Burrow, Com'r of Ind. Relations v. Kapfhammer

145 S.W.2d 1067, 284 Ky. 753, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 577
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 13, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 145 S.W.2d 1067 (Burrow, Com'r of Ind. Relations v. Kapfhammer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burrow, Com'r of Ind. Relations v. Kapfhammer, 145 S.W.2d 1067, 284 Ky. 753, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 577 (Ky. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The General Assembly of the Commonwealth at its 1940 session enacted Chapter 105, page 414 of the -Session Acts for that year, and which is now carried in Baldwin’s 1940 Supplement to Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes as Sections 1599c-4 to and including 1599c-40. All emphasis herein is ours. The general subject dealt with as stated in the title to the act is: “An Act relating to employer-employee relations.” That general statement is followed by a list of specifications detailing the various phases of that relationship to which the statute is intended to apply, including definitions of terms, etc. Subdivision (h) of Section 1 of Article I says: “ ‘Domestic Work’ means all work performed by persons in homes, residences, hotels and apartment houses, such as cleaning, waiting on tables, washing dishes, cooking, answering calls of guests and waiting upon them, and general house and'hotel work.” Section 17 of the same article enacts inter alia that: “Every employer who requires or permits any employee to work seven days in any one work week at any time, shall pay to such employee compensation or wages at the rate of time and a half for the time worked on the seventh day in each and every instance where the employee is required to work seven days in any one work week;” hut with later following qualifications and with a long list of exempted employments, among which is “domestic work.”

Article V also exempts certain enumerated activities from the provisions of the act by saying: “There is exempted and excluded from all of the provisions of this Act the following,” etc. A part of the “following,” as set out in subdivision (b) of that article there is ex *756 empted “domestic work,” which, as we have seen, is subdivision (h), Section 1 of Article I, embracing work performed by employees and servants “in homes, residences, hotels and apartment houses,” and whose duties consist in keeping the premises of the employer cleaned, in waiting on tables, in washing dishes, cooking and answering calls of guests and in waiting on them “and general house and hotel work. ’ ’ So that, the operations of hotels — -including dining apartments operated by them, and wherein the character o.f labor necessary to do so is rendered — are excluded from the operation of the act, although the same duties are performed by employees of independent restaurants who likewise engage in the .business of feeding the public in the same manner and requiring the same character of necessary service as is required in connection with operating .a hotel.

Plaintiff and appellee, Paul Kapfhammer, is and has been for quite a while engaged in operating an independent restaurant and bakery in the city of Louisville, Kentucky, and he filed this action in the Franklin circuit court against. the administrative and enforcement officers of the act, asserting its invalidity, and particularly its Section 17 of Article I, since its provisions, as claimed, invaded a number of constitutional rights, guaranteed to him by both the Federal and our State Constitutions whereby the act is discriminatory against him and deprives him of his rights and property without due process of law, etc. The act is also attacked as violating Sections 51, 59 and 60 of our Constitution. The prayer of the petition was that Section 17, Article I, of the act be declared unconstitutional as being arbitrary and unreasonable, and in violation of Sections 1, 2, 13, 26, (all parts of our Bill of Rights) 51, 59 and 60 of our Constitution, and also the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution. The answer of defendants denied that the act violated any of the constitutional provisions referred to in the petition. The court upon submission of the cause upon the pleadings, including a demurrer to the petition, overruled the demurrer and then adjudged “That Section 17 of Article I of said Act, being codified as Section 1599c-20 of Carroll’s Kentucky Statutes, 1940 Supplement, is unconstitutional as constituting an arbitrary and unreasonable classification.” That declaration was followed by one enjoining defendants from enforcing the act as “against the *757 plaintiff, Paul Kapfliammer, and any and all other persons similarly situated.” Prom that judgment defendants prosecute this appeal.

Learned counsel for plaintiff in the pleadings prepared for their client, as well as in their ‘briefs filed in this court attack, as invalid — for the reasons set out supra — the validity of Section 17 of Article I of the act as applicable to all relationships of employer and employee in whatever activity to which its provisions apply, and which are not exempted from it. The trial court appears to have so determined when it held the entire section unconstitutional. But it will be observed that later in the judgment the court applied his injunction only against the enforcement of the act as against plaintiff and his business and to others similarly situated, i. e., those engaged in the same business. So that, the only enforcible judgment that the trial court rendered was one enjoining the enforcement of the act as against operators of independent restaurants because the set-up in the framework of the act, as we have pointed out, excluded from its provisions employees of hotels engaged in the same competitive business with plaintiff, and others similarly situated, and which was because the act excluded from its provisions “domestic work,” and later defined those words as embracing employees of hotels. So that, so far as relates to the specific judgment rendered by the trial court the only question before us is, whether or not the exclusion of hotels engaged in the restaurant, or dining room services rendered to the public, from the provisions of the law as made applicable to independent restaurants, is or not an arbitrary classification and, therefore, void?

In rendering this opinion that section of the court’s judgment apparently declaring all of Section 17, Article I, invalid will be considered as modified so as to apply to the concrete case in hand, i. e., the business of operating an independent restaurant, and consider it from the standpoint of that limiting qualification. Moreover, it is extremely doubtful if plaintiff — who is entirely disinterested in other employments than his own, could raise the question as to the validity of the act as applicable to other occupations or activities in which he has no interest whatever, since in order to maintain this character of action there must not only be a controversy, but the parties are required to have some in *758 volved interest in that controversy. We have, therefore, concluded to’ confine this opinion to a determination of the sole question as to whether or not the provisions of the act excluding operators of hotels in the relationship of employer and employee, although competing with, independent restaurants and at the same time making the act applicable to the latter renders the classifications made as to such employment unreasonable and, therefore, invalid?

Perhaps no single principle of the law is more firmly settled oy the unanimous declaration of courts and text writers than (a) that it is competent for legislatures to classify subjects for legislation, provided (b) the classification is based upon reasonable grounds and is not arbitrary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.W.2d 1067, 284 Ky. 753, 1940 Ky. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrow-comr-of-ind-relations-v-kapfhammer-kyctapphigh-1940.