Ex parte Hawley

12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 22 Ohio Dec. 39, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 44

This text of 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1 (Ex parte Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Hawley, 12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 22 Ohio Dec. 39, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 44 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Dillon, J.

By writ of habeas corpus the applicant seeks release from arrest, charged with violating the act of May 31,1911 (102 O. L., 488). This act provides for a number of conveniences such ás [2]*2chairs, suitable and separate toilet and dressing rooms, water-closets, ventilation, etc., for female employes. Among other things provided for in this act,is the following:

“Females over eighteen years of age shall not be employed or permitted or suffered to work in or in connection with any factory, workshop, telephone or telegraph office, millinery, or dressmaking establishment, restaurant, or in the distributing or transmission of messages more than ten hours in any, one day, or more than fifty-four hours in any one week, but meal time shall not be included as a part of the work hours of the week or day, provided, however, that- no restriction as to the hours of labor shall apply to canneries or establishments. engaged in preparing for use perishable goods.”

Violation of this provision by any employer is punishable by a fine of not less than twenty-five dollars nor more than two hundred dollars. ' The applicant through her counsel claims that the foregoing provision of said act is void and unconstitutional and bases this contention upon three propositions:

First, that the freedom of the right to contract both on the part of an employer and on the part of an employe, as well as the right to enforce such contracts, are guaranteed to all the people by Sections 1 and 19 of the Bill of Eights of the Constitution of Ohio and also by Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, and that any legislative act which limits this freedom of contract must fail, unless it shall appear to the court that such limitation is necessary for the public welfare, that is to say, for the protection of public health or safety or morals.

Second, that freedom of contract with reference to the salé and purchase of labor is as much protected as freedom of contract with reference to any subject or in any other respect.

Third, that the Legislature can not constitutionally make any arbitrary, artificial, fictitious or capricious classification so as to make an act apply to a certain person or persons engaged in some particular line of enterprise, while others coming-within the same general class are.exempt.

• It is well settled law not only of this state but of all the states ; of .the. United States, .that.it becomes the duty of a court to de[3]*3termine whether or not an aet in limitation upon individual rights.or affecting individual property is to be justified on the ground that it is reasonably necessary for the protection of public health, safety, morals or general welfare. Succinctly stated, this siipply means that all private right or property, liberty, etc., must yield to the general welfare.

Since, then, it is for the court to determine what is and what is not for the protection of the public health, safety, morals or general welfare, it is not surprising that we meet with much contrariety of decision. This variance is easily explained by a number of considerations. First, the age in which the decision was rendered, for it must be conceded that that which was not public welfare fifty years ago, under the then conditions of society, morals, necessities, and commercial conditions, may in this present age be considered public welfare. At a time when most people of this country worked for themselves and. industrial conditions were such that few women were engaged .in labor in factories, workshops, etc., it might easily be said that there was no public necessity or need of any legislation limiting the hours of their labor. At the present day, happily or. not, few men work for themselves and large industrial institutions have multiplied so that a large percentage of our people, both men and women, are compelled by industrial conditions to labor for others, and, therefore, public health, public welfare, public morals, as well as public safety, demand that these conditions be recognized as existing and decision be not rendered upon the bare, naked questions of purely private right.

This contrariety of decision also varies with the individual judge who interprets statutes in different parts of the country as well as in different ages. Judges differ as to their standard of ethics as well as to their views as to what constitutes public welfare.

It is not a yielding to any erroneous clamor of the day to observe that this nation has passed through an era of the greatest commercial and financial cupidity in the history of the world, and the inordinate competition and desire for commercial success has threatened to blunt the higher and more sacred' objects of living.

[4]*4Coming now to some of the decisions, one of the strongest cases which has been cited to this court in behalf of the invalidity of this law comes from our own state in the case of Palmer v. Tingle, 55 O. S., 423, and yet that case I consider easily distinguishable from the one at bar. In that case the Supreme Court held that the inalienable right of enjoying liberty and acquiring property, which is guaranteed by the first section of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution, embraces the right to be free in the enjoyment of our faculties, subject only to such restraints as are necessary for the common welfare. Further, that the judgment of the General Assembly as to whether restraint .of private right and the right to contract was for the general welfare was not conclusive, but that the court must see that it is for the general welfare. In that case the court considered that the act of April 13, 1894, giving a lien on the property of the owner to sub-contractors who had no contract with him was unconstitutional and void, and yet the general principles on which this case is decided here were announced in that case.

Again, in our own state the case of City of Cleveland v. Clements, 67 O. S., 197, is cited, in which the act of April 16, 1900, limiting the hours of daily service of workmen and mechanics-employed upon public works or work done for the state of Ohio, or any municipality thereof, to eight hours a day, was not for any public welfare, public health or public morals, and, therefore, was unconstitutional and void.

In the year 1895, the Supreme Court of Illinois in the ease of Ritchie v. People, 155 Ill., 98, held, emphatically, that the right to labor or employ and to make contracts in respect thereto, upon any terms as might be agreed upon, was a liberty and property right under the Constitution, and, therefore, a statute prohibiting women from working more than eight hours a day was unconstitutional. This decision of 1895, however, is completely modified and distinguished, if not practically overruled, in the case of Ritchie & Co. v. Wayman, 244 Ill., 509, where the court held that property rights may always be limited and regulated under the police power of the state when the public health, safety, morals and welfare so required, and, therefore, that the Woman’s Ten Hour Law of 1909 was a valid regulation.

[5]*5The oldest ease sustaining the validity of laws like the one in question here was decided by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts in 1876 in the case of Commonwealth v. Hamilton,

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 1, 22 Ohio Dec. 39, 1911 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-hawley-ohctcomplfrankl-1911.