People Ex Rel. Price v. Sheffield Farms-Slawson-Decker Co.

121 N.E. 474, 225 N.Y. 25, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 814
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by136 cases

This text of 121 N.E. 474 (People Ex Rel. Price v. Sheffield Farms-Slawson-Decker Co.) 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
People Ex Rel. Price v. Sheffield Farms-Slawson-Decker Co., 121 N.E. 474, 225 N.Y. 25, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 814 (N.Y. 1918).

Opinions

Cardozo, J.

) The defendant, a corporation, has been convicted of violating section 162 of the Labor Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 31). That section provides that “ no child under the age of fourteen years shall be employed or permitted to work in or in connection with any mercantile * *• * establishment specified in the preceding section.” Violation of the Labor Law is a misdemeanor, and is punishable, if a first offense, by a fine of not less than twenty nor more than fifty dollars (Penal Law, sec. 1275). J Heavier fines and even imprisonment may follow a repetition of the offense (Penal Law, sec. 1275). In this case the fine imposed was $20. The question is whether there is any evidence of guilt.

The defendant is engaged in the sale of milk. It employs one hundred and twenty-five drivers to make deliveries to its customers. . In February, 1917, one of the state’s inspectors found a boy of thirteen years assisting in a driver’s work. The driver,' one Schmidt, employed the boy and paid him. Schmidt’s purpose *28 seems to have been to prevent the theft of milk bottles, and thus to benefit the defendant, whose practice had been to stand the loss from thefts itself. .None the less, \Zhe knew that his conduct, whether helpful to the defendant or not, was forbidden by its rules. The rule was that drivers, under pain of dismissal, were not to allow any person not in the employ of the company to assist them in any way or to ride on their wagons. But the defendant’s duty did not end with the mere promulgation of a rule (Larkin v. N. Y. Tel. Co., 220 N. Y. 27, 32). There was some duty of enforcement. The defendant was not blind to the fact that the rule was often broken. Word had often come to it before.that some of its drivers were employing boys to help them. ' It sent out its inspectors “may be once a week or a month” to discover and report delinquents. Offenders discovered had been reprimanded, but not discharged. One driver, who had been prosecuted by the People, was still, though. convicted, in the defendant’s service. For six months the boy employed by Schmidt had been doing the same work. The inference is permissible that there was no adequate .system either of repression or of detection. We must say whether on such facts a fine may lawfully be imposed.^] There are two statutes to be construed: the-Labor Law, which imposes the.duty, and the Penal Law, which attaches the penalty. The Labor Law, standing by itself, is not a criminal statute. The purpose of most of its provisions is not penal, but remedial. But a separate statute (Penal Law, sec. 1275) supplements its mandates and prohibitions by attaching penal consequences. For many years, they were attached to the violation of certain enumerated provisions and those only (PenaL Code, sec. 384-1, added by L. 1897, ch. 416, sec. 3, and amended by L. 1903, ch. 380, sec. 1; L. 1907, ch. 506, sec. 2; Penal Law, sec. 1275; as enacted by L. 1909, ch. 88). Included in that enumeration were the provisions relating to *29 factories and the employment of children therein; those relating to the manufacture of "articles in tenements; and those relating to mercantile establishments and the employment therein of women and children (L. 1897, ch. 416). But an amendment passed in 1913 (L. 1913, ch. 349, sec. 1) has imported into the domain of the law of crimes a vast, body of rules which grew up in other fields of law. LThe statute (Penal Law, sec. 1275) now contains the sweeping declaration that any person who violates or does not comply with any provision of the labor law, any provision of the industrial code, any rule or regulation of the industrial board of the department of labor, or any lawful order of the commissioner of labor,” shall be guilty of a crime. 3l (See also second report of the Factory Investigating Commission, January 15, 1913, vol. 1, p. 50.) These penal consequences, imposed by a separate statute, do not of necessity affect the meaning that the Labor Law would have without them. The scope of the duty is one problem; the extent to which the breach may be visited with punishment, another, j At the outset, therefore, we turn to the Labor Law itself. Section 162 is directed primarily against the employer, and only secondarily against others as they may aid and abet him (People v. Taylor, 192 N. Y. 398, 400). He must neither create nor suffer in his business the prohibited conditions. The command is addressed to him. Since the duty is his, he may not escape it by delegating it to others (People v. Taylor, supra). He breaks the command of the statute if he employs the child himself. He breaks it equally if the child is employed by agents to whom he has delegated his own power to prevent ” (Lord Alverstone, C. J., in Strutt v. Clift, 1911, 1 K. B. 1, 6, 7, and Emary v. Nolloth, 1903, 2 K. B. 264). What is true of employment, must be true of the - sufferance of employment (Bond v. Evans, L. R. 21 Q. B. D. 249). The personal duty rests *30 on the employer to inquire into the conditions prevailing in his business. He does not rid himself of that duty because the extent of the business may preclude his personal supervision, and compel reliance on subordinates. He must then stand or fall with those whom he selects to act for him/) He is in the same plight, if they are delinquent, as if he had failed to abate a nuisance on his land (The Queen v. Stephens, L. R. 1 .Q. B. 702; Tenement House Department N. Y. City v. McDevitt, 215 N. Y. 160, 167, 168), or had failed to furnish a safe place of work (Labor Law, sec. 200). It is not an instance of respondeat superior. It is the case of the non-performance of a non-delegable duty (Hankins v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 142 N. Y. 416, 420). There are a host of other provisions of the Labor Law where the duty must be held personal, or we nullify the statute (Secs. 69, 79, 81, 83a, 83b, 94).

The employer, therefore, is chargeable with the sufferance of illegal conditions by the delegates of his power. But to say that does not tell us how sufferance may be implied. We do not construe the statute with all the rigor urged by counsel for the People. Not every casual service rendered by a child at the instance of a servant is “ suffered by the master. If a traveling salesman employed by a mercantile establishment in New York gives a dime to á boy of thirteen who has carried his sample case in Buffalo, the absent employer is not brought within the grip of the statute. Sufferance as here prohibited implies knowledge or the opportunity through reasonable diligence to acquire knowledge."^This presupposes in most cases a fair measure at least of continuity and permanence (Tenement House Dept. N. Y. City v. McDevitt, supra, p. 164). But the duty to inquire existing, there is no safety, in ignorance if proper inquiry would avail (Purtell v. Phila. & R. Coal & Iron Co., 256 Ill. 110, 117). Whatever reasonable supervision by oneself or *31 one’s agents would discover and prevent, that, if continued, will be taken as suffered.

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Bluebook (online)
121 N.E. 474, 225 N.Y. 25, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-price-v-sheffield-farms-slawson-decker-co-ny-1918.