DeRenzo v. Nichols

7 Mass. App. Div. 313
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedSeptember 10, 1942
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Mass. App. Div. 313 (DeRenzo v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeRenzo v. Nichols, 7 Mass. App. Div. 313 (Mass. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

Pettingell, P. J.

Action by an employee to recover from her employer, in accordance with General Laws (Ter. Ed.) Chapter 151, section 1, the amount due her as “a [314]*314wage fairly and reasonably commensurate with the value of the service or class of service rendered”, less the amounts actually paid her by the employer as the weekly wage at which she was employed.

The plaintiff’s declaration sets forth that the plaintiff was employed at a wage of nine dollars a week and that that amount was “oppressive and unreasonable” wages as set forth in General Laws, Chapter 151, Sec. 1, and that “fifty cents an hour or $27.50 per week of 55 hours” was “the fair and reasonable value of her services.”

The defendant set up a general denial and payment.

The trial judge made the following “Findings of Facts and Findings.”

“I find that the plaintiff worked for the defendant as an elevator operator in an office building in Haverhill, Massachusetts for 47 weeks beginning in February 1941 and ending in January 1942 and received therefore the sum of nine dollars per week; that the said wages of nine dollars per week were oppressive and unreasonable in all the circumstances, being both less than the fair value of her services and less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for her health.
“I. further find that a fair wage for the plaintiff’s services would have been twelve dollars per week, which I find would also represent the minimum neees- . sary for her health.
Finding
“I find for the plaintiff for $141.00 plus interest from February 12, 1942, seventy-five cents, making $141.75.”

The case comes to this division because of the defendant’s claim of error based on the giving of seven requested-rulings, filed by the plaintiff, as follows:

2. That if the Court finds that the amount paid by the defendant to the plaintiff as a woman elevator operator, as wages is less than the fair and reason[315]*315able value of the services rendered by the plaintiff and is less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for her health then the plaintiff is entitled to recover the fair and reasonable value of her services less any amount actually paid to the plaintiff by the defendant.
3. That if the Court finds that the amount paid by the defendant to the plaintiff as a woman elevator operator, as wages is oppressive and unreasonable wage; then the plaintiff is entitled to recover the fair and reasonable value of her services less any amount actually paid to the plaintiff by the defendant.
4. That an oppressive and unreasonable wage is a wage which is both less than the fair and reasonable value of the services rendered and less than sufficient to meet the minimum cost of living necessary for health G. L. Chpt. 151, Sec. 2, Acts of 1937 Chpt. 401, Sec. 1-2.
5. That any contract or agreement or understandings for or in relation to any employment of the plaintiff by the defendant as a woman elevator operator for wages which are oppressive and unreasonable is null and void Sec. 2, Chpt. 151.
9. That the fact that a mandatory minimum fair wage order for women elevator operators has not been established is not a bar or a defence to the plaintiff’s right to recover.
10. That upon all the evidence a finding is warranted that the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
11. That upon all the evidence a finding is warranted that the wages paid to the plaintiff by the defendant was oppressive and unreasonable wage.

A proper disposition of the case requires a consideration of the statute under which the action is brought, its purpose and history. It appeared first as St. 1912, Chapter 706, and was amended by St. 1913, Chapters 330 and 673, and St. 1914, Chapter 368. Thus amended, the statute provided for the appointment of a minimum wage commission with power “to inquire into the wages paid to the female employees in any occupation in the Commonwealth, [316]*316if the commission has reason to believe that the wages paid to a substantial number of such employees are inadequate to supply the necessary cost of living and to maintain the worker in health”. The statute then authorized the commission to investigate and to form a wage board which shall consider the matter, and after taking into consideration “the needs of the employees, the financial condition of the occupation and the probable effect thereon of any increase in the minimum wages paid”, “shall endeavor to determine the minimum wage ***** suitable for a female employee of ordinary ability in the occupation in question”, and report the same, with specified alternate facts, to the commission “together with the reasons therefor and the facts relating thereto,” with certain other information including the names of employers who pay less than the minimum wage, the commission having the right, in the last instance, to publish the names of such employers.

In Holcombe v. Creamer, 231 Mass. 99, which arose when certain employers refused to furnish the commission with required information, the court held that the act was constitutional and ordered a writ to issue compelling testimony. Every issue which could be raised regarding the constitutionality and legality of that statute was passed upon at that time in favor of the statute.

Following that decision, an amending statute was passed, Statute 1937, Chapter 401, which is the present General Laws (Ter. Ed.) Chapter 151, the" basis of this action. That statute went much farther than the original statute. It declared a contract to pay wages that are “oppressive and unreasonable”, as defined in the statute, to be null and void, and after elaborating the procedure by which investigations are to be made and information acquired, provided for the establishment of minimum wages, and [317]*317the publication of the orders determining the same. Section 10 of the chapter provides a procedure to be followed in cases where there is a persistent non-observance of an order published under Section 8. Section 11 provides a manner of enforcing the attendance of employers, of hearings and of publication of the names of those who have failed to observe the orders, published in accordance with the provisions of the statute. Other sections provide appropriate penalties for such violations.

The sections of Chapter 151 which thus far have been considered deal with the procedure of the public authorities with relation to employers. Section 20 of the statute provides a personal remedy. It gives to an employee the right to recover in a civil action “the full amount of such minimum wage less any amount actually paid” to such employee by the employer. Any agreement by which the employee contracts “to work for less than such mandatory minimum fair wage shall be no defence to such action”.

Section 20A provides that “In any prosecution under section 19 or in any action or suit under section twenty, a copy of the mandatory order covering any occupation” properly attesting the execution and existence of the order shall be competent evidence.

Minimum wage control is no part of the Common law. It is clearly an innovation created by statute, intended to provide better living conditions for women and children.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mass. App. Div. 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derenzo-v-nichols-massdistctapp-1942.