Makarov v. Commonwealth

228 S.E.2d 573, 217 Va. 381, 1976 Va. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 8, 1976
DocketRecord 751263
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 228 S.E.2d 573 (Makarov v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Makarov v. Commonwealth, 228 S.E.2d 573, 217 Va. 381, 1976 Va. LEXIS 292 (Va. 1976).

Opinion

Compton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

We consider in this criminal case whether a part of Code § 40.1-29 is unconstitutional on its face, upon the ground that it authorizes imprisonment for failure to pay a debt.

We examine the following pertinent provisions of the statute, codified in Article 2 of Chapter 3 of Title 40.1, captioned “Labor and Employment”:

“§ 40.1-29. Time ... of payment; . . . penalty for violation of section; ... — (a) All employers operating a business shall establish regular pay periods and rates of pay for employees except executive personnel and shall pay salaried employees at least once each month and employees *382 paid on an hourly rate at least once every two weeks or twice in each month. Upon termination of employment an employee shall he paid all wages or salaries due him for work performed prior thereto; such payment shall he made on or before the date on which he would have been paid for such work had his employment not been terminated.
* * *
“(d) An employer who violates this section shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” (emphasis added). 1

Defendant Simeon Makarov was tried July 7,1975 by a jury on nine indictments for failure to pay wages in violation of the above statute. He was sentenced in accordance with the jury’s verdicts to 30 days in jail and a fine of $1,000 on each charge. The writ of error to the July 10, 1975 judgments of conviction was limited to dual grounds, but determination of the foregoing single issue disposes of the case.

Defendant was president and majority stockholder of Swimming Pool Management Co., Inc., which had its principal place of business in Alexandria. During the summer of 1974, defendant provided lifeguard services for approximately 100 swimming pools in the Washington, D. C.-Northern Virginia area. Makarov’s customers included the owners of hotels, motels, apartments and health clubs. The complaining witnesses, who were summer employees of defendant and students either in high school or college, testified they did not receive their final paychecks by about Labor Day (September 2), 1974, the time of their next regularly-scheduled payday had their employment not been terminated. In most cases the delinquent amount represented payment for the employee’s final two weeks of work. The evidence showed that when the employees sought to obtain timely payment of these wages, defendant was evasive, rude, abusive and “unavailable”. At the time of trial, however, all except one complainant had been fully paid the wages due for the period in question.

*383 Defendant’s evidence showed that even though his business remáined solvent during the late summer and fall of 1974, about 50 per cent of his customers, who had agreed to pay for his services on a regular basis, were in arrears, resulting in defendant’s inability to promptly meet the last payroll for the summer of 1974. But an official of the National Swimming Pool Institute testified that in businesses similar to defendant’s no more than ten per cent of the business accounts were delinquent at the end of a summer.

The record further shows that during an investigation of the employees’ complaints, conducted by the Virginia Department of Labor and Industry prior to indictment, defendant assigned additional specific reasons for failure to pay the disputed wages, such as: one employee had not submitted complete time records to the supervisor; another employee had not properly cleaned the pool on the last day of employment; and another employee’s time records did not accurately reflect the time worked because the employee took excessive time for “lunch breaks”.

Defendant argues the foregoing statutory provisions are patently unconstitutional because they permit imprisonment for a mere failure to pay a debt. He contends the vice in the statute is the failure to require, as an element of the crime, an intent to defraud.

The Commonwealth contends that the statute “does not provide imprisonment merely for unpaid debts; rather, § 40.1-29 prohibits the deliberate and willful failure or refusal of an employer, when able, to pay employees their regularly scheduled wages.” Pointing out that a statute should be interpreted “so as to uphold its constitutionality if this can be reasonably done”, the Attorney General contends that when, as here, there is no express language “on the face of the statute as to the intent on the part of the employer in his refusal to pay the wages when due”, the courts will read into the statute a mens rea or scienter requirement, to avoid declaring it unconstitutional. We do not agree with these contentions and reverse.

In Virginia the system of imprisonment for debt was abolished in 1849, when the predecessor to Code § 8-400, which *384 prohibits issuance of a writ of capias ad satisfaciendum, 2 was enacted. Code 1849, ch. 188, § 2 at 716; Report of Revisors of Virginia Code, 1849, at 838-43; Kidd v. Virginia Deposit Co., 113 Va. 612, 615, 75 S.E. 145, 146 (1912). A majority of the states, by specific constitutional provision, now prohibit enforcement of commercial obligations by imprisonment for debt; criminal penalties are not permitted against “the honest but insolvent debtor.” Note, Imprisonment for Debt: In the Military Tradition, 80 Yale L. J. 1679, 1679 (1971). The United States Constitution contains no express provision against imprisonment for debt, but the federal district courts follow the laws of the various states in which they sit wherein imprisonment for debt has been .abolished. 28 U.S.C. § 2007 (1964).

Likewise, there is no explicit proscription in Virginia’s Constitution against imprisonment for debt. 3 But it is nevertheless established in this State that a person may not be imprisoned, absent fraud, for mere failure to pay a debt arising from contract or for mere failure to pay a judgment for a debt founded on contract. See Code § 8-400; Overstreet v. Commonwealth, 193 Va. 104, 111, 67 S.E.2d 875,879 (1951); West v. West, 126 Va. 696, 699, 101 S.E. 876, 877 (1920); Rinehart & Dennis Company, Inc. v. McArthur, 123 Va. 556, 563, 96 S.E. 829, 831 (1918). See also Code §§ 8-569, 8-576. Contra, Smith, The Constitutionality of Bimonthly Pay Day Laws, 16 Tenn. L. Rev. 940, 948 (1939-1941). There is no doubt that imprisonment of poor debtors offends fundamental principles of justice in today’s ordered society. Indeed, as early as 1849 imprisonment for debt in Virginia was regarded “as inconsistent with the liberal and . enlightened snirit of the age.” Report of Revisors, supra, at 843.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.E.2d 573, 217 Va. 381, 1976 Va. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/makarov-v-commonwealth-va-1976.