Larkin v. Consolidated Telegraph & Electrical Subway Co.

193 Misc. 1001, 85 N.Y.S.2d 631, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1683
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 Misc. 1001 (Larkin v. Consolidated Telegraph & Electrical Subway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larkin v. Consolidated Telegraph & Electrical Subway Co., 193 Misc. 1001, 85 N.Y.S.2d 631, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1683 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1949).

Opinion

Eder, J.

This is a motion to strike out five separate defenses upon the ground that it appears on the face thereof that the same are insufficient in law.

This action is brought to recover back wages and is based upon the provisions of section 83-4.0 of the Administrative Code of the City of New York, which reads as follows: “ § 83-4.0. Workmen on excavations.— A person to whom consent may be granted, or a permit issued, to use or open a street, shall be required, before such consent or permit may be granted or issued, to agree that none but competent men, skilled in the work required of them, shall be employed thereon, and that the prevailing scale of union wages shall be paid to those so employed. Consent shall be denied and permission refused until such agreement shall have been entered into with the agency having jurisdiction over the street to be so used or opened, and all such permits hereafter issued shall include, therein a copy of this provision.”

The plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, asserts the right to recover the difference between the claimed prevailing scale of union wages ” and the union scale of wages paid to and received by him during the six-year period preceding the date of the commencement of this action.

Seemingly, this case is one of first impression under this statute.

The statute, it is to be noted, requires the permittee to enter into an agreement with the city, through the municipal agency having jurisdiction over the street to be used or opened, that the statutory compensation will be paid by such permittee to the worker so employed. The statute and the agreement make the employee the beneficiary thereof. The complaint is grounded on the statute and this third party beneficiary agreement.

The plaintiff complains that the defendant has not lived up to its agreement to pay him the prevailing scale of union wages and demands judgment for the difference, the sum of $4,250.

The facts are hardly in dispute. The answer, after denying certain allegations of the complaint, sets up five separate and complete defenses, and the legal sufficiency thereof is challenged by this motion.

[1004]*1004In brief, the first defense pleads that during the entire period covered by the complaint the plaintiff was represented by unions certified by the National Labor Relations Board as the sole and exclusive agents to bargain collectively for all weekly employees of the defendant; that pursuant to collective bargaining contracts made by the defendant with such unions and arbitration awards growing out of such contracts and approval by appropriate governmental agencies and valid directive orders issued by them, the said contracts and awards thus fixed and determined the plaintiff’s union scale of wages during the entire period mentioned in the complaint and - that' such fixation of wages constitutes the prevailing scale of union wages for the life of the contracts within the fair intendment of section 83-4.0 and that the payment of such union scale of wages was in full compliance with the requirement of this statute that plaintiff be paid the prevailing scale of union wages ”.

The second defense pleads that defendant paid and plaintiff continued to receive without protest the wages paid him in accordance with the said collective bargaining contracts and thereby waived any right of claim he might have under said statute or permits issued pursuant thereto.

The third defense pleads that if and insofar as the statute and permits issued pursuant thereto require the payment of a scale of wages that is higher than the union’s scale of wages fixed by the collective bargaining contracts, the statute and permits are invalid, null and void becáuse they are against the public policy expressed by section 17 of article I of the State Constitution and are inconsistent with the National and State Labor Relations Acts.

The fourth defense pleads that said section 83-4.0 and permits issued pursuant thereto are void and unenforcible, if interpreted to require the payment of a higher scale of wages than that fixed by the collective bargaining agreements, because said statute and permits aré too vague to be intelligible.

The fifth defense pleads that said statute and permits issued pursuant thereto are arbitrary and discriminatory, if interpreted to require the defendant to pay a higher scale of wages than that fixed by the collective bargaining contracts made between the defendant and the said certified unions.

It is to be noted that section 83-4.0 of the Administrative Code does not define the term prevailing scale of union wages that it does not establish any standard and that it provides no method, formula or procedure or agency for ascertaining and determining the prevailing scale of union wages to be paid to those coming within the coverage of said law.

[1005]*1005It is unlike section 220 of the State Labor Law which defines the term therein used “ prevailing rate of wage ” and which establishes the standard and provides the method, formula and procedure for determining the prevailing rate of wage for a legal day’s work and designates the fiscal official to make the determination. These features are wholly absent in section 83-4.0 of the Administrative Code.

What constitutes the prevailing scale of. union wages ” is left undefined and no method is provided to ascertain and determine it. It is left in a state of vagueness and uncertainty. It lacks clarity, definiteness, certainty, precision.

An act of the Legislature, to have the force of law, must be intelligibly expressed (59 C. J., Statutes, § 160, p. 801, and cases cited); when too vague to be intelligible it is a nullity (Standard Chemicals & Metals Corp.v. Waugh Chemical Corp., 231 N. Y. 51, 54-55).

In the light of this situation it is recognized that the statute in concern is subject to attack as being invalid for vagueness and for lack of definiteness in the respects mentioned.

However, where it is possible .to .remedy a defect by construction so as to sustain the validity of the law, the courts will apply a reasonable construction toward that end, to carry out the legislative intent.

The obvious purpose of section 83-4.0 is to aid labor; its plain intent is to improve the economic condition of the worker. 'The legislation is of a nature that pertains to the public welfare and the court should endeavor, by a sensible and practical •construction, to carry out the legislative object and intent; the act should receive an interpretation such as will save it from destruction. 1 •

Since the statute does not define the term “ prevailing, scale of union wages ”, nor provide any standard, nor prescribe any method or procedure to determine the same, the reasonable inference is that the Legislature'must have intended that the parties would themselves employ such legal methods as they believed would attain that end.

Here the parties concerned entered into collective bargaining contracts and resorted to arbitration and approval of governmental agencies in arriving at a determination of what should be the union scale of wages, and there is nothing in section 83-4.0 of the Administrative Code which prohibits resort to .and employment of such a method for determining the wage compensation of the plaintiff and those coming within* the purview of this enactment.

[1006]

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Bluebook (online)
193 Misc. 1001, 85 N.Y.S.2d 631, 1949 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larkin-v-consolidated-telegraph-electrical-subway-co-nysupct-1949.