By Brent Kendall 

WASHINGTON--The U.S. Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that Amazon.com Inc. warehouse workers weren't entitled to pay for the time they spent being screened for theft at the end of their work shifts.

The court, in a unanimous opinion by Justice Clarence Thomas, said the workers couldn't proceed with a lawsuit seeking wages for the security checks because the time they spent waiting to be screened wasn't an integral and indispensable part of their jobs.

The high court's ruling reversed a lower court decision that allowed the workers' case to proceed.

Plaintiffs in the case had sued a staffing agency that supplied Amazon with temporary workers who fill online orders. Amazon had been named directly as a defendant in other lawsuits. The workers alleged they could spend 20 to 25 minutes in unpaid time waiting to leave their shifts because there weren't enough screeners.

The case raised potentially high stakes for both sides. A lawyer for the plaintiffs had estimated that hundreds of thousands of current and former Amazon workers stood to be affected.

Other companies, including Apple Inc., CVS Health Corp., TJX Cos. and Ross Stores Inc., have faced similar lawsuits.

Write to Brent Kendall at brent.kendall@wsj.com

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