Figura v. Cummins

122 N.E.2d 162, 4 Ill. 2d 44, 1954 Ill. LEXIS 232
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1954
Docket33188
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 122 N.E.2d 162 (Figura v. Cummins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Figura v. Cummins, 122 N.E.2d 162, 4 Ill. 2d 44, 1954 Ill. LEXIS 232 (Ill. 1954).

Opinion

Mr, Chiee Justice Bristow

delivered the opinion of the court:

In a proceeding for a declaratory judgment instituted by plaintiffs, Lewis Spring Company and Irmina Figura, Estelle Zbylut and Estelle Zawislak, on their own behalf and on behalf of 100 home workers employed by the plaintiff company, the circuit court of Cook County held that paragraph G of section 2 of the Industrial Home Work Act, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1953, chap. 48, pars. 251-260,) which prohibits the processing of metal springs by home workers, was unconstitutional, and enjoined defendants, Roy Cummins, Director of the Department of Labor, and Latham Castle, Attorney General of the State of Illinois, from enforcing the said void statutory provisions against plaintiffs.

The sole issue presented upon this appeal is whether paragraph G of section 2 of the Industrial Home Work Act constitutes a proper and constitutional exercise of the police power of the State.

According to the facts adduced from the pleadings and evidence, the plaintiffs, Lewis Spring Company, an Illinois corporation engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling mechanical springs and coils used in television and radio sets and household appliances, and three home workers, constituting a special committee suing on behalf of themselves and other home workers of the company, sought a declaratory judgment of the constitutionality of the provision prohibiting the processing of metal springs by home workers, which was added to the act by amendment in 1953. Prior thereto, and since the enactment of the act sixteen years earlier, section 2 prohibited industrial home work involving the processing of articles of food or drink, drugs or poisons, medical and surgical bandages, sanitary napkins, cotton batting, fireworks, explosives, toys, dolls and tobacco. In 1951 a proposed amendment prohibiting the processing of mechanical purpose springs was vetoed; however, in 1953, a bill which originally prohibited the processing of metal springs “and metal products,” but which was altered to merely prohibit the processing of metal springs, became law, and is the subject of this inquiry.

It appears further that plaintiff Lewis Spring Company employs about 400 persons, some no of which are home workers who do the bending, gauging, assembling, looping and trimming of the springs. The bending, gauging and assembling are done with small hand tools, whereas looping and trimming involve the use of foot presses. Only 25 per cent of the home workers use the foot press, and the remaining 75 per cent use only hand tools.

On the hearing for a preliminary injunction, the State offered evidence of some finger abrasions sustained from the operation of a kick press in a factory. The court, at the dose of that preliminary hearing, in analyzing section 2 of the act, pointed out that paragraphs A to P, which had been in force since 1937, were justified because of the inherently dangerous nature of the articles themselves to the home workers or the public, whereas the prohibition in paragraph G related to a supposed danger in the processing of an article harmless to the public and the home worker. On the basis of the evidence adduced at that hearing, the court held that if a kick press were dangerous, it would be so irrespective of whether it were used in processing a metal spring or other metal object; consequently, the selection of the processing of metal springs in the statute was arbitrary and unconstitutional.

At the trial it was stipulated that defendants’ evidence on the motion for a temporary injunction might be considered. Defendants introduced no further evidence, although defendant Department of Labor supervises and keeps records of the industrial home work done in the State, and the accidents incidental thereto. Plaintiffs offered evidence of what the home work consisted of, the tools involved, how they were operated, testimony of a tool maker who supervised all the home workers using foot presses for the Lewis Spring Company, and testimony of home workers' who had small children and who had worked with foot presses. Their testimony revealed that no home worker for Lewis Spring Company, nor a child of a home worker, nor member of the household, had ever been slightly injured or injuriously affected by the foot press or the operation thereof, and that it was practically impossible for anybody to be so injured, or for even a small child to put his finger in the one-fourth-inch aperture for the looping die.

The court found upon undisputed evidence and stipulation that the metal springs themselves were completely harmless to the home workers, their households, or users of the products into which the springs are incorporated; that all of the six hand tools used by the plaintiff home workers are not dangerous or injurious to the health, safety and welfare of the home workers or members of their households; and that in the eight years during which home workers have worked on metal springs for the Lewis Spring Company, no home worker, or member of his family, had ever been injured or his health injuriously affected in the processing of metal springs. The court found, however, on the basis of its own physical observation, that the foot press used in connection with the die for looping, if unguarded, is dangerous to small children. Upon inquiry by the court, plaintiffs’ counsel stated that while no cover or guard had heretofore been furnished for the foot press, one could be made.

The court held that inasmuch as the foot press can be, and is used for processing other metal products by home workers, and that since there is no reasonable basis for prohibiting home work in the processing of metal springs and not prohibiting it in the processing of other products which have the potentiality of being at least as or more dangerous and injurious to the health and safety of home workers and members of their households, therefore paragraph G of section 2 of the act violates section 22 of article IV of the Illinois constitution prohibiting the enactment of special laws, and deprives plaintiffs of the rights, privileges and immunities guaranteed by sections 1 and 2 of article II of the Illinois constitution and section 1 of the fourteenth amendment of the Federal constitution, and decreed that a permanent injunction be issued against defendants.

In determining the propriety of that decree it is evident that there is a firmly entrenched constitutional principle that every citizen is guaranteed the right to engage in any lawful, useful and harmless business or trade, and that it is not within the constitutional authority of the State legislature in the exercise of the police power to interfere with that right of the individual where no interest of the public safety, welfare or morals is damaged or threatened. People ex rel. Barrett v. Thillens, 400 Ill. 224.

It is an equally well-established principle of constitutional law that under the police power of the State the legislature has the power to restrict or prohibit the exercise of a legitimate trade where it is necessary for the protion of the public health, morals, safety or welfare; however, such restraint must be a reasonable one, and be reasonably adapted to obtain the objective intended. (People v. Brown, 407 Ill.

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.E.2d 162, 4 Ill. 2d 44, 1954 Ill. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/figura-v-cummins-ill-1954.