Robert T. Winzinger, Inc. v. Management Recruiters of Bucks County, Inc.

668 F. Supp. 389, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7492
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedAugust 17, 1987
DocketCiv. 86-4170 (GEB)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 668 F. Supp. 389 (Robert T. Winzinger, Inc. v. Management Recruiters of Bucks County, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert T. Winzinger, Inc. v. Management Recruiters of Bucks County, Inc., 668 F. Supp. 389, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7492 (D.N.J. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

BROWN, District Judge.

This declaratory judgment action was brought originally in state court and removed on the basis of diversity of citizenship. Plaintiff is a construction company located in Burlington County, New Jersey. Defendants are an employment agency and its president, and are located in Newtown, Pennsylvania.

Defendant agency solicited plaintiff’s business, advertising its services and specific persons for hire. A series of conversations then took place between the parties. Plaintiff denies that defendants ever mentioned that they charged a fee for their services. Subsequently, on June 2, 1986, defendants sent one William Forbes to plaintiff to interview for the position of estimator. He was eventually hired; defendants then requested payment of $11,-000 for their services and threatened to sue. Instead, plaintiff filed this action, and received temporary restraints, pending a show cause hearing, enjoining defendants from enforcing the alleged contract in any judicial proceeding. The action was removed, the show cause hearing never took place, and the restraints have been dissolved.

Plaintiff now moves for summary judgment, claiming that the alleged contract is void and unenforceable because defendants are not licensed as an employment agency in New Jersey.

§ 34:8-26 states in pertinent part:

No person shall either directly or indirectly open conduct or maintain an employment agency or perform any of the functions of an employment agency without first obtaining such license or licenses as is or are required by the provisions of this act.

The provision further provides for civil penalties to be levied by the Attorney General against unlicensed agencies. § 34:8-26.1 gives the Attorney General power to conduct an investigation.

Defendants argue that the statute applies only to employment agencies conducting business in New Jersey. They state that they do not have any employees, agents, representatives, officers, property, telephone listing, or advertising in New *391 Jersey, but admit that they actively solicited plaintiff’s business by phone and mail on numerous occasions.

Defendants urge that the statute must be read in its entirety and point to other licensing provisions which refer to “the county” or “the municipality” where the agency is or will be located. They argue that the state’s enforcement machinery would be overtaxed if the Attorney General had to conduct the various licensing procedures. There is no New Jersey case law construing the applicability of the statute to out-of-state agencies.

Alternatively, defendants argue that if the statute does apply to foreign employment agencies, it is unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution.

The State of New Jersey has intervened in defense of the constitutionality of the statute and its applicability to defendants, and in support of plaintiff’s summary judgment motion. Our analysis is as follows: first, does the Employment Agency Act apply to foreign agencies like defendant; second, does the statute violate the Commerce Clause; and third, if the statute is constitutional does defendant’s failure to adhere to it render the contract unenforceable?

I. There is nothing in the language of the statute which precludes its application to out-of-state agencies. The definition in § 34:8-24 applies to the defendant agency, given the evidence which we have:

“Employment agency” means and includes the business of procuring or offering to procure help or employment, or the giving of information as to where help or employment may be procured, whether the business is conducted in a building or on the street or elsewhere; or the business of keeping an employment bureau, nurses’ registry, or booking agency for procuring engagements for performing artists, or other agency or office for procuring work or employment for persons, where a fee or privilege is exacted, charged or received directly or indirectly for procuring or assisting or promising to procure employment, work, enagement or a situation of any kind, or for procuring or providing help or promising to provide help for any person, whether such fee is collected from the applicant for employment or the applicant for help, or whether the application for help or employment is made directly or indirectly by either the prospective employer or the prospective employee or by any person acting to secure either help or employment for the prospective employer or the prospective employee. “Employment agency” shall not include any temporary help service firm. .

The licensing requirement of § 34:8-26 is not ambiguous. The statute’s emphasis is on the activity, not the location of the agency. In addition, out-of-state employment agencies form no part of the list of entities excluded from the statute in § 34:8-25. Moreover, even if it could be said that the act is ambiguous, any such ambiguity would have to be interpreted to accomplish the legislative purpose. Eagle Truck Transport, Inc. v. Board of Review, 29 N.J. 280, 289-290, 148 A.2d 822 (1959). Clearly the statute is a consumer protection statute. It would be incongruous for the Legislature to have desired the statute to apply to New Jersey agencies, while allowing foreign agencies to avoid its requirements while providing the same services to New Jersey consumers.

The Attorney General, who is charged with enforcing the statute, has consistently interpreted it to have application to foreign employment agencies doing business in New Jersey since at least 1975, when he rendered an opinion so stating. This consistent interpretation of the statute by the agency charged with its enforcement, although not conclusive, is entitled to be given great weight by this Court. Self v. Board of Review, 91 N.J. 453, 457, 453 A.2d 170 (1982); Peper v. Princeton University Board of Trustees, 77 N.J. 55, 69-70, 389 A.2d 465 (1978).

The Attorney General also notes that several of the statute’s provisions which the defendants argue would be unmanageable if applied to foreign agencies have already been made manageable (such as *392 not strictly enforcing the requirement of character references from New Jersey residents), or can easily be made manageable (such as having agency records sent to the Attorney General or kept with a registered agent in New Jersey). Moreover, at least two foreign employment agencies are in fact presently licensed in New Jersey.

Defendants’ contention that they do not conduct business in New Jersey is clearly unsupported by the facts revealed through discovery. Defendants have solicited over 100 New Jersey firms in the past year and plan to continue to do so. They have placed people with at least three New Jersey businesses. They actively engage in telephone and mail solicitation in New Jersey. Their contacts with plaintiff during the transaction which forms the basis for this suit were substantial. This cannot be considered an isolated “single transaction”. Cf

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668 F. Supp. 389, 1987 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-t-winzinger-inc-v-management-recruiters-of-bucks-county-inc-njd-1987.