14 N.Y.2d 326 | NY | 1964
Section 343-9.0 (subd. a) of the Administrative Code of the City of New York, enacted in 1961, requires the insertion in city contracts and subcontracts of certain stipulations pertaining to the wages and working conditions of employees of such contractors and subcontractors. Insofar as relevant, this local law recites that
‘ ‘ Every contract for or on behalf of the city for the manufacture, furnishing or purchase of supplies, material or equipment, or for the furnishing of work, labor or services ”,
entered into by public letting, pursuant to section 343 of the City Charter,
‘ ‘ shall contain stipulations by which the contractor agrees * * * [t]hat all persons employed by the contractor and any subcontractor in the manufacture or furnishing of the supplies, materials or equipment, or the furnishing of work, labor or services, used in the performance of the contract will be paid * * * not less than the sum of one dollar and fifty cents an hour. ”
Another provision of section 343-9.0 empowers the city’s Board of Estimate ‘ ‘ to adopt such rules and regulations as may be necessary to carry out the purposes of this section (§ 343-9.0, subd. e). Under an administrative regulation duly promulgated soon after the enactment of the section, the board directed — and there has been compliance with its direction—that the minimum wage stipulations were not to be inserted in city contracts or subcontracts ‘ ‘ for those employees whose minimum wage is required to be fixed by Section 220 of the Labor Law
The Administrative Code provision is challenged in this taxpayer’s action (General Municipal Law, § 51) as illegal and void on the grounds that it is in conflict with existing State legislation and that, in any event, it deals with a subject completely pre-empted by the State.
Before treating these specific arguments, we would but say— what seems quite plain—that the challenged local law is within the scope of the powers granted the city by both Constitution and statute. Thus, the.State Constitution (art. IX, § 12) and the City Home Rule Law (§ 11, subds. 1, 2) expressly confer upon every city the authority to adopt local laws, not inconsistent with State Constitution or statute, “ relating to its property, affairs or government ” and, whether or not such local laws relate to such subjects, to legislate with respect to “ the transaction of its business ” and “ the wages or salaries, the hours of work or labor, and the protection, welfare and safety of persons employed by any contractor or subcontractor performing work, labor or services for it ”. (Emphasis supplied.)
Although the powers delegated to a city by the provisions of the Constitution and the City Home Rule Law, to which we have referred, are exceedingly broad, they are, of course, conditioned on their exercise not being “ inconsistent ” with any State enactment. And it is the plaintiff’s principal contention that such an inconsistency exists between the challenged provision and section 220 of the Labor Law which declares that persons employed on “ public works ” either directly by a city or by its contractors and subcontractors must be paid a minimum wage equal to “ the "prevailing rate of wages ” (supra, p. 330). By establishing a rigid minimum wage of $1.50 an hour for “ all persons employed ” by city contractors or subcontractors, including those employed on “ public works ”, the plaintiff argues, subdivision a of section 343-9.0 of the Administrative Code comes in conflict with the State’s more flexible “ prevailing rate ” standard and must fall as inconsistent therewith under the principles laid down by this court in Wholesale Laundry Bd. of Trade v. City of New York (12 N Y 2d 998, affg. the reasoning in 17 A D
Whether the minimum wage provisions of section 343-9.0, if applied to employees working under contract or subcontract with the city on “ public works ”, would be inconsistent with the standard prescribed in section 220 of the Labor Law which, as we have observed, provides for the payment of prevailing rates, is a question with which we need not now concern ourselves, for it is quite clear that the Administrative Code provision has no such application. As previously remarked, the Rules and Regulations of the Board of Estimate, promulgated soon after enactment of the local law, expressly exclude from its scope any and all employees covered by the provisions of the State Labor Law and, in addition, the “ Standard Form of Contract ” used by the city explicitly recites that, “ Except for those employees whose minimum wage is required to be fixed pursuant to Section 220 of the Labor Law ’ ’, all persons employed by the contractor or subcontractor will be paid not less than the specified minimum wage of $1.50 an hour. (Emphasis supplied.) The fact that section 343-9.0 refers, in terms, to “ [e]very contract ” by the city and “ all persons ” employed thereunder is not decisive where it is clear, as it is here, that the city did not intend the section’s provisions to apply to employees covered by existing State law. (See, e.g., Matter of Tuschinsky v. City of New York, 261 App. Div. 802, mot. for Iv. to opp. den. 285 N. Y. 861.) To impute to the city a contrary design — that is, an intention to apply its enactment even to employees on “ public works ”—would not only require us to assume that the city’s legislative officials were unaware of, or chose to ignore, the terms of section 220 but would fly in the face of the clear administrative interpretation given the section by the Board of Estimate, one of the very bodies which participated in its adoption.
In light of considerations such as these, it is not unreasonable to read the words “ [e]very contract” in the Administrative Code section to mean “ every contract not subject to section 220 of the Labor Law”, especially as such a construction not
Equally lacking in merit is the plaintiff’s alternative argument that, even if there is no inconsistency between the Administrative Code provision and State legislation, the State’s prevailing wage law (Labor Law, § 220) and its minimum wage act (Labor Law, § 650 et seq.) indicate a purpose on the part of the State to occupy or pre-empt “ the entire field ” in which the Administrative Code provision was designed to operate and thereby preclude the city from enacting a minimum wage provision of any kind.
It cannot be seriously contended that section 652, which neither deals with the rates of pay of employees of city contractors nor in any way curtails a city’s right to set its own contractual wage standards, evidences any intent on the part of the State to prohibit a city from passing legislation such as that before us. Nor can such a design be inferred from the enactment of section 220. In the first place, that provision merely deals with one type of city contract and undertakes to set a minimum wage for but a single category of employees, namely, those working on State or city public works projects. In the second place, and of prime significance, the constitutional provision (art. IX, § 12) granting every city the power to fix “ the wages or salaries ” of persons employed by those with whom it contracts was added to the Constitution in 1923 (then art. XII, § 3) at Avhich time section 220 and the constitutional grant of wage-fixing power to the State Legislature (art. IX, § 9) had been in effect for some 18 years. Surely, both the successive State Legislatures and the People, who subsequently adopted the municipal wage-fixing constitutional amendment, must be presumed to have been aware of the existence of section 220 and of the power previously granted to the State Legislature to fix the wages of employees of city contractors and subcontractors. If section 220 had indeed pre-empted the entire area of wages payable under city contracts and had, by that token, rendered a city powerless to establish what it considers decent wage minima for employees
We have considered the other arguments advanced by the plaintiff and find them without substance..
The order appealed from should he affirmed, with costs.
Chief Judge Desmond and Judges Dye, Burke, Scileppi and Bergan concur with Judge Fuld ; Judge Van Voorhis dissents and votes to reverse upon the dissenting opinion at the Appellate Division.
Order affirmed.
. Article IX of the Constitution was revised, effective January 1, 1964, and the City Home Rule Law was repealed and its provisions re-enacted as part of the Municipal Home Rule Law, effective January 1, 1964. Since the local la-w under consideration was enacted prior to that date, references herein are to the Constitution and City Home Rule Law provisions in effect at that time. (See N. Y. Const,, art. IX, § 2; Municipal Home Rule Law, § 10.)