In Re Moffett

55 P.2d 584, 12 Cal. App. 2d 320, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1033
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 9, 1936
DocketCrim. 190
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 55 P.2d 584 (In Re Moffett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Moffett, 55 P.2d 584, 12 Cal. App. 2d 320, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1033 (Cal. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

MARKS, J.

Petitioner filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus to secure his release from the jail of Tulare County, where he was confined by the sheriff under a judgment of a justice of the peace sitting in Orosi Township in Tulare County. The only return made by the sheriff to the writ is the order under which petitioner was held. Its sufficiency is not attacked and for the purposes of this opinion we will assume its sufficiency tad proper form. No brief has been filed on behalf of the sheriff or in support of the legality of the detention- of petitioner.

The facts shown by the record before us may be briefly summarized as follows: The Southern Sierra Pine Company is a partnership, of which petitioner was the managing member, organized for the manufacture of lumber near the town of Cutler in Orosi Township, Tulare County. The partnership had insufficient capital with which to pay its operating expenses and therefore entered into a contract with each of its employees whereby they were to work at a fixed compensation in cash, not to be paid on any fixed or regularly recurring dates but when the lumber could be sold and out of the proceeds of such sales as the money was collected. Ralph Goodwin was employed under such an express contract on May 12, 1935, at a compensation of fifty cents an hour which was increased on July 1, 1935, to fifty-five cents an hour. Goodwin was not discharged but voluntarily left the employ of the partnership on August 31, 1935. He had earned $431.31 and had been paid $308.50 during his employment and $7 after he had quit, leaving a balance of $115.81 unpaid on October 22, 1935, at the time the complaint was filed in the justice’s court. At that time there were several thousand dollars’ worth of manufactured lumber unsold in the yards of the partnership.

The complaint in this action contained three counts. The first alleged that on July 25, 1935, petitioner continued to employ one or more in and about the sawmill without maintaining semi-monthly or two monthly pay days and particularly without paying such employees in full for their services for the previous semi-monthly period on or before the last- *322 mentioned date as required by sections two and four of the Semi-Monthly Pay Day Law. (Stats. 1919, chap. 202, as amended.) Count two alleged that petitioner failed to post and keep posted in a conspicuous place at the place of employment, or elsewhere, where the employees could see it, or at the office or nearest agency for payment kept by the employer, any notice specifying any regular pay day or pay days as required by the same sections of the same law. The third count deserves no notice here. It does not charge a public offense, or at best any other offense than that charged in the first count.

The two sections of the act in question provide that an employer must pay his employees the money earned by them semi-monthly, or twice each month, on regular pay dayb to be designated in advance, and post, and keep posted, conspicuously at a designated place, a notice specifying the regular pay days and the time and place of payment of wages. ¡

It is admitted that petitioner did not have two, of any, regular pay days each month for his employees and did not post and keep posted the notice we have mentioned. It is obvious that he could not conform to the requirements |of the statute under the terms of his contracts with his employees as wages became due and payable when and as soon as money was received for the lumber sold and in such amounts as could be paid from the returns from the sale's. The question squarely presented here is: Does the Semi-monthly Pay Day Law prohibit a special contract of employment between the employer and his employee such as was made between the partnership represented by petitioner and Ralph Goodtyin?

We have not been cited to nor have we found any California case in which this precise question has been decided. However, the following cases decided under the Wage Law of 1911 (Stats. 1911, p. 1268, as amended), and under the present law, may be cited: In re Crane, 26 Cal. App. 22 [145 Pac. 733]; Moore v. Indian Spring etc. Co., 37 Cal. App. 370 [174 Pac. 378]; Manford v. Singh, 40 Cal. App. 700 [181 Pac. 844]; Klaffki v. Kaufman, 52 Cal. App. 48 [198 Pac. 36]; Martin v. Going, 57 Cal. App. 631 [207 Pac. 935]; In re Oswald, 76 Cal. App. 347 [244 Pac. 940]; In re Samaha, 130 Cal. App. 116 [19 Pac. (2d) 839]; Sears v. Superior Court, 133 Cal. App. 704 [24 Pac. (2d) 842] ; In re Sears, 137 Cal. App. 308 [30 Pac. (2d) 571]; Fueller v. Justice’s Court, 134 *323 Cal. App. 305 [25 Pac. (2d) 248]; In re Ballestra, 173 Cal. 657 [161 Pac. 120], In these cases certain phases of the Wage Act of 1911 were held unconstitutional, and certain phases of the Wage Act of 1919 were held constitutional under the police powers of the state which permits the enactment of laws' to promote the general welfare of the citizens of the state. See, also, In re Miller, 162 Cal. 687 [124 Pac. 427], and In re Farb, 178 Cal. 592 [174 Pac. 320, 3 A. L. R. 301], The limitations placed upon the exercise of the police power in cases similar to the one we are considering are thus defined in Ex parte Hayden, 147 Cal. 649 [82 Pac. 315, 109 Am. St. Rep. 183] : “It has come to be well recognized that the liberty and the pursuit of happiness in which the individual is protected by the Constitution of the United States and of the state applies as fully to his right of contract, his right to follow a legitimate vocation, untrammeled by unnecessary regulations, as it does to the freedom from arrest or restraint of his person. This subject has received recent consideration by this court, and it is unnecessary to do more than refer to Ex parte Dickey, 144 Cal. 234 [77 Pac. 924, 103 Am. St. Rep. 82, 1 Ann. Cas. 428, 66 L. R. A. 928].

.“Putting out of contemplation, therefore, the fundamental right of government to subject private property to taxation and to take such property in time of public calamity and peril, the right of the state to impose burdens upon such property where the business is legitimate and innocuous,—in other words, to regulate harmless vocations,—is found in the police power alone. (Young v. Commonwealth, 101 Va. 853 [45 S. E. 327]; Holden v. Hardy, 169 U. S. 366 [18 Sup. Ct. 383, 42 L. Ed. 780].) The police power, deriving its existence from the rule that the safety of the people is the supreme law, justifies legislation upon matters pertaining to the public welfare, the public health, or the public morals. (Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., p. 837; Ruhstrat v. People; 185 Ill. 133 [47 N. E. 41, 76 Am. St. Rep. 30, 49 L. R. A. 181].) But the legislature, under the guise of police regulations, cannot enact laws which do not pertain to one or the other of those objects, and which impose onerous and unnecessary burdens upon business and property. By this court it has been said (Ex parte Whitwell, 98 Cal.

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Related

In Re Moffett
57 P.2d 538 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.2d 584, 12 Cal. App. 2d 320, 1936 Cal. App. LEXIS 1033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-moffett-calctapp-1936.