142 N.Y. 101 | NY | 1894
The Board of Claims have made an award in this case in favor of the claimant based upon the following facts: The claimant was employed by the superintendent of public works during the season of navigation from May 1 to November 1 in the year 1889, as a locktender on the canal. No express agreement was made as to compensation, but payment was made monthly during the six months of his employment at the rate of $20 per month. This seems to have been the compensation theretofore paid to persons so employed. The claimant, during part of the time at least, signed the monthly pay rolls, and at no time during his employment did he make any claim that he was entitled to more. No question as to the liability of the state to pay the claimant any more *103 could possibly arise upon these facts, except for the enactment by the legislature of chapter 380 of the Laws of 1889, which took effect on the 6th of June of that year. Although this statute was repealed by the succeeding legislature (Laws of 1890, ch. 218), it was in force during nearly five months of the period of the employment. As the award rests entirely upon this statute, it may be well to give it here in the language used by the legislature:
"An act to regulate the rate of wages on all public works in this state, and to define what laborers shall be employed thereon.
"Section 1. From and after the passage of this act wages of day laborers employed by the state, or any officer thereof, shall not be less than two dollars per day, and for all such employedotherwise than day laborers at a rate of not less than twenty-five cents per hour.
"Sec. 2. In all cases where laborers are employed on any public work in this state, preference shall be given to citizens of the state of New York.
"Sec. 3. This act shall take effect immediately."
I am unable to see why the claimant was not a laborer upon the public works of the state employed as such by an officer of the state within the meaning of this statute. If the claimant was entitled to its benefits he is not concluded by the fact that he received pay from time to time at former rates and signed the pay rolls. He has not released the state from any of its legal obligations to him. The superintendent, who is charged with the duty and vested with the power under the Constitution of employing all persons necessary in the care and management of the canals, might, notwithstanding this statute, have made contracts for labor and services before it was passed upon such terms and at such rates of compensation as in his judgment was most advantageous to the state, but the finding in this case implies that no such contract was made. The trial court might have found from all the facts and circumstances that the claimant agreed to perform the services for $20 per month and that compensation at that rate was *104 what the parties intended, but the evidence was of such a character as to render another view possible. At all events under the circumstances of this case we feel concluded by the finding. The statute did not take effect until after the claimant was employed, and if he entered the service under a contract, express or implied, it could not be affected by subsequent legislation. The contract need not be expressed in formal words or in writing, but could be implied from the situation and conduct of the parties and from the circumstances.
There is no exception to the findings as made and there was no request to find a contract from the facts disclosed. We must, therefore, treat the case as one of employment merely without any contract as to compensation, and this brings us to the question discussed by the learned attorney-general in regard to the power of the legislature to enact the statute in question. By section three of article five of the Constitution, certain powers are conferred and duties imposed upon the superintendent of public works with respect to the care and management of the canals that may not be affected by legislation. (People ex rel. Killeen v.Angle,
It is true that when the claimant was employed there was no statute regulating his compensation, and it was competent for the officers in charge of the canals to stipulate with him upon any measure of compensation that might be agreed upon by the parties, and the statute would have no application to this case during the period when the contract was in force. So that in this case a finding that the claimant entered into the service of the state in pursuance of a contract, express or implied, under which he was to render the service for the compensation paid, would defeat the claim, but, in the absence of such finding, we must dispose of the case upon the assumption that there was no such stipulation. This court will not look into the evidence for the purpose of making a finding to reverse a judgment, though it may do so for the purpose of sustaining it.
For these reasons, the award of the Board of Claims should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Award affirmed.