168 S.E. 798 | W. Va. | 1933
This action was brought by the assignee of scrip stamped "Not transferable", to recover of the obligor in money. The *523
scrip was issued in 1930 under Acts 1927, chapter
The Act of 1927 provided that non-transferable scrip should be issued "upon request of any employee"; that it should be "redeemable in merchandise only by the employee to whom issued"; and should be taken as a promise by the obligor to pay "to the employee to whom issued, in lawful money * * * upon demand and surrender by said employee of such scrip or unused portion thereof" at the regular pay day, etc.
The plaintiff contends that the statute is unconstitutional because (1) it coerces employees to purchase merchandise from their employer, and (2) it, is a limitation on the use of property.
(1) Since the scrip is issued only upon the request of the employee and the statute requires the employer to take up the scrip in cash at the regular pay day, we do not observe any coercion.
(2) In support of plaintiff's second proposition, he submitted the following cases which held against limitation on the right to assign: Bewick Co. v. Hall,
In State v. Goodwill, this Court did stress "the most sacred and inviolable" right of an individual to do as he pleased with his property (labor). That case was decided in 1889, and since then the growing complexity of our civilization has caused the courts generally to moderate their views on the detachment of the individual. In 1910, the Supreme Court of the United States said in Chicago etc. Rr. Co. v. McGuire, supra: "There is no absolute freedom to do as one wills or to contract as one chooses. The guarantee of liberty does not withdraw from legislative supervision that wide department of activity which consists of the making of contracts, or deny to government the power to provide restrictive safeguards. Liberty implies the absence of arbitrary restraint, not immunity from reasonable regulations and prohibitions imposed in the interests of the community." In Atkins v. Coal Co.,
The Am. Eng. Ency. of Law is one of our most reliable reference books though published nearly forty years ago. It states unequivocally, Vol. 2, p. 1035, "The parties to a contract may in terms prohibit its assignment, so that neither their personal representatives nor assignees can succeed to any rights in virtue of it." The same rule is recognized in such later authorities as Annotation (1903), 88 Am. St. Rep. 201; Annotation (1912) Am. Eng. Ann. Cases, 1912A, p. 363; 2 Rawle C. L. (1914) subject Assignments, sec. 6; Williston on Contracts (1920), sec. 422; The A. L. I. Restatement of *525 the Law of Contracts (1928), Draft No. 1, sec. 151; and MacMillan's Selected Readings on the Law of Contracts (1931), pp. 731-2. If assignment of a contract may be prohibited lawfully by the contracting parties themselves, we see no invasion of personal rights by a legislative scheme sanctioning such prohibition when the scheme is entirely optional, as in this case.
Statutes prohibiting the assignment of wages to be earned or to become due have been held not to violate the organic law.International Co. v. Weissinger,
With the principle so thoroughly established that assignments may be lawfully prohibited by agreement of the contracting parties and with that principle so uniformily applied by the courts, we have no hesitancy in holding that the scrip statute as amended in 1927, does not unduly curtail the right of contract.
Plaintiff's brief refers to Code 1923, chapter 99, section 14, which provides that an assignee of non-negotiable paper may sue in his own name, etc. That section, of course, refers only to a valid assignment, not to one like this which is invalid.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.