Salla v. County of Monroe

399 N.E.2d 909, 48 N.Y.2d 514, 423 N.Y.S.2d 878, 1979 N.Y. LEXIS 2425
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 29, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 399 N.E.2d 909 (Salla v. County of Monroe) 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
Salla v. County of Monroe, 399 N.E.2d 909, 48 N.Y.2d 514, 423 N.Y.S.2d 878, 1979 N.Y. LEXIS 2425 (N.Y. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Fuchsberg, J.

We hold that section 222 of the Labor Law, which mandates preferential employment of New York citizens on public works projects, offends the privileges and immunities clause of section 2 of article IV of the United States Constitution.1

In broad and unqualified terms, section 222 commands that, in the construction of public works, the State, its subdivisions and the contractors they, employ must give "preference in employment * * * to citizens of the state of New York who have been residents of the state for at least twelve consecutive [519]*519months immediately prior to the commencement of their new employment”. The statute comes before us in the following factual and procedural context:

Plaintiffs David S. Salla and Robert W. Keppley, residents of Pennsylvania, are employed as equipment operators by Lisbon Contractors, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation engaging almost exclusively in the installation of public sanitary sewers. One of the largest firms in its highly specialized industry, Lisbon carries on its activities throughout the east coast, about 40% of its work being done away from its home State. It maintains a permanent crew of employees whose experience, ranging in duration in individual cases from between 3 to 16 years, averages 6 years overall. For many employees the wide-ranging location of Lisbon’s job sites has made it necessary for them to shift from one temporary abode to another as Lisbon’s projects move them from State to State.

Lisbon was awarded a contract to construct a sanitary sewer line for Monroe County and its Division of Pure Waters. Seventy-five percent of the project’s funding came from Federal moneys allocated to implementation of the Environmental Protection and Pure Water Acts of the United States. Salla and Keppley, who were assigned to the Monroe project, immediately entered into a one-year lease for local living quarters. Soon thereafter, their employment terminated because Lisbon found it necessary to accede to the county’s insistence on strict enforcement of section 222, which had been incorporated as a term of the contract. The individual employees have alleged that, because of job scheduling conflicts, they would find themselves without work for a period of four to five months.

Salla and Keppley, together with Lisbon, then brought this action, in which they sought a declaration that section 222 is unconstitutional and an injunction against its enforcement.2 Pursuant to CPLR 1012 (subd [b]), the Attorney-General intervened on behalf of the State in support of the statute’s constitutionality. There being no dispute as to the essential facts, on a motion for summary judgment, Special [520]*520Term, finding support for its determination not only in section 2 of article IV but in both the Federal Constitution’s commerce clause and its Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause as well, granted the requested relief. In turn, the Appellate Division, premising its own conclusion on the privileges and immunities and commerce clauses alone, affirmed (64 AD2d 437). For the ensuing reasons, we uphold its determination, but we find it unnecessary to go beyond the privileges and immunities clause.

Since the circumstances surrounding the adoption of the constitutional clause in question will help clarify the scope of the protection it was intended to afford, we start our analysis with a brief review of its history. Section 2 of article IV was born of more than the founding fathers’ commitment to the creation of a Nation that recognized the universality of "natural rights”.3 By its adoption, the architects of the Constitution also sought to deal with a more specific and immediate problem. For, once the unifying influence of the British Crown had been swept away by the Revolution, strong strains of separatism had emerged among the former colonies. Threatened with the prospect that the treasured independence each of the individual States had now achieved might lead them to adopt highly protectionist economic policies, careful provision to avoid such an eventuality was made as early as in the drafting of the Articles of the Confederation: "The better to secure and perpetuate mutual friendship and intercourse among the people of the different states in this union, the free inhabitants of each of these states * * * shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of free citizens in the several states; and the people of each state shall have free ingress and regress to and from any other State, and shall enjoy therein all the privileges of trade and commerce, subject to the same duties, impositions and restrictions, as the inhabitants thereof respectively”. (9 Journal of the Continental Congress. [Govt Printing Office, 1906], pp 908, 909.)

The importance ascribed to the right to travel and to pursue a livelihood or to otherwise engage in trade and commerce is seen from the juxtaposition of these rights with the "privileges and immunities of free citizens”. For "privileges and immunities of free citizens” embraced no less than those "natural rights” thought to inhere in the very concept of [521]*521civilized government, such as the right to "enjoyment of life and liberty” and the pursuit of "happiness and safety”, the denial of which by any of the States would have been unthinkable to the revolutionary theoreticians (Blake v McClung, 172 US 239, 248-249; see, generally, Antieau, Modern Constitutional Law [1969 ed], §§ 9:13, 9:14).

It is a measure of the unanimity that prevailed on this subject that Alexander Hamilton dubbed it the very "basis of the Union” (The Federalist No. 80). So, when the Constitution itself was penned, unlike those provisions whose detail reflects the controversy and compromise that preceded their adoption, the privileges and immunities clause was set out in broad, concise and unqualified terms. (See, generally, 3 Farr and, Records of the Federal Convention of 1787 [1911 ed], at p 112; 5 Elliot’s Debates on Adoption of Federal Constitution [2d ed, 1836], at p 487; Madison, The Federalist No. 42). Ironically, it was this lack of specificity that later would make it possible for courts to be persuaded, on a seemingly ad hoc basis, to introduce exceptions to the clause’s literal application.

For example, it was held not to interdict a State’s conditioning of the right of a nonresident to bring suit on the posting of security for court costs (see Blake v McClung, 172 US 239, 256-257, supra), its exclusion of noncitizens from access to State-owned oyster beds (Corfield v Coryell, 6 Fed Cas 546), or its requirement that any employee of a nonresident business be deemed an agent for the receipt of process (Doherty & Co. v Goodman, 294 US 623). But the clause was applied to strike down statutes under which out-of-State merchants alone were required to take out licenses (Ward v Maryland, 12 Wall [79 US] 418), under which citizen creditors were given a preference over nonresidents in the distribution of assets of local insolvent businesses (Blake v McClung, supra), under which property of noncitizens was taxed at a higher rate or in a different manner than that of citizens (Matter of Stanford, 126 Cal 112) and under which barbers’ licenses were restricted to residents (Templar v State Bd. of Examiners of Barbers, 131 Mich 254).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

GOVATOS v. MURPHY
D. New Jersey, 2024
Clement v. Durban
32 N.Y.3d 337 (New York Court of Appeals, 2018)
Munnelly v. Newkirk
262 A.D.2d 781 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1999)
A.L. Blades & Sons, Inc. v. Yerusalim
121 F.3d 865 (Third Circuit, 1997)
Lichtenstein v. Emerson
171 Misc. 2d 933 (New York Supreme Court, 1997)
1st Westco Corp. v. School Dist. of Philadelphia
811 F. Supp. 204 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1993)
Winkler v. Spinnato
134 A.D.2d 66 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1987)
Callanan Industries, Inc. v. White
118 A.D.2d 167 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1986)
Robison v. Francis
713 P.2d 259 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1986)
State v. Antonich
694 P.2d 60 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1985)
Opinion of the Justices to the Senate
469 N.E.2d 821 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1984)
People Ex Rel. Bernardi v. Leary Construction Co.
464 N.E.2d 1019 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1984)
Informal Opinion No.
New York Attorney General Reports, 1983
Laborers Local Union No. 374 v. Felton Construction Co.
654 P.2d 67 (Washington Supreme Court, 1982)
Massachusetts Council of Construction Employers, Inc. v. Mayor of Boston
425 N.E.2d 346 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1981)
White River Paper Co. v. Ashmont Tissue, Inc.
110 Misc. 2d 373 (Civil Court of the City of New York, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
399 N.E.2d 909, 48 N.Y.2d 514, 423 N.Y.S.2d 878, 1979 N.Y. LEXIS 2425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salla-v-county-of-monroe-ny-1979.