The principal issue in this appeal is whether the trial court correctly classified the outside tailors as defendant’s employees within the meaning of the Act which contains the following definitions:
“(d) ‘Employer’ includes any person acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee * * *
“(e) ‘Employee’ includes any individual employed by an employer * * *
“(g) ‘Employ’ includes to suffer or permit to work.”
Homeworkers have been held to be employees within these definitions. Guiseppi v. Walling,
We find no difficulty in classifying as employees those of the outside tailors who employ others to do various incidental jobs, such as sweeping and pressing. As the tailors themselves perform the task for which they are paid, it cannot reasonably be argued that, because they delegate some of the minor chores, they are transformed into independent contractors. Nor do we find any merit in defendant’s contention that we must exclude from the classification of “employee” those tailors who share their shops with other tailors — partners or business associates, as they have been variously called. As New York State law* 3 prohibits homework in the clothing industry, these tailors must maintain shops outside their homes. Their status as employees is not altered merely because they find it more desirable or convenient to share the use of a shop and the cost of its maintenance with another tailor similarly situated.
With respect to the tailor, Stigliani, who employs an apprentice to help him with the actual tailoring, defendant poses a problem which may be stated thus: Does a tailor, who would otherwise clearly be classified as an employee, lose his employee status because he himself employs a single helper? To state the problem is, in effect, to dispose of it. We are here dealing with a remedial statute whose declared purpose is to eradicate the evils attendant upon low wages, long hours, and sub-standard labor conditions. United States v. Darby,
We do not think that Goldberg, who employs some 14 other tailors in his shop, does come within the scope of the injunction, which relates only to “employees,” Whether or not he personally performs any of the actual tailoring work is not decisive, for it seems to us that a man who employs 14 men to do the work that he has contracted to do cannot reasonably be classified as anything but an independent contractor. Appellant claims that there are others in the same position as Goldberg. However, there is no finding to that effect, and the record is extremely fragmentary on this point. If there actually are others, then they too are independent contractors, and of course the injunction does not apply to them.
Defendant contends that the injunction order errs because it includes within its scope the defendant’s obligations to the employees of those tailors who themselves come within it. But that issue is not before us, since the order does not mention those sub-employees, and since plaintiff advises us that he has no intention of ever asserting that it relates to them.
Defendant, relying on United States v. Andolschek, 2 Cir.,
The exclusion of the statement concerning Twyeffort’s previous record was not error. While the question of general good faith in compliance with the Act is relevant where the violations have ceased before the Administrator begins an action, it has no bearing on the issuance of an injunction where the violations have continued up to the commencement of the suit, and where the employer still asserts that the Act does not apply. See Walling v. Youngerman-Reynolds Hardwood Co., Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
See Walling v. American Needlecrafts, 6 Cir.,
By order of the Industrial Commissioner, pursuant to New York Labor, Law, Consol.Laws, e. 31, Art. 13, §§ 350, 351.
Lavery v. Pursell, 1888, 39 Ch.D. 508, 514.
N. L. R. B. v. Hearst Publications,
