89 A.D. 481 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
At the trial there appeared to be no dispute as to the worth of the services rendered within a year prior to the assignment for the benefit of creditors, and for that reason the opinion of Mr. Justice Jenks at Special Term does not discuss that branch of the case. The question which he treated in his exhaustive opinion we believe properly decided by the learned justice at Special Term, and we adopt the opinion delivered below on that branch of the case.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Bartlett, Woodward, Hirsohberg and Hooker, JJ.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
The following is the opinion of Mr. Justice Jenks, delivered at Special Term: JENKS; J.:
The issue arises upon the application of section 29, chapter 624, Laws of 1897, as amended,
“In all distribution of assets, under all assignments made in pursuance of this act, the wages or salaries actually owing to the employes of the assignor or assignors at the time of the execution of the assignment for services rendered within one year prior to the execution of such assignment, shall be preferred before any
There is no dispute as to the services rendered within the prescribed period or as to their worth, but the question is whether the plaintiff was an employee entitled to wages or salary, and, therefore, to a preference afforded by the statute.
This and similar legislation is the protection of those who. serve in more subordinate and humble capacities and who naturally would suffer if their compensation was not surely and speedily paid. (Bristor v. Smith, 168 N. Y. 157.)
To this end the statute has preferred those who depend upon their daily work for the means of life, to the dealers or independent contractors who take the chances of trade, or who extend credit in the ordinary risks of business, to the professional man, or to the high official of the corporation; in fine, to those who have, presumably, other means of subsistence or capital or can protect themselves, or who in any event are not naturally dependent upon the solvency of one individual. While the word “ employee ” is not to be read with full generic force (Palmer v. Van Santvoord, 153 N. Y. 612), it has been adjudicated to embrace more than the words “ operative or laborer.”
In Matter of American Lace Works (30 App. Div. 323) Willard Bartlett, J., says: “It may be said generally that the term ‘employees’ includes persona employed by a corporation in comparatively subordinate positions who cannot correctly be described either as operatives or laborers.”
In Bristor v, Smith (supra) Gray, J., discussing the scope of the term as used, in section 54, chapter 688, Laws of 1892, says that the word defines “in a general way such classes of persons as were engaged in serving the corporation in subordinate capacities.”
In Palmer v. Van Santvoord (supra), in the course of a discussion of the term, Andrews, Oh. J., says that it must be recognized as “including in the designation all who in common understanding held that relation to the corporation.” (See, too, People v. Beveridge Brewing Company, 91 Hun; 315.)
I am of opinion that plaintiff was an employee within the purview of this statute. The assignor of the defendant was a corporation engaged in the wholesale pickle business in the city of New York. The plaintiff lived at White Plains. The corporation would name to him a price which it would pay for pickles to the farmers in the vicinity of White Plains, and the plaintiff would call upon those farmers and contract with them, but in the name of the corporation, for the pickles. In diie course, from time to time, the plaintiff received the pickles at the factory and then sorted them, weighed them, prepared the brine, changed it as necessary, and inspected the stock. He then changed the pickles
Stress is laid upon the fact that the corporation dubbed the plaintiff its “ superintendent ” or its “superintendent at White Plains.” A position is not classified by its title, but by the .duties incident to it. Nomenclature cannot alter the facts that here was a subordinate engaged in daily manual labor, who superintended nothing more than to see that his own work was properly done and that the orders of his superiors were obeyed by himself. The- plaintiff had no concern with the corporation or its financial business, its policy or its management; even the farmers who supplied the pickles under the contracts with the corporation were paid at the office of that corporation in the city of New York.
The relation of the plaintiff to the defendant’s assignor brings him within the preferred class of employees, as. that term is interpreted in Palmer v. Van Santvoord, and the other authorities, supra. There was no feature of the services that placed the plaintiff in the plane of the attorney in Bristor v. Smith (supra), or of the superintendent in People v. Remington (45 Hun, 329), or of the occasional drawman in Matter of Kimberly (37 App. Div. 106). ,
While such services should not be classified with those of subordinates considered in Matter of Stryker (158 N. Y. 526)' it is to be noted that the Stryker case (like Several others somewhat contra) construes an act of more restricted, phrase, in that the apt words there are “wages” and not “wages or salaries,” while the subjects of the statute are designated as “operatives and laborers” and not “ employees.”
The compensation of the plaintiff was twenty cents for every hundred pounds of pickles purchased from the farmers, when delivered on the cars, which was to become due when the pickles were so delivered; that is, after the plaintiff had expended his labor as indicated above upon them, and when they were shipped to his principal.
In Commonwealth ex rel. Wolfe v. Butler (99 Penn. St. 542) Sharswood, Ch. J., says: “According to the most approved lexicographers, the words ‘wages’ and ‘ salary ’ are synonymous. They both mean one and the same thing:- ‘ a sum of money periodically paid for services rendered.’ * * * The truth is, and this the lexicographers seem to hold, that if there is any difference in the popular sense between ‘ salary ’ and ‘ wages ’ it is only in the application of them to more or less honorable services. * * * A merchant pays wages to his servant who sweeps the floor, makes the fire, and runs his errands, but he compensates his salesman or clerk by a salary. How can it make any. difference in what way the compensation is ascertained?”
In South & Worth Alabama Railroad Company v. Falkner (49 Ala. 115) B. F. Saffold, J., says: “The term ‘wages’ indicates inconsiderable pay without excluding ‘ salary,' — which is suggestive of larger compensation for personal services. But its application to laborers and employees certainly conveys- the idea of a subordinate occupation which is not very remunerative.”
I think the Legislature employed the words “ wages or salaries ” while practically equipollent, for the purpose of fully describing the compensation which is to be paid to employees, inasmuch as that term, while embracing operative or laborer, means something more. The final question in every case is whether the subordinate, tested by the character of his services, and the nature of his relation, is an employee within the protection of the statute, whose compensation may be fairly said to be wages or salary, within the accepted scope of these, terms; and the fact that the compensation in this case was practically paid for piece work, that is, for pickles after they were sorted, properly treated and forwarded for the principal as the result of plaintiff’s manual labor, should not exclude the plaintiff from the benefits of this statute. (Matter of Luxton & Black Co., 35 App. Div. 243.)
Judgment for plaintiff, with costs.
See Laws of 1877, chap. 466, § 29, as amd. by Laws of 1897, chap. 624.—[Rép.