People v. Williams

51 Misc. 383, 100 N.Y.S. 337
CourtNew York Court of Special Session
DecidedAugust 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 Misc. 383 (People v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Special Session primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Williams, 51 Misc. 383, 100 N.Y.S. 337 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Olmsted, J.

At twenty minutes after ten o’clock on the night of January 31, 1906, a deputy factory inspector visited the bookbinding establishment of the defendant, Ho. 437 Eleventh avenue, in the county of Hew York, and there found one Katie Mead, a female more than twenty-one years of age, and a citizen, employed in “ gathering,” to wit, assembling printed papers in the form of a book or pamphlet for binding purposes. The defendant, one of the proprietors of the establishment, was present and in charge of the work and the employees, and among them were several other women. There is no pretext that the building was insecure, the light bad, ventilation defective, or the general sanitary condition deficient. In these respects the deputy testified, “ It is1 the best factory of the kind in Hew York City.”

The information .upon which the defendant was tried and convicted, charges a misdemeanor under section 77, article 6, entitled “ Factories ” of the General Laws Relating to Labor (Laws 1897, chap. 415), in that he employed, permitted and suffered the said Katie Mead to work in that factory after nine o’clock at night on the date specified.

So much of the section as is pertinent to the present inquiry is as follows: Ho minor under the age of eighteen

years, "and no female shall be employed at labor in any factory in this state before six o’clock in the morning or after nine o’clock in the evening of any day, or for more than "ten hours in any one day, * * * except to make a shorter work day of the last day of the week; or more hours in any one week than will make an average of ten hours per day for the whole number of days so worked.”

[385]*385The remainder of the paragraph makes provision for a schedule of the hours per day during which each person shall be employed, and grants permission for them to begin work after six o’clock and to quit before nine o’clock, “ but they shall not otherwise be employed, permitted or suffered to work in such factory, except as stated therein.”

Section 384-1 of the Penal Code provides that: “Any person who violates or does not comply with (1) The provisions of article 6 of the labor law relating to factories * * * is guilty of a misdemeanor.”

The establishment of the defendant, where Katie Head was working, was a factory within the statutory definition, viz: “ The term ‘ factory,’ when used in this chapter, shall be construed do include also any mill, workshop or other manufacturing or business establishment where one or more persons are employed at labor.” Art. 1, § 2.

Ko issue of fact was raised on the trial. The People called the deputy inspector to prove the bare facts of employment after prohibited hours in a factory and defendant’s connection therewith and rested. The defendant offered no evidence and was thereupon found guilty. Upon a motion in arrest of judgment defendant’s counsel contends, first, that section 11 of the Labor Law, under which the conviction was had, is in contravention to the fourteenth amendment of the Constitution of the United States, in that it is an infringement of the privileges and immunities of the citizen of the United States and denies to women the equal protection of the laws; second, that it contravenes article 1, section 6, of the State Constitution, in that it deprives a citizen of her liberty and property without due process of law.

The question of the constitutionality of the statute having arisen in a way permitting an appeal by either side, it is as much a duty of this court to pass thereon as it is, upon evidence, to pronounce judgment of acquittal or conviction.

To labor and employ labor are inherent and inalienable • rights of our citizens, and cannot be taken away in whole or' in part unless upon the broad ground of public good, which must be apparent and cannot be predicated on legislative . dictum.

[386]*386It may be stated as a well-settled legal proposition that the right to labor and to contract for that labor is both a liberty and a property right; when, therefore, the Legislature enacts a statute such as that under consideration it must be admitted that it has infringed in the enactment the rights which are very, clearly accorded by the Constitution to the individual citizen. The People, therefore, are called upon to justify this invasion, and there is but one plea of justification, the statute was enacted to protect the comfort, welfare and safety of the whole people, and the individual must suffer this curtailment of his granted rights in the interest of the common good.

In the case under consideration the right of the employed and the right of the employer are equally involved. Nothing to the contrary appearing, it must be assumed that the woman was a willing worker for a willing employer, and that the result was mutually satisfactory and profitable. No argument is needed to show that both the employer and the employed have been restricted in their rights by the law in question. Was this restriction within the constitutional power of the Legislature? The provision of the State Constitution invoked by the defendant is: “ No person shall * * * be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” Art. 1, § 6.

A correlated section is section 1 of the same article: “ No member of this State shall be disfranchised, or deprived of any of the rights or privileges secured to any citizen thereof, unless by the law of the land, or the judgment of his peers.”

The Supreme Court of Illinois in Eitchie v. People, etc., 155 111. 98, held a law of that State which provided that “No female shall be'employed in a factory or workshop more than eight hours in any one day or forty-eight hours in any one week,” to be unconstitutional, because it violated the provisions of a section of the Illinois Constitution almost identical in language with that of article 1, section 6, of the New York State Constitution.

No case exactly in point with that at bar has been cited by counsel. The attention of the court has been called to cases [387]*387decided in the States of Massachusetts, Illinois (Ritchie v. People, etc., supra), Nebraska and Washington. In these cases the issue was the constitutionality of statutes limiting the number of hours in any one day or week during which women might be employed at labor in a factory. That is not the issue here. While the statute under consideration fixes a limitation as to daily and weekly employment, this-action is brought under a provision which prohibits the employment of women after nine o’clock p. m. and before six o’clock in the morning, and the only evidence of such employment in this case is that at the hour of twenty minutes past ten p. m. a woman was found so- employed in the defendant’s factory. The information of the district attorney charges the employment even less explicitly. How long the woman worked on the day in question, how long she worked that week or how many hours of labor she had contracted to perform on the night she was found working in the factory—none of these things appears. The sole fact before us is that a woman was employed in factory work for a few minutes during hours when the statute declares it was unlawful to so employ her.

The first legislative enactment in this State looking to the protection of women employed in factories was chapter 409, Laws of 1886. This statute formed the basis of what is now the Factory Law of the State. Prior thereto the law-making body had passed acts (Laws of 1867, chap. 856, and Laws of 1870, chap.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Misc. 383, 100 N.Y.S. 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-williams-nyspecsessct-1906.