79 S.E. 521 | S.C. | 1913
October 6, 1913. The opinion of the Court was delivered by Plaintiff recovered judgment against defendant in the court of the magistrate for $1.93, wages due him by defendant, at the time he was discharged from the service of defendant, and $95, the accumulated daily penalty of $5 per day for every day's delay in payment of his said wages, after demand therefor, as allowed by section 3812 of the Civil Code of 1912, which reads as follows: "When any corporation carrying on any business in this State in which laborers are employed, whose wages, under the business rule or custom of such corporation, are paid monthly or weekly on a fixed day beyond the end of the month or week in which the labor is performed, shall discharge any such laborer, the wages which have been earned by such discharged laborer shall become immediately due and payable. And if not so paid, then such laborer shall recover in addition thereto, a penalty of five dollars per day for every day after twenty-four hours until such *3 wages are paid, to be recovered in any Court of competent jurisdiction, in the same action with the wages, or in a separate action: Provided, Such demand has been made upon the paymaster or other paying officer."
From the judgment of the Circuit Court, affirming the magistrate's judgment, the defendant appealed to this Court, on the ground that the statute above quoted is unconstitutional and void, because it deprives defendant of its property without due process of law, and denies to it the equal protection of the laws and the liberty of contract.
These constitutional guarantees have been so frequently and so fully considered and discussed in this Court and in the Supreme Court of the United States that we shall content ourselves in the present case with the citation of only a few of the cases upon the authority of which the validity of the statute must be affirmed.
In the case of St. Louis etc. Ry. Co. v. Paul,
There can be no doubt that such legislation may, also, be sustained under the power of the State to legislate *4
for the common good — commonly called the police power.Chicago etc. R. Co. v. McGuire,
We determine the validity of the statute as applied to the facts of the case presented by the record, which is that of a corporation having discharged one of its laborers to whom it was indebted in the sum of $1.93 for wages which he had earned, and having refused, after demand, to pay his wages, without any reason or excuse, except that which appears only in the argument of its counsel, to wit, that, by custom or contract, express or implied, his wages were not due, until defendant's next regular pay day.
Therefore, we are not concerned in this case with possible combinations of circumstances in which the statute might work inconvenience, or even hardship. We say, however, that, giving the statute a reasonable construction, the intention is not to be gathered from it that the corporation employer shall be penalized for the failure to pay what is not a just debt; not for the failure to pay, when the discharged laborer, after demanding payment, prevents compliance with the demand by his own conduct; nor to deny or preclude the right of the corporation to interpose any valid counterclaim or defense to the claim of such laborer, under coercion of the penalty thereby imposed.
The purpose of the statute is to prevent the postponement, until the corporation's next regular pay day, of payment of the wages which a discharged laborer has earned at the time of his discharge, and which he would be entitled to sue for and collect immediately, but for the rule or custom of the corporation not to pay except on its regular pay days, and the express or implied agreement of the laborer to abide that rule or custom. The legislature probably considered that the hardship which befalls the needy laborer by withholding, for a week, or two weeks, or a month, the wages which he has earned, is far greater than the inconvenience to the corporation which is caused by *5 requiring a reasonably prompt settlement with him, so that he can use the money which he has earned in an effort to get other employment, or to live upon until he can get other employment, and thereby possibly prevent him and his family from becoming a burden upon the State. Besides this, the statute tends to prevent dissatisfaction among laborers, and, hence, also, it tends to prevent agitation and strikes among them, which is a matter of grave public interest.
Affirmed.