New Jersey Federal District Court Holds Pharmaceutical Sales Reps Exempt

Prescription SymbolOn July 19, 2010, in Jackson v. Alpharma Inc., the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey held that Alpharma, Inc.’s pharmaceutical sales representatives qualify as exempt administrative employees under the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”). The court’s unpublished opinion relies in part on the Third Circuit’s holding in Smith v. Johnson & Johnson, 593 F.3d 280 (3d Cir. 2010).

Background

Plaintiffs are former pharmaceutical sales representatives (“PSRs”) for Alpharma, Inc., a manufacturer of pain medication that is now owned by King Pharmaceuticals. On July 10, 2007, the plaintiffs filed a complaint alleging they are due unpaid wages and overtime pursuant to the FLSA. Thereafter, on March 24, 2009, the court granted Alpharma, Inc.’s motion to stay the proceedings pending the outcome of Smith v. Johnson & Johnson in the Third Circuit Court of Appeals. Following the Third Circuit’s decision in Smith, Alpharma filed a motion for summary judgment before the instant court.

Analysis

The court held that the former PSRs qualify for the administrative exemption and analyzed the three-prong test that the Secretary of Labor sets forth in the administrative regulations. Under the test, an administrative employee must (1) make no less than $455 per week; (2) perform “non-manual work directly related to the management or general business operations of the employer;” and (3) exercise sufficient “discretion and independent judgment with respect to matters of significance.”

With the weekly salary requirement conceded by the parties, the court held that the second prong of the administrative exemption test was met, reasoning that the PSRs were involved in “marketing” and “promoting sales.” The court recognized that federal statutes and regulations prohibit the sale of Alpharma’s prescription medication directly to the public. The PSRs “called on doctors and pharmacies to encourage them to prescribe or stock Alpharma’s products over the products of its competitors.”

Concerning the third prong, the court further examined federal regulations defining the exercise of discretion and independent judgment as involving “the comparison and evaluation of possible courses of conduct, and acting or making a decision after the various possibilities have been considered.”

Alpharma relied heavily on the Third Circuit’s holding in Smith that “a pharmaceutical sales representative was not entitled to overtime pay because she qualified for the administrative exemption under the FLSA.” The district court noted that the plaintiff in Smith “described herself as ‘the manager of her own business who could run her own territory as she saw fit.’”

The court stated that “the facts in Smith are startlingly similar to the case at bar.” The court identified the following similarities: the employer gave Smith a list of target doctors including “high-priority” doctors, set a minimum number of doctors to visit per-day, permitted Smith to determine the order of doctor visits each day, provided Smith with a prepared “message,” allowed Smith “some discretion when deciding how to approach the conversation,” provided Smith with visual aids and did not allow her to use other aids.

The PSRs here worked alone, developed business plans, decided their “routing” (i.e., when and where to travel), and determined the doctors to meet with each day “in order to effectuate the most business.” The court stated that the PSRs also had discretion to decide “how to approach the physician.”

On the other hand, the plaintiffs characterized Alpharma’s PSR supervisors as “micro managers,” and argued that the PSR in Smith was more of a “freelancer.” The plaintiffs also urged the court to examine the full list of factors set forth in the regulations for determining “whether or not an employee exercises the requisite discretion and judgment to fit within the exemption.”

The court reasoned that the plaintiffs satisfied the same two factors as the plaintiff in Smith. First, the court noted that the PSRs’ work “affects business operations to a substantial degree.” Second, the court stated that the PSRs “are ‘involved in planning long-or short-term business objectives’ related to the marketing of their products within their territories.”

In addition to satisfaction of these two factors, the court stated that its conclusions were “buttressed by the plaintiffs’ duties to write reports and business plans to determine where their business was coming from, to detect trends in the sales of the drug, and to generate ideas on how to grow the business.”

The plaintiffs submitted supplemental submissions to direct the court’s attention to other PSR misclassification cases: Jirak v. Abbott Laboratories, Inc. and In re Novartis Wage and Hour Litigation. The court found it unnecessary to discuss these cases in light of the Third Circuit’s decision in Smith and in a subsequent nonprecedential opinion.

This entry was written by Michael Harvey.

Information contained in this publication is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or opinion, nor is it a substitute for the professional judgment of an attorney.