Anderson v. Salant

96 A. 425, 38 R.I. 463, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 25, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 96 A. 425 (Anderson v. Salant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Salant, 96 A. 425, 38 R.I. 463, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 8 (R.I. 1916).

Opinion

Johnson, C. J.

This case is before this court on a constitutional question certified by the Superior Court under Gen. Laws, 1909, Chap. 298, § 1.

*464 The action is in assumpsit on quantum, meruit. •

The question certified is raised by the third count of the declaration which alleges-in substance: That the plaintiff on October 10, 1910, was convicted of entering a shop in the night time with the intent to commit larceny, was sentenced to a term of three years imprisonment at hard labor in the State prison, in the county of Providence, and was there imprisoned from October 10th, 1910, to and including June 25th, 1913; that on December 24th, 1912, a contract was entered into between defendant and the Board of Control and Supply, pursuant to Section 21 of Chapter 825 of the Public Laws of 1912, which transferred to the Board of Control and Supply all the power and authority previously vested in the Board of State Charities and Corrections, over the labor of prisoners and other inmates of State institutions, “with power in said board to sell the products of such institutions, and make such contract respecting the labor of the prisoners and inmates of such institutions as said board may deem proper,” and provided that “all orders, agreements and contracts made by said board with respect to said labor shall be observed and obeyed by the officers in charge of the prisoners and other inmates of such institutions;” that pursuant to said contract the labor and services of the plaintiff were furnished to the defendant and accepted and hired by it, and the plaintiff was employed by the defendant and for its benefit without the plaintiff’s consent and against his will, from January 1, 1913, to and including June 25th, 1913; that during that period the plaintiff was compelled, by force and threats, against his will, to perform labor and services in accordance with the provisions of the said contract, and by'his labor and services manufactured shirts in accordance therewith, and the profits from his said labor and services were received and retained 'by the defendant, subject only to the payment to the State of Rhode Island, pursuant tó the terms of the said contract, of the sum of fifty cents (50 cents) per dozen shirts, manufactured through the plaintiff’s labor and services; that the *465 reasonable value of the said services was $3.50 per day, and that no part of the value of the said labor and services, or the product thereof, and no compensation whatever therefor, was ever paid to the plaintiff.

It is further alleged “that said Section 21 of said Act, in authorizing and giving to the said Board power to make such contracts respecting labor of the prisoners as said Board may deem proper, is unconstitutional in that it is repugnant to, and in violation of, Article 1, Section 4 of the Constitution of Rhode Island, and such contract between the said State by the said Board, and the defendant, the. Crescent Garment Company, is, therefore, illegal, null and void.”

A fictitious promise by the defendant in consideration of the premises to pay the plaintiff the reasonable value of his services, amounting to the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000), and the breach of that promise, are then alleged.

The contract in question is made a part of the third count, and annexed thereto as “Exhibit A.”

Its material provisions are: the State agrees to furnish, and the company agrees to accept and hire, the labor and services of not less than two hundred and fifty inmates of the Rhode Island State Prison and of the Providence County Jail. The contract however provides that if the State can furnish more, or cannot furnish so many as two hundred and fifty, the company shall accept the services of such number as can be furnished, it being understood that all available inmates shall be furnished.

Such inmates are to be employed in the factory within the prison in making shirts, with machinery and materials furnished by the company, which is to pay to the State fifty cents per dozen for all shirts manufactured under the contract. It is provided that the working day shall last from “7 or 7:30 A. M. to twelve noon, and from 1 P. M. to 4:30 or 5:30 P. M.; and on Saturday from 7 or 7:30 A. M. to 12 noon.” The company is to employ a superintendent and assistants, subject to the approval of said board, and said employees are always to be subject to such rules and regulations as said board may prescribe.

*466 The sixth section is as follows: “Sixth. The party of the second part further agrees to impart all needful instructions to said inmates employed hereunder in the manufacture of said shirts and to employ at its own expense a superintendent and such other assistants as may be necessary to impart such instructions and to direct and superintend the manufacture of said shirts, but the employment of said superintendent and said assistants shall be subject to the approval of the Board of Control and Supply, on behalf of the party of the first part, and said superintendent and assistants shall at all times be subject to such rules, regulations and limitations as said Board of Control and Supply may from time to time prescribe, the said Board of Control and Supply reserving the right to deny admission to or to eject from said factory any person whom said Board may for cause regard as objectionable, or whom said Board may deem guilty of any violation of the rules of said prison or of any breach of conduct therein; and it is understood and agreed that said party of the first part shall at all times have the right to control and govern said inmates, to regulate their conduct and to assign the tasks to be performed under this agreement, and further to make and institute all rules and regulations for the proper discipline and guidance of said inmates, and at any time to change the same, and further to forbid and prevent any work, or any manner or method of performing the same, that may be deemed injurious to the health, dangerous to the person or subversive of prison discipline.

When it appeared that the third count of the declaration brought in question the constitutionality of Section 21 of Chapter 825 of the Public Laws, 1912, the Superior Court certified the case to this court for the determination of the constitutional question.

It is necessary first to consider whether the determination of the constitutional question is necessary for the disposition of the case.

*467 The plaintiff alleges that pursuant to said contract the labor and services of the plaintiff were furnished to the defendant and accepted by it; that he was employed by the defendant, and that he was compelled by force and threats against his will to work for the defendant. He does not allege that he was so compelled to labor by the defendant; and that allegation cannot be inferred for him. The compulsion of which he complains, therefore, must have been exercised by the State, and if the statute was invalid the wrong done the plaintiff in compelling him to work for the defendant was done by the State. If however the contract made under said Section 21 reduced the plaintiff to the condition of slavery it may be argued that the defendant would be liable to an action of assumpsit upon a tort committed by it in receiving said labor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A. 425, 38 R.I. 463, 1916 R.I. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-salant-ri-1916.