150 Misc. 699 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1934
A preliminary objection is made as to constitutionality. Two acts are involved: First, the National Industrial
The next question is whether the code in this industry has been drawn in accordance with the acts. The plaintiffs are dry cleaners and pressers. The code prescribes that they may not charge less than seventy-five cents for a certain service in dry cleaning and pressing. The defendants are also dry cleaners and pressers. Defendants object that plaintiffs are unfairly competing because, in addition to dry cleaning and pressing, they render a very expensive service for which they do not charge anything. Defendants merely dry clean and press and do not render the extra expensive service. I rule that this court has jurisdiction of this controversy. In effect the plaintiffs are not doing the same service as defendants. The law is not prima facie unconstitutional. If the way it is being worked here is in accordance with the law, then the law is unconstitutional. One might as well fix the same price to stucco a house as to build a new house. If that is what the acts mean, then they are unconstitutional. But the acts do not mean that. Two interpretations of the code are possible: (1) Mere dry cleaning and pressing have a minimum price of seventy-five cents, and the worker can give as an inducement an additional valuable service. This is in effect prohibited by the law. (2) The price of seventy-five cents is for the complete service as rendered by plaintiffs. In that case there is no code for the service rendered by defendants. The code as promulgated will not work as applied to the two types of service. I decline to grant an injunction to try to make it work. Each item of service must be charged for. This does not mean a meticulously detailed itemization, but a general separation of items of service. Here no separation at all has been attempted, involving the differentiation of service. There is an adequate detail as to the items of service which both parties render, but none at all as to service rendered by one and not by the other.
The acts are constitutional and can be made to work to cover the point here. Let that be done. No criticism of the code draftsman is meant. The point here was inadvertently and excusably overlooked.
Motion denied.
Opinion on reargument, February 19, 1934.
McGeehan, j. The plaintiffs move for a reargument. The ground seems to be not that the court overlooked either any fact or the law, but that the court after full consideration reached a wrong conclusion. Perhaps, but on reconsideration I again fall into the same error (if it be error).
Laws of 1933, chap. 781.