155 N.E. 628 | NY | 1927
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *321
These are taxpayers' actions under General Municipal Law, §
By the Labor Law of the State (Consol. Laws, ch. 31, § 220) every contract to which the State or a municipal corporation or a commission appointed pursuant to law is a party and which may involve the employment of laborers, workmen or mechanics shall contain a provision for an eight-hour day of labor except in cases of extraordinary emergency.
By the same section, "The wages to be paid for a legal day's work, as hereinbefore defined, to laborers, workmen or mechanics upon such public works, or upon any material to be used upon or in connection therewith, shall be not less than the prevailing rate for a day's work in the same trade or occupation in the locality within the State where such public work on, about or in connection with which such labor is performed in its final or completed form is to be situated, erected or used *323 and shall be paid in cash. Such contracts shall contain a provision that each laborer, workman or mechanic, employed by such contractor, subcontractor or other person about or upon such public work, shall be paid the wages herein provided."
Violation of any provision of the section is a crime, punishable by fine or imprisonment, or both, and in addition forfeiting the contract illegally performed, and, in case of a second offense, the payments earned thereunder (§ 220, subd. 5).
Following the requirements of this section, the proposed contracts provide "that the wages to be paid for a legal day's work as hereinbefore defined to all classes of such laborers, workmen or mechanics upon the work contemplated by this contract or upon any material to be used upon or in connection therewith, shall be not less than the prevailing rate for a day's work in the same trade or occupation in the locality within the State where the work hereby contemplated about or in connection with which such labor is performed in its final or completed form is to be situated, erected or used, and shall be paid in cash; and that each such laborer, workman or mechanic employed by the contractor or by any sub-contractor or other person on, about or upon the work contemplated by this contract, shall receive such wages herein provided for."
The framers of the contracts did not confine themselves, however, to the foregoing provisions which are substantially a repetition of the language of the statute. They added other provisions with a view to greater certainty. "Locality within the State" was to be understood as signifying the city of New York. "The prevailing rate" of wage was to be the "rate paid to a majority of the laborers, workmen or mechanics engaged in the same trade or occupation in the City of New York." If there was not a majority paid at the same rate, "then the rate paid to the greater number of such trade or *324 occupation in the City of New York" was to be accepted as the prevailing rate, "provided that such greater number constitute at least 40 per centum of the laborers, workmen or mechanics engaged in such trade or occupation in the City of New York." If less than 40 per centum were paid at the same rate, then the prevailing rate was to be the average rate paid to such laborers, workmen or mechanics in the same trade or occupation. Those employed under the proposed contracts were to be included with others in reckoning the total number.
The complaints allege in substance that the "prevailing rate" of wages under Labor Law (§ 220) is a variable quantity, uncertain, indefinite, and not susceptible of ascertainment; that the statute, in so far as it prescribes the payment of such wages, is unconstitutional, for the reason that its command is unintelligible; that the contracts made thereunder, in so far as they repeat the same command, are invalid for the same reason and to the same extent; that the added definitions illegally depart from the form established by the statute, and, even if otherwise permissible, do not correct the uncertainty; and finally that bidders for the proposed contracts will be unable to bid with understanding, and will be driven to increase their bids as a protection against obligations unknown and unknowable, with resulting waste and injury to the city and its taxpayers.
The public policy of the State declared by successive Legislatures during a period of thirty years (L. 1897, ch. 415; L. 1899, ch. 567; L. 1900, ch. 298; L. 1906, ch. 506; L. 1909, ch. 292; L. 1913, ch. 494; L. 1916, ch. 152; L. 1921, ch. 642) exacts the payment of the rate of wages prevailing in the vicinage to laborers and mechanics employed upon the public works. We trace in judicial decision and constitutional amendment the tides of thought and sentiment. People ex rel. Rodgers v.Coler (1901,
The plaintiffs would have us hold that from the throes of this long struggle there emerged a statute without meaning, a futile and deceptive gesture. Connally v. *326 General Construction Co. (
We are met in the case at hand by a problem of a different order. There is no question before us now of punishment for crime. There is merely a question of the regulation of a form of contract. The Legislature has said that contractors working for the State or for its civil subdivisions shall bind themselves by a promise which is criticised as indefinite and meaningless. Plainly the Constitution of the United States has nothing to say about regulations of that kind. The Fourteenth Amendment *327
does not embody a provision that municipal contracts shall be perspicuous and definite. If a promise is meaningless, the promisor may not be punished for the omission to observe it. By the very terms of the hypothesis, the fact of the omission is incapable of proof. For the same reason, he may not be charged in such circumstances with civil liability. "A prohibition so indefinite as to be unintelligible is not a prohibition by which conduct can be governed. It is not a rule at all; it is merely exhortation and entreaty" (Standard Chemical Corp. v. WaughChemical Corp.,
If the Constitution does not make it illegal to place this promise in the contract, the plaintiffs may not be heard to insist that the promise shall come out. Their right of action as taxpayers is measured by the statute (General Municipal Law, §
The form of contract being lawful to the extent that it repeats the provisions of the statute, there is no occasion to determine the remedies, criminal or civil, that will be available to the municipality if the claim shall be made hereafter that those provisions have been violated. Questions of that order, suggested in the briefs of counsel, are mentioned only to reserve them. We do not now determine whether Connally v. General ConstructionCo. (supra) stands in the way of criminal prosecution. Distinctions of place and circumstance may conceivably exist. If so, the time to draw them is not now. We put aside for the same reason the determination of the bounds *329
of civil liability. Criteria of conduct, too indefinite and elastic to expose to punishment for crime, may yet be fixed and definite in such degree that they are not to be disregarded as wholly unintelligible when the question is one of the violation of a promise. This is not the time to attempt a definition of "the prevailing rate of wages" with its background of legislative history and twenty years or more of practical construction. One finds it hard to believe that a cliche so inveterate is devoid of meaning altogether. Learned judges have said (e.g., HAIGHT, J., in People ex rel. Rodgers v. Coler, supra, at p. 42) that it is synonymous with market rate. This might not exclude altogether the possibility of fluctuations and diversities at a given day and place. There can be little doubt that it would furnish us with criteria of conduct adequate for civil, if not for criminal, liability (Sloan v. Baird,
A word must be said of the so-called "added definitions." The effect of these definitions is to supplement the statutory promise by setting bounds to the "locality" and by stating rules for the ascertainment of the rate of wage prevailing at any time or place. The *330
statutory promise is either workable or unworkable, with meaning or without. If unworkable and meaningless, point and power may be given it by gloss and explanation. (cf. Public Service Comm. Law, § 134; Rapid Transit Act, § 26). If intelligible and workable, there may still be amplifying provisions when amplification is consistent with the statutory scheme. The plaintiffs take the ground that in framing the definitions, the defendants have made an illegitimate departure from the meaning of a statute which was already without meaning. If a feat so extraordinary were taken to be possible, it would not serve to establish an actionable wrong. We do not go into the question whether statute and definitions can stand together at every point. The plaintiffs would not be helped though inconsistency were found. Their cause of action as taxpayers requires something more than proof of an illegal act. The illegality must tend to the detriment of the city either by the dissipation of its funds or by the threat of other injury so imminent and substantial as to make it proper that the taxpayers be protected by injunction (Western N.Y. Water Co. v. City ofBuffalo,
We see no force in the contention that the contract is illegal in providing for the arbitration of any controversy thereunder (Matter of Berkovitz v. Arbib Houlberg,
We have considered other questions and find them unsubstantial.
The judgment in each action should be affirmed with costs.
POUND, CRANE, ANDREWS and LEHMAN, JJ., concur; KELLOGG, J., absent.
Judgments affirmed.