175 P. 859 | Or. | 1918
The only question for decision is whether Chapter 163, Laws of 1907, authorized the trial court to allow an attorney’s fee in the instant action. The complaint alleges that the plaintiff performed work and labor for the defendant and that the
“An Act to prohibit the issuance of non-negotiable acknowledgments of indebtedness in payment for wages due employees, providing how acknowledgments of such indebtedness shall be paid, fixing the time when certain wages shall become due, and providing for the collection of reasonable attorney’s fees in actions to recover wages.”
Section 1, in substance, prohibits an employer from issuing any order, check or other acknowledgment of indebtedness on account of wages, unless the paper is made negotiable. Section 2 provides that whenever an employer discharges an employee, all wages earned and unpaid at the time of such discharge, shall become due and payable immediately; and also whenever an employee, not having a contract for a definite period, sees fit to quit his employment, all wages earned and unpaid become due and payable at the time of such quitting if the employee has given three days’ notice of his intention to quit.
Section 3 reads as follows:
“In any action for the collection of any such order, check, memorandum, or other acknowledgment of in*178 debtedness, or in any action by an employee against an employer for the collection of wages, if it is shown that such order, check, memorandum, or other acknowledgment of indebtedness, or said wages were not paid for a period of forty-eight hours after proper demand for the payment thereof, the court may, in its discretion, upon entering judgment for the plaintiff, include in such judgment, in addition to the costs and disbursements otherwise prescribed by statute, a reasonable sum for attorney’s fees for prosecuting said action; provided, such employee shall have given not less than three days’ notice of his intention to quit his employment.”
“a clause engrafted on a preceding enactment for the purpose of restraining or modifying the enacting clause, or of excepting something from its operation which otherwise would have been within it, or of excluding some possible ground of misinterpretation of it, as by extending it to cases not intended by the legislature to be brought within its purview.”
The purview states that an attorney’s fee shall be allowed “in any action for the collection” of any check, order or acknowledgment of indebtedness on account of wages earned, and that an attorney’s fee shall also be allowed “in any action by an employee”; but the proviso, referring among other words, to the words “an employee” in the purview, declares that “such employee” shall not be entitled to an attorney’s fee unless he “shall have given not less than three days’ notice of his intention to quit his employment.” There are no words in the proviso confining its operation to employees who voluntarily quit their employment; but the words “such employee” are as comprehensive as the antecedent words “an employee.” In the instant case the plaintiff was discharged and therefore in the very nature of things he could not give notice of an intention voluntarily to