42 Cal. App. 2d 827 | Cal. App. Dep’t Super. Ct. | 1941
Lead Opinion
Defendant was charged in three counts with paying to women employees a wage less than the minimum wage fixed by an order of the Industrial Welfare Commission, was found guilty on all three counts, sentenced and appeals from the judgments. The complaint in each case alleged that he was " an employer of women in an unclassified occupation in the food packing industry”. In support of the charges the People introduced in evidence order No. 10A, made by the Industrial Welfare Commission on the 8th day of June, 1923, relating to “unclassified occupations”. We hold this order void because it shows on its face that the commission, in making it, disregarded the directions of the legislature by lumping together for consideration and decision a miscellany of unspecified, unsegregated industries whereas its statutory authority required it to hear and determine matters relating to each separate industry separately.
The order just referred to was made under the provisions of an act authorizing the fixing of minimum wages for women and minors employed in industry. (Stats. 1913, p. 632, as amended.) No question is raised as to the validity of this act, and as it is substantially like that involved in West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish, (1936) 300 U. S. 379 [57 Sup. Ct. 578, 81 L. Ed. 703, 108 A. L. R. 1330], it is undoubtedly valid. It has now been substantially embodied in sections 70-73 and 1171-1203 of the Labor Code enacted in 1937 (Stats. 1937, pp. 185-329).
From all these provisions we conclude that by the statute the commission was required to consider and deal with each separate industry separately, and that a- blanket order applicable to unspecified, unsegregated industries, linked to
We do not intend by what we have just said to draw any hard and fast line setting limits on what might be regarded as a single industry or occupation and dealt with as such by the Industrial Welfare Commission. Undoubtedly that commission had a considerable discretion in that respect, and its acts in treating somewhat differing forms of business activity as in reality allied and constituting a single industry or occupation, or in segregating a general industry into smaller parts for separate consideration, must be upheld so long as a substantial and reasonable basis therefor appears; but it could not, under the law as written, yoke together for consideration industries belonging to entirely different genera. To illustrate by cases mentioned in argument, it would not be necessary for the commission, in dealing with the canning of fruit, to hold separate hearings for each kind of fruit that may be canned; but bootblacking and taxi dancing are obviously unrelated occupations, not to be considered conjointly in one hearing by the commission. Yet the two last mentioned are undoubtedly, as the argument suggests, embraced within the terms of the order here in question.
We see nothing in our interpretation of the statute which would render it invalid, and hence there is no occasion to
Order No. 10A, on which this prosecution is based, manifestly is not such an order as is authorized by the statute. By its terms it purports to fix the minimum wage for women and minors “in any unclassified occupation” and defines the term “unclassified occupations” to mean “all employment not classified under the mercantile, manufacturing, millinery, hotel and restaurant, laundry and dry cleaning, fruit and vegetable canning, fruit and vegetable packing, fish canning, and telephone and telegraph industries, office or professional occupations, domestic labor, or the harvesting, curing or drying of any variety of fruit or vegetables, and the cracking and sorting of nuts”. No particular industry is here “in question”, or is affected by this order. It is plainly intended to be a
In addition to the defects in Order No. 10A itself, it appears that the notice given of the hearing required before the order could be made was insufficient. Besides a certified copy of the order, the people introduced in evidence certified copies of the affidavits of publication of a notice of hearing. Section 6 of the statute, as amended in 1921, required that notice of such a hearing be given “by advertisement in at least one newspaper published in each of the cities of” (enumerating 12 cities in the state). While the statute did not expressly require this notice to state the purpose of the hearing, it must be construed to have that effect by implication. Section 6 required the commission to mail “a copy of said notice” to any employer filing “a written request for such notice of such hearing and the purpose thereof”. This mailing would not satisfy the request unless the purpose were stated in the notice, and such statement would also be necessary to satisfy constitutional requirements discussed in a later part of this opinion. The affidavits mentioned show publication of a notice in newspapers corresponding in number and location to this requirement, but its contents were insufficient. It stated the purpose of the hearing thus: “for the purpose of rescinding, amending or altering Orders [here follows a list of several orders by number, year and industry covered, including] . . . Number 10, amended 1920, Unclassified Occupations”. Other parts of the notice indicated that as to each industry listed “minimum wages to be paid to women and minors ’ ’ would be considered. No further description of “Unclassified Occupations” appeared, but the list of other occupations set forth included many—not all—of those excluded from that category by the definition contained in Order No. 10A and above quoted. This notice, in so far as it related to “unclassified occupations” was too vague and uncertain to support any hearing or order. No attempt was made in the notice, as there was
Without an opportunity for the interested parties to be heard, in a matter of this kind, where the legislature has committed to a special tribunal the fixing of wages, the resulting order would be invalid for want of due process of law. (Western Union Tel. Co. v. Industrial Com. (1938), 24 Fed. Supp. 370 and cases there cited; McGrew v. Industrial Com. (1938), 96 Utah, 203 [85 Pac. (2d) 608, 617].) The provision for the hearing and for notice thereof, being a part of the statutory embodiment of due process, must be regarded as mandatory, for, even though some other form of bearing or some different notice might have been regarded as sufficient, the statute has not so declared, and compliance must be had with what has been, not merely what might have been, provided. (See O. T. Johnson Corp. v. City of Los Angeles (1926), 198 Cal. 308, 316, 317 [245 Pac. 164] ; Beck v. Ransome-Crummey Co. (1919), 42 Cal. App. 674, 679, 681 [184 Pac. 431]; Overell v. Overell (1937), 18 Cal. App. (2d) 499, 502 [64 Pac. (2d) 483] ; Bandini Estate Co. v. County of Los Angeles (1938), 28 Cal. App. (2d) 224, 229, 230 [82 Pac. (2d) 185].)
The judgments are reversed and the cause is remanded to the municipal court for a new trial.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur. Order numbered 1OA is the only one claimed by the People to govern this ease.
Schauer, J., dissented.