5 How. Pr. 454 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1851
I regard the statute under whicn this action is brought, as highly remedial in its character. The legislature, aware of the condition and habits of that class of persons usually engaged in the construction of public works, have sought to protect them against the fraud or insolvency of their immediate employers. The purpose was benign, and the act should be liberally construed.
The important terms used in the act are, “contractors” and “laborers.” By the first, I think, we are to understand all such persons as assume to perform a specified portion of the work; and that, too, whether such persons have contracted with the defendants; or with other persons who have contracted with the
The application of the statute, thus construed, to the case in hand, would sustain the plaintiff’s right to recover upon all the claims stated in the complaint. Whether the laborer (by which term, as we have seen, is to be understood the man who performs the work upon the employment of another who has engaged that it should be performed), whether he performs the work with his own hands, or with the hands of another man; whether he uses his spade and wheelbarrow, or his horses and wagon; whether he perform-the work in person, or by his servant, he is equally a laborer within the intent and spirit of the statute, and entitled to its benefit. And so too, in whatever capacity he is employed. He who is employed to superintend others who are engaged in the actual labor of constructing the road, is as much a laborer, within the meaning of the statute, as those whom he superintends.
The counsel for the defendants relies upon the case of Wood vs. Donaldson (17 Wend. 550), and the same case in error (22 Wend. 395), to sustain the position that the defendants are not