this decision.
    For these reasons, we conclude that loading and unloading duties are
    seaman work when performed by these vessel-based tankermen.
    B.
    We briefly note that the Plaintiffs also argued a number of tasks related
    to their loading and unloading duties were also nonseaman work for FLSA
    purposes. They explain in their brief that the district court did not address
    these categories of work and urge that the work is not part of this appeal. This
    work is part of this appeal, though, both because Blessey has briefed the issue
    and because we may affirm the district court for any reason supported by the
    14
    Case: 13-20144    Document: 00512835754      Page: 15   Date Filed: 11/13/2014
    No. 13-20144
    record, even if the district court did not rely on that reason. United States v.
    Gonzalez, 
    592 F.3d 675
    , 681 (5th Cir. 2009).
    This argument gives us little pause, though, as the activities related to
    loading and unloading were also clearly seaman work. As Blessey notes, many
    of these readiness duties are part of the basic maintenance of a barge. The
    basic maintenance of a vessel is almost always seaman work for FLSA
    purposes. See Louviere v. Standard Dredging Corp., 
    239 F.2d 164
    , 164–65 (5th
    Cir. 1956) (recognizing that a deckhand’s routine maintenance work on a tug
    constituted seaman duties for FLSA purposes). As we discussed in detail
    above, the loading and unloading process is connected with the Plaintiffs’ many
    seaman duties as members of the crew.
    Additionally, our interpretation of the FLSA regulations above would
    also control this issue in this appeal. We have held that the loading and
    unloading is itself seaman work for FLSA purposes, and by extension the work
    related to loading and unloading is also seaman work under the FLSA.
    IV.
    In sum, we have focused on the totality of the facts presented in this
    appeal, and we have held that loading and unloading duties along with any
    related duties constitute seaman work when performed by vessel-based
    tankermen. Consequently, the district court erred when it denied Blessey’s
    motion for summary judgment on this issue. The tankermen performed duties
    crucial to the mission and purpose for the unit tow and were at all times
    engaged in work regarding the safe and efficient operation of a “vessel as a
    means of transportation” under § 783.31. This holding is in harmony with our
    precedent, the relevant DOL regulations, and the spirit and purpose of the
    FLSA.
    VACATED, and REMANDED,
    for entry of judgment in favor of Blessey.
    15