56 A.2d 655 | Conn. | 1947
This action comes before us by an appeal from a judgment rendered for the defendants upon the plaintiff's failure to plead over after a demurrer to the complaint was sustained. The writ is dated January 8, 1947. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff was employed by the defendants from October 1, 1939, to about June 1, 1942, under an oral agreement that he be paid $25 a week, and that he in fact worked eighty-four hours each week; and he claims to recover additional compensation for the time he worked over forty hours a week, under the provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938.
The Fair Labor Standards Act gives jurisdiction to state courts of competent jurisdiction to entertain actions to recover overtime compensation. 216. It contains no limitation as to the time within which such actions must be brought, and when this action was instituted no other act of Congress provided any such limitation. It is not disputed before us that any applicable Statute of Limitations of this state will be controlling in this action. Campbell v. Haverhill,
The relevant portions of the Fair Labor Standards Act are 207, which provides that no employer shall employ any of his employees for a work week longer than forty hours "unless such employee receives compensation for his employment in excess of the hours above specified at a rate not less than one and one-half times the regular rate at which he is employed," and 216, which provides that any employer who violates the requirements of 207 "shall be liable to the employee or employees affected in the amount of their . . . unpaid overtime compensation . . . and in an additional equal amount as liquidated damages."
The parties have cited no decision of the Supreme Court of the United States dealing with the question before us, and we have found none. That court has, however, in several decisions considered an analogous situation arising out of the statutory liability imposed upon stockholders in certain corporations to pay assessments in case of their insolvency. In Carrol v. Green,
In Matteson v. Dent,
In Christopher v. Norvell,
These decisions of the United States Supreme Court may be summarized in this way: The imposition of an additional statutory liability upon stockholders in a corporation has two aspects: On the one hand, the liability has been regarded as annexed to the contract inherent in the ownership of stock and therefore contractual in its nature; on the other, the liability has been considered as one created by the statute. Which aspect will be held controlling depends upon the question before the court. While it held that where the liability was asserted by a *254 receiver of a corporation and was contingent upon an assessment made by the comptroller it was net within a Statute of Limitations as to contractual obligations, all the cases hold that where, as in this case, the liability is unconditional and direct such a statute applies.
Turning to decisions upon the issue directly before us, we find that in Lorber v. Rosow,
In Cannon v. Miller,
There can be no question that in this case the foundation of the plaintiff's right was his contract of employment with the defendant; the plaintiff in effect concedes that by the allegation in the complaint that he was employed by the defendants at an agreed wage; and without such an allegation or something of that nature he would have no basis upon which to recover. The provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act became a part of that contract. See Richmond v. Irons, supra, 55; Concord First National Bank v. Hawkins, supra, 372; Broderick v. McGuire,
The amicus curiae in this case agrees with the contention of the defendant that 6010 controls as regards the plaintiff's right to recover for overtime work at the rate of at least one and one-half times the agreed wage, but contends that the further recovery authorized, "in an additional equal amount as liquidated damages," is in effect the imposition of a penalty and so governed by 6017 which limits to one year actions to recover "any forfeiture upon any penal statute." Other questions aside, if the additional recovery is not in the nature of a penalty, this statute does not apply. The Supreme Court of the United States has held that the amount to be recovered is in fact liquidated damages and not a penalty; Overnight Motor Co. v. Missel,
It remains to consider whether 6005 or 6010 controls recovery in this case. The genesis of 6010 is an act of the General Assembly passed in 1771, the first section of which was the Statute of Frauds and the second section of which provided that "no suit in law or equity shall be brought or maintained upon any contract or agreement . . . not reduced to writing as aforesaid but within three years next after entering into or making the same." 13 Col. Rec. 422. This act appears in the Revision of 1796, p. 216. In Chittington v. Fowler, 2 Root 387, decided in 1796, it was held that the statute applied only to *258
contracts which were executory. The Revision of 1821, p. 309 et seq., contains a series of statutes evidently designed to cover the various types of actions which might be instituted. The act of 1771 was included but was changed to read: "No action founded upon any express contract or agreement, other than actions of book debt, on proper subjects thereof, not reduced to writing, or some note or memorandum thereof, made in writing, and signed by the party to be charged therewith, or some other person by him lawfully authorized" shall be brought except within three years. Among the other statutes included in the 1821 Revision was the prototype of 6005, providing: "No action of account, of debt on book, or on simple contract, or of assumpsit, founded upon implied contract, or upon any contract in writing, not under seal, except promissory notes not negotiable" shall be brought except within six years. Both acts were included in the Revision of 1875, p. 494, although the language of the latter was changed in immaterial respects. See Anderson v. Bridgeport,
It is not easy to harmonize with that construction of 6010 the inclusion in the Revision of 1821 of the exception of actions of book debt, because such *259 an action could hardly lie on an executory contract; and the most that can be said is that the exception was inserted by the revisers out of an abundance of caution. If 6005 and 6010 are to be construed to make a harmonious body of law, it is necessary to restrict the latter, as was suggested in Baker v. Lee, supra, to executory contracts. Section 6005 limits to six years actions on simple, that is parol, contracts; 6010 limits to three years actions on contracts not reduced to or evidenced by a writing, that is, contracts resting in parol; and unless the latter is intended to apply only to executory contracts there would be different limitations established for actions of the same type, that is, those on parol contracts, a result which the legislature could not have intended.
The action before us is clearly one upon a simple contract where the plaintiff has fully performed, and it falls fully within 6005. So far as appears in the complaint, the plaintiff was employed for an indefinite time at a weekly wage, and each week constituted a new employment; Mazzotta v. Mazzotta,
We have not overlooked our decisions in Hickey v. Slattery,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded to be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.