100 N.Y.S. 337 | New York Court of Special Session | 1906
At twenty minutes after ten o’clock on the night of January 31, 1906, a deputy factory inspector visited the bookbinding establishment of the defendant, Ho. 437 Eleventh avenue, in the county of Hew York, and there found one Katie Mead, a female more than twenty-one years of age, and a citizen, employed in “ gathering,” to wit, assembling printed papers in the form of a book or pamphlet for binding purposes. The defendant, one of the proprietors of the establishment, was present and in charge of the work and the employees, and among them were several other women. There is no pretext that the building was insecure, the light bad, ventilation defective, or the general sanitary condition deficient. In these respects the deputy testified, “ It is1 the best factory of the kind in Hew York City.”
The information .upon which the defendant was tried and convicted, charges a misdemeanor under section 77, article 6, entitled “ Factories ” of the General Laws Relating to Labor (Laws 1897, chap. 415), in that he employed, permitted and suffered the said Katie Mead to work in that factory after nine o’clock at night on the date specified.
So much of the section as is pertinent to the present inquiry is as follows: “ Ho minor under the age of eighteen
years, "and no female shall be employed at labor in any factory in this state before six o’clock in the morning or after nine o’clock in the evening of any day, or for more than "ten hours in any one day, * * * except to make a shorter work day of the last day of the week; or more hours in any one week than will make an average of ten hours per day for the whole number of days so worked.”
Section 384-1 of the Penal Code provides that: “Any person who violates or does not comply with (1) The provisions of article 6 of the labor law relating to factories * * * is guilty of a misdemeanor.”
The establishment of the defendant, where Katie Head was working, was a factory within the statutory definition, viz: “ The term ‘ factory,’ when used in this chapter, shall be construed do include also any mill, workshop or other manufacturing or business establishment where one or more persons are employed at labor.” Art. 1, § 2.
Ko issue of fact was raised on the trial. The People called the deputy inspector to prove the bare facts of employment after prohibited hours in a factory and defendant’s connection therewith and rested. The defendant offered no evidence and was thereupon found guilty. Upon a motion in arrest of judgment defendant’s counsel contends, first, that section 11 of the Labor Law, under which the conviction was had, is in contravention to the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States, in that it is an infringement of the privileges and immunities of the citizen of the United States and denies to women the equal protection of the laws; second, that it contravenes article 1, section 6, of the State Constitution, in that it deprives a citizen of her liberty and property without due process of law.
The question of the constitutionality of the statute having arisen in a way permitting an appeal by either side, it is as much a duty of this court to pass thereon as it is, upon evidence, to pronounce judgment of acquittal or conviction.
To labor and employ labor are inherent and inalienable • rights of our citizens, and cannot be taken away in whole or' in part unless upon the broad ground of public good, which must be apparent and cannot be predicated on legislative . dictum.
In the case under consideration the right of the employed and the right of the employer are equally involved. Nothing to the contrary appearing, it must be assumed that the woman was a willing worker for a willing employer, and that the result was mutually satisfactory and profitable. No argument is needed to show that both the employer and the employed have been restricted in their rights by the law in question. Was this restriction within the constitutional power of the Legislature? The provision of the State Constitution invoked by the defendant is: “ No person shall * * * be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” Art. 1, § 6.
A correlated section is section 1 of the same article: “ No member of this State shall be disfranchised, or deprived of any of the rights or privileges secured to any citizen thereof, unless by the law of the land, or the judgment of his peers.”
The Supreme Court of Illinois in Eitchie v. People, etc., 155 111. 98, held a law of that State which provided that “No female shall be'employed in a factory or workshop more than eight hours in any one day or forty-eight hours in any one week,” to be unconstitutional, because it violated the provisions of a section of the Illinois Constitution almost identical in language with that of article 1, section 6, of the New York State Constitution.
No case exactly in point with that at bar has been cited by counsel. The attention of the court has been called to cases
The first legislative enactment in this State looking to the protection of women employed in factories was chapter 409, Laws of 1886. This statute formed the basis of what is now the Factory Law of the State. Prior thereto the law-making body had passed acts (Laws of 1867, chap. 856, and Laws of 1870, chap. 385) in which women were not referred to as a class, but might be included in the general designation of “ mechanics, workingmen and laborers.” It will be noted that the provisions of chapter 409, Laws of 1886, only relate to the employment of women under the age-of twenty-one years (minors, and as such, wards of the State). It did not prevent their employment at night. Not until 1889 (Laws of 1889, chap. 580) was any inhibition against nightwork injected into the statute. It was continued in chapter 398, Laws of 1890, and chapter 673, Laws of 1892, and in the act of 1897, when the several acts relating to labor were codified and became chapter 32 of the General Laws. No attempt was made to restrict the rights of women other than those of
• The general regulation of the hours of labor of the working classes in this State is to be found in section 3 of this same chapter, which reads in part as follows :
“ Eight hours shall constitute a legal day’s work for all classes of employees in this State, except those engaged in farm and domestic services, unless otherwise provided by law. This section does not prevent an agreement for overwork at an increased compensation, except upon work by or for the State or a municipal corporation or by contractors or subcontractors therewith.”
The other provisions of law modifying the provisions of this section are to be found in the same chapter. Section 5 permits employees of certain street surface and elevated railroads to Work ten hours a day, and in certain emergencies to perform extra labor for an added compensation. Section 6 permits employees in brickyards to work ten hours a day after seven o’clock in the morning or for a longer period and before seven o’clock in the morning, if the employer is willing to pay extra compensation. Section 7 provides for a ten-hour day for the employees of steam surface and elevated railroads and for extra work and additional compensation in emergencies. Then come the exceptions, relating to the . employment of minors and adult females in factories and minors of both sexes in mercantile establishments. Another exception was that -providing for a ten-hour day for employees of bakeries and confectionery establishments, a restriction which the Supreme Court of the United States has declared to be unconstitutional. Lochner v. New York, 198 U. S. 45.
The present Constitution of the State of ISTew York was adopted in 1894, and became effective January 1, 1895. All of the rights which adult women citizens possessed at that time were confirmed-by that document.. One of those rights
Upon this question of the right of the State to exercise its police power for the promotion of a strong and robust future citizenship, the Supreme Court of the United States had the following to say in the case of Lochner v. New York, supra: “ It is also urged, pursuing the same line of argument, that it is to the interest of the State that its population should be strong and robust, and therefore any
Women are here classed with minors under the age of sixteen years. All minors are wards of the State, and this classification of women with children seems to be an attempt to relegate women to their old position as dependent State wards. That women have not yet been accorded equal liberty under the laws with men must be admitted. They never were, however, in the same class as to wardship with children, and the whole trend, of modern legislation has been toward their emancipation from legal disabilities and a con-
It must be apparent that women, considered in the matter of their employment, should not need the same paternal protection that is accorded by the State to its minor wards. The reason for the prohibition under consideration, therefore, is not to be found in the right of the State to control the action of its wards, although the classification of women with children in the statute suggests it.
The People contend that the law is a health regulation, and that its purpose is to protect the health of a large class of the community, i. e., women employed in factories, and being an enactment of that character, in the interest of health and the public welfare, it is wholly within the police power of the State, and in no sense derogatory of the constitutional rights of the citizen. Is it such a health regulation ?
There are fifteen sections of article 6 of the Labor Law which follow the section 11. Fourteen of them are devoted to provisions for the health, safety and welfare of persons employed in factories. They relate to the operation and protection of elevators and hoisting shafts, provisions for proper stairs and doors, special protection of employees operating machinery, provision of ample fire escapes, wash rooms and water closets, the size and cleanliness and ventilation of rooms, the reporting of accidents, inspection of boilers, employment of persons at polishing and buffing and the requirement that sufficient time shall be accorded employees to secure their meals, together with a general power of inspection and regulation in the factory inspector. It is apparent on the face of these statutes that their purpose is to protect the health and safety of persons employed in factories and so to promote the public welfare. This purpose is not apparent on the face of the section under consideration.
The provision of the statute against the employment of
Eeference only needs to be made to another article of the Labor Law relative to the employment of women. (Art. 11, § 161) to show the special and class character of this enactment, and to demonstrate that it was not enacted as a health regulation. By the section cited, “ no female employe, under twenty-one years of age, shall be required to work in -any mercantile establishment more than sixty hours in any one week, nor more than ten hours in any one day. * * * nor shall any such employe be required or permitted to work before seven o’clock in the morning or after ten o’clock in the evening of any day. This section does not apply to the employment of such persons on Saturday, provided the total number of hours of labor in a week of any such person does not exceed sixty hours, nor to the employment of such persons between the fifteenth of December and the following first day of January.” This means nothing if it does not permit the employment in mercantile establishments of minor females
Is this plainly and palpably a health regulation in the interest of the common good % Is it not plainly and palpably an unauthorized and unwarrantable interference with the constitutional right of the citizen %
In its further discussion of the right of the Legislature of this State to limit the hours of labor of bakers (and bakers may be men or women) the United States Supreme Court says:
They are in no sense wards of the State. Viewed in the light of a purely labor law, with no reference whatever to the question of health, we think that a law like the one before us involves neither the safety, the morals nor the welfare of the public, and that the interest of the public is not in the slightest degree affected by such an act. * * *
“ It is a question of which two powers- or rights shall prevail — the power of the State to legislate or the right of the individual to liberty of person and freedom of contract. The
The statute which would prevent Katie Mead from working in a factory after nine o’clock at night, under the best sanitary conditions, offers no prohibition against her doing the same work in a hall bedroom in a tenement house, under conditions more detrimental to her health. She may work at her usual employment all night if she so pleases and the State does not interfere to prevent possible injury to her possible children who may be its future citizens.
A dressmaker or milliner has a factory within the meaning of the law if he or she have but one employee. The employer, even though she be a woman, may work when and so long as it pleases her. The single employee, on the contrary, if she be a woman, may not work after nine o’clock at night nor before six o’clock in the morning. Why this distinction between two possible mothers of future citizens if this be simply a health regulation? The relation of the subject of this statute to the public health and common welfare seems altogether too remote to sustain it as a proper exercise by the State of its police power.
We can arrive at no other conclusion than that there has been in this enactment an unwarranted invasion of the constitutional rights of individual liberty and property; that for this reason the information of the district attorney herein does not state facts constituting a crime. The motion in arrest of judgment is granted and the defendant discharged.
Deuel and McKean, JJ., concur.
Motion granted and defendant discharged.