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A Missing Oxford Comma Decided This Ruling On Overtime Pay

A Missing Oxford Comma Decided This Ruling On Overtime Pay
Monday, June 17,2013. Oakhurst dairy plant in Portland. -- (Photo by Jill Brady/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)
Portland Press Herald via Getty Images
Monday, June 17,2013. Oakhurst dairy plant in Portland. -- (Photo by Jill Brady/Portland Press Herald via Getty Images)

There’s not much that makes grammar and punctuation enthusiasts more hot and bothered than debates about Oxford commas. And a court ruling out of Maine is adding fuel to the nerdy fire.

On Monday, U.S. First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of a group of dairy truck drivers who were suing Oakhurst Dairy for unpaid overtime wages, the Bangor Daily News reports.

The judge’s reasoning that the drivers were in the right? The lack of an Oxford comma in a list of activities deemed exempt from overtime pay.

“For want of a comma, we have this case,” Judge David Barron wrote in the opening line of his decision.

In case you need a refresher on what an Oxford comma is, it’s also known as a “serial comma.” It’s the comma right after the next-to-last item in a list of three or more things, before the words “and” or “or.”

Oxford comma fans like to point to hilarious examples of how the lack of the comma can cause confusion.

Even so, there are some powerful anti-Oxford comma forces out there — notably, the AP Style Guide, which The Huffington Post follows. (Though AP does specify that writers should insert the the comma when leaving it out would cause misreading.)

So how does all of this play into the truck driver lawsuit? The Maine overtime law in question states that workers must get overtime pay if they work more than 40 hours a week, unless their work falls under an exemption. One of these exemptions in state law reads as follows:

The canning, processing, preserving,

freezing, drying, marketing, storing,

packing for shipment or distribution of:

(1) Agricultural produce;

(2) Meat and fish products; and

(3) Perishable foods.

Oakhurst claimed that the phrase “packing for shipment or distribution” covered workers who were packing goods for shipment, as well as workers involved in “distribution” — like the truck drivers. But the truck drivers argued that the phrase essentially meant “packing for shipment or packing for distribution.” In other words, the distribution itself was a separate activity not covered by the exemption.

If there had been a comma after “shipment,” the distinction would have been more clear, and “distribution” would have been a more obviously distinct activity.

Plus, there were other grammatical clues that “distribution” was not meant to be read as a separate activity, the drivers noted. And Barron agreed.

“The drivers read ‘shipment’ and ‘distribution’ each to be objects of the preposition ‘for’ that describes the exempt activity of ‘packing,’” he wrote. “And the drivers read the gerunds each to be referring to stand-alone, exempt activities.”

Barron’s ruling reverses an earlier ruling by a U.S. District Court, which sided with Oakhurst in saying that “distribution” was intended to be read as a separate job responsibility. But according to the Bangor Daily News, there will likely be more punctuation-heavy court proceedings before the case is settled for good.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.