N. H. Lyons & Co. v. Corsi

143 N.E.2d 392, 3 N.Y.2d 60, 163 N.Y.S.2d 677, 1957 N.Y. LEXIS 977
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 143 N.E.2d 392 (N. H. Lyons & Co. v. Corsi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. H. Lyons & Co. v. Corsi, 143 N.E.2d 392, 3 N.Y.2d 60, 163 N.Y.S.2d 677, 1957 N.Y. LEXIS 977 (N.Y. 1957).

Opinions

Desmond, J.

Plaintiff operates, in New York City, 20 cheap (350 to 600 per night) men’s lodging houses out of a total of about 60 such establishments on the Bowery and in other similar localities in the city. This suit was brought to have declared invalid and to restrain the enforcement as against plaintiff of mandatory wage order No. 6-a established by respondent State Industrial Commissioner in 1947 for the hotel industry. The order contains a definition of ‘' hotel industry ’ ’ which in terms includes “lodging houses ” and the commissioner has announced his intention to enforce the order against “ flop houses ” such as those conducted by plaintiff although no women are employed therein. The commissioner’s justification for this is section 663-a of the Labor Law which is part of article 19 and is quoted below. Article 19 is headed “ Minimum Wage [64]*64Standards for Women and Minors ” and contains section 650 which recites the factual background of the legislation and section 651 which states it to be the public policy of the State of New York that women and minors should, receive wages sufficient to provide adequate maintenance and to protect their health. Although in terms and purpose article 19 is for the protection of women and minors only, the Legislature considered it appropriate, in order to strengthen this protection for women and minors, to enact section 663-a which is headed “Supplementary protection ’ ’ and in applicable part is as follows: “ To effectuate the aim of this article and to protect the minimum wage standards and rates provided for women and minors, no male twenty-one years of age or over shall be employed in an occupation at less than the minimum standards or rates of wages fixed for women and minors in such occupation under a minimum wage order.” Section 663-a (and a predecessor section to the same effect) has been in effect since 1944 although other parts of article 19 were enacted in 1937.

The idea back of section 663-a is plain enough. The Legislature, intent on providing wage and hour protection for employed women and minors, realized that this objective could not be realized if men workers could take the same jobs at wages lower than those set for women and children. If that kind of wage competition between men and women were not eliminated the result of a minimum wage order for women might be that their last state would be worse than their first. They would be out of jobs. Thus, section 663-a, although it deals directly with wages of men rather than of women, has a reasonable relation to the enforcement of the general policy of protecting women and minors in industry. Mary Lincoln Candies v. Department of Labor (289 N. Y. 262) is interesting in this connection. That case held to be valid so much of a wage order for women in the candy industry as not only fixed a minimum hourly rate for women employees but required an employer to pay that minimum hourly rate for a minimum number of hours per week. There was and is nothing in article 19 which specifically authorized the guarantee of a number of hours of work but, nonetheless, we said (in Mary Lincoln Candies) that the candy industry order validly mandated a minimum number of hours for women workers since such a provision was reasonably necessary to carry opt the statutory purpose of guaranteeing to women [65]*65workers a living wage. The present case is stronger for the State than was Mary Lincoln Candies (supra) since the prohibition here against men working for less than the minimum wages fixed for women and children is not in the order but in the statute itself.

Appellant says that section 663-a is unconstitutional as interfering with freedom of contract. Certainly, that argument as to minimum wage legislation for women and children can no longer be made since West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish (300 U. S. 379) and Mary Lincoln Candies v. Department of Labor (289 N. Y. 262, supra) in this court (see, also, People v. Beck, 288 N. Y. 569, cert. denied 317 U. S. 696). But, says plaintiff-appellant, section 663-a is not a minimum wage act for women and children but is an unconstitutional general minimum wage act for men. The first answer to that argument of unconstitutiqnality is that section 663-a is not such a general statute since its prohibition runs against the employment of men in certain regulated industries at wages lower than those fixed for women in the same industries. In the second place, it is by no means clear that a State general minimum wage act for men would be unconstitutional. In United States v. Darby (312 U. S. 100) which held valid the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, Justice Stone for a unanimous court said at page 125 that since West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish (supra) it is no longer open to question that the fixing of a minimum wage is within the legislative power and that the bare fact of its exercise is not a denial of due process under the Fifth more than under the Fourteenth Amendment”. At another place on the same page in the Darby opinion Justice Stone wrote: Similarly the statute is not objectionable because applied alike to both men and women ”. In other parts of the Darby opinion the Supreme Court was talking about the constitutional question of Federal power to bar from interstate commerce articles produced in the States at substandard wages, but at the places quoted (in the Darby opinion) the Supreme Court was addressing itself to a due process like that made in the present case. The Supreme Court’s answer to that argument in Darby was that a minimum wage fixing law is within the legislative power of the States and not objectionable because applied to men as well as to women (see, more recently, Lincoln Union v. Northwestern Co., 335 U. S. 525, 536).

[66]*66Actually, appellant at one point in its brief seems to concede the power of the State to pass even a general wage law for men but points out that this wage order as applied to men contains no safeguards of notice, hearing, decisions of wage boards, etc., such as are required by article 19 in connection with fixing the wages for women and children. This raises no constitutional question. The wage board before making its recommendations to the commissioner as to minima must give notice and hold hearings, etc. Account must be taken of the sums necessary for adequate maintenance and health of the woman worker, the value of her services and the wages paid in the State for similar work (Labor Law, §§ 650, 656). All these procedures were had in the present case as to women and children. Then the board and the commissioner from the testimony at these hearings determined what would be a proper minimum wage for women in the industry. That wage was by the statute’s own command made applicable, however, as a minimum for men working in the same occupation. Surely, the Legislature could take notice that the needs of men for maintenance and health are not less than that of women and that the value of the services of men and the wages ordinarily paid to men in a given industry are not less than those of women.

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Bluebook (online)
143 N.E.2d 392, 3 N.Y.2d 60, 163 N.Y.S.2d 677, 1957 N.Y. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-h-lyons-co-v-corsi-ny-1957.