Mingin v. Alva Glass Manufacturing Co.

55 N.J. Eq. 463
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 N.J. Eq. 463 (Mingin v. Alva Glass Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mingin v. Alva Glass Manufacturing Co., 55 N.J. Eq. 463 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Grey, V. C.

As to the claims of the apprentices. The portion of their wages earned but held back has no greater equity than the unpaid portion of any other class of workmen’s wages. There is no assertion that the amount so held back exists in any specific and separate form held in custody for them; no trust fund has been created or held for these unpaid wages. They stand merely as a credit in favor of the apprentices, for which they have a right of action on breach of the contract by the company, as any other workmen may have under like circumstances.

I am referred to the case of Bedford v. Newark Machine Co., 1 C. E. Gr. 121, as declaring that the apprentices have some equity superior to that of other workmen in the employ of an insolvent company. That case arose like this, on an application for direction to a receiver as to disposition of funds in his hands. The right of the workmen to a lien on the assets of the company in the hands of the receiver, was asserted under section 42 of the act'of 1849, authorizing the establishment of manufacturing companies. That act gave a lien for their wages, in case of insolvency of the company, to laborers in its employ. There were wages due to laborers who had left the employ of the company previous to the act of insolvency, and also to others who were at that time still in its employ. The question in dispute was whether both these classes of laborers were entitled under [467]*467the statute to a preference; and only those laborers were held to have a preference who were actually in the employ of the company at the time of the suspension of its business operations, which was, under the statute, the act of insolvency. There were also apprentices in the employ of the company, and these were held to be entitled to their wages without regard to the time they were last’ actually laboring for the company, because there was no evidence that they had been discharged from their indentures prior to the act of insolvency, and the refusal or inability of the •company to furnish them with employment did not affect the ■continuance of their employment. For this reason they were ■declared to be within the class of laborers who were in the employ of the company at the time of the suspension of its business, whether actually engaged in the doing of labor or not. 'The apprentices were not given any different or more favorable position than other laborers in the employ of the company, but because of the continuity of their contract under their indentures they were deemed to be within the class of laborers who were in ■the employ of the company at the time of the act of insolvency, within the meaning of the statute.

The act of 1887 (P. L. of 1887 p. 99) changed the law, as -defined by the case of Bedford v. Newark Machine Co., and provided that the lien upon the assets of the insolvent company for wages should extend to all the laborers for services rendered in behalf of the corporation before the date which the court -adjudged to be the time when the insolvency occurred, whether such laborers were in the actual employ of the corporation at that time or not.” "Whatever rights the apprentices have to a preference are secured to them not because they are ■apprentices, but because they are employes, and those rights are in no way superior to those of any other employes of the insolvent company.

It being ascertained that the apprentices and all other laborers are alike in their rights of preferential payment, it remains to be ascertained what those rights are under the facts .of this case.

It may be premised that the privilege of preferential pay[468]*468ment is wholly statutory and is always dealt with in statutes-which direct the disposition of the assets of insolvent corporations. These acts prescribe the conditions and characteristics which will entitle a certain class of claimants to preferential payment over other creditors whose claims may be equally meritorious. The privilege conferred is in derogation of the general equity of all creditors to share equally in the distribution of the assets of an insolvent debtor.

The laborers who, in this case, claim a preference, began working for the insolvent company in the year 1890 and while section 63 of the Corporation act of April 7th, 1875 (Rev. p. 188 § 63), as modified by the act of March 31st, 1887 (P. L. of 1887 p. 99), was in force. The provisions of these statutes gave to the-laborers who had been in the employ of an insolvent corporation a lien upon the assets of the company for the whole of the-amount of wages which might be due them, respectively, for all services rendered before the date which the court adjudged to be-the time when the insolvency occurred.

The act of 1892 (P. L. of 1892 p. 426) directed that the workmen should have a first lien upon the assets of the insolvent company, but prescribed that this lien should be limited to the amount of wages owing for services rendered within two months next preceding the date when the proceedings in insolvency were-actually instituted.

This statute has been, in all its material elements, re-enacted' in the Corporation act of 1896. P. L. of 1896 p. 303 § 83... These workmen in this case, who earned wages as above stated, prior to 1892, insist that they should be given a preferential payment, under the acts of 1875 and 1877, for the full amount of those wages, and that the limitation of their preference, under the act of 1892, to wages earned two months next before the assumption of jurisdiction in insolvency, ought not to be applied to them, because they say they took their employment before-the passage of that act, at a time when the acts of 1875 and 1887 were in operation, and they insist that they acquired a vested right to this preference, which cannot be taken from them by subsequent legislation. This argument is based upon the-[469]*469.assumption that the preference given by the statute of 1875 became a part of this workman’s contract as soon as he accepted •employment, and that, during its continuance, he has always been entitled to the same preference, which could not be taken away by subsequent legislation.

An examination of the several statutes will show that the •employes’ lien has its origin in the taking of jurisdiction by a ■court to administer the assets of the insolvent company. The lien which the laborer has upon the assets of the employing ■company does not. attach coincidently with nor as attendant upon the making of the contract of employment, but only when all the prescribed statutory conditions which create that lien have come into being.

By section 63 of the act of 1875, it was only in case of the insolvency of the corporation that the workmen were given a lien on the assets of the corporation. The time when the lien attached was defined in the Bedford v. Newark Machine Co. Case, ubi supra, to have been the period when the insolvency •occurred.

The act of 1887 enlarged the class of workmen who might have the lien, and extended its benefits to include all claims for ¡services rendered before the date which the court adjudged to be .the time when insolvency occurred. The workmen had no lien under these acts against the assets of a solvent corporation engaged in the conduct of its ordinary business. They acquired none by their contract; it came as a pure gift, and only when insolvency occurred.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.J. Eq. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mingin-v-alva-glass-manufacturing-co-njch-1897.