State of Arizona v. Ash

87 P.2d 270, 53 Ariz. 197, 1939 Ariz. LEXIS 194
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1939
DocketCivil No. 4076.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 P.2d 270 (State of Arizona v. Ash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Arizona v. Ash, 87 P.2d 270, 53 Ariz. 197, 1939 Ariz. LEXIS 194 (Ark. 1939).

Opinions

LOCKWOOD, J.

This is an action by O. A. Ash, hereinafter called plaintiff, on behalf of himself and some forty-one others, against the State of Arizona, *199 hereinafter called defendant, to recover wages for services performed by him and his assignors for the defendant at the Arizona state prison. It is alleged, in substance, that the services performed by plaintiff and each, except one, of his assignors were as ‘ ‘ a guard, ’ ’ while the other assignor’s services were performed as “prison matron”; that they had been paid for such services an amount less than that fixed as the legal per diem wage for such work by the Arizona state highway commission, under the provisions of section 1350, Revised Code 1928, as amended by chapter 12 of the Session Laws of 1933, commonly referred to as the “Minimum Wage Law,” and that the amount which they were seeking to recover was the difference between the sum so paid and the amount to which they were entitled under such law.

The defendant demurred to the complaint as not setting up a cause of action in favor of plaintiff either on his own or on any of the assigned claims, and the demurrer being overruled and defendant declining to plead further, judgment was rendered for plaintiff as prayed for, and the matter was brought before us on appeal.

The sole question for our consideration is whether or not plaintiff set up a cause of action in his complaint, and we think this depends upon whether plaintiff and his assignors come within the terms of the Minimum Wage Law as unskilled manual laborers. If they do, they are entitled to recover, for the demurrer admits that they performed services for the length of time set up in the complaint, and that they were paid for such services less than the per diem fixed by the Minimum Wage Law for unskilled manual laborers under the act, in the amount asked for.

Section 1350, as amended, reads so far as material as follows:

*200 “Hours Of Labor On Public Work; Wages-. Eight hours, and no more, shall constitute a lawful day’s work for all persons doing manual or mechanical labor employed by or on behalf of the state, or of any of its political subdivisions, except in an extraordinary emergency, in time of war, or for the protection of property or human life; in such cases the persons working to exceed eight hours each day shall be paid on the basis of eight hours constituting a day’s work. Not less than the minimum per diem wag*es fixed by the state highway commission for manual or mechanical labor performed for said commission or for contractors performing work under contract with said commission, shall be paid to persons doing manual or mechanical labor so employed by or on behalf of the state or of any of its political subdivisions. ...” (Italics ours.)

It appears that the only persons covered by the act are those who are “doing manual or mechanical labor” and naturally the question is, what did the legislature mean by those terms? We have had them under consideration in the case of Arizona Eastern R. R. Co. v. Matthews, 20 Ariz. 282, 288, 180 Pac. 159, 161, 7 A. L. R. 1149. Therein we said:

“ ‘Mechanical labor’ is labor performed by a mechanic or ‘one who practices any mechanic art; one skilled or employed in shaping or uniting materials, as wood materials, etc., into any kind of structure, machine or other object requiring the use of tools or other objects, an artisan.’ Webster.
‘ ‘ Taken in connection with the context, we think ‘mechanical labor’ is such skilled labor as is necessarily employed by employers in making and repairing tools and instruments used in the operation of the business. It is manual labor, but of the skilled kind.
“While the words ‘manual labor’ might be construed to mean clerical work, we do not think any such meaning attaches to them as they are used in the context. . . .
“When we speak of a person doing manual labor, the mind is instantly directed to some kind of toil in *201 which the physical predominates the mental. The words would never call to mind the office man engaged in keeping books or making out bills or statements or operating a typewriter. ...”

What are the duties of a guard at the state prison? The very name indicates the primary and principal duty. The word “guard” is defined by Webster as “a man or body of men stationed to protect or control a person or position; a sentinel; ‘the guard which kept the door/ ” and this definition is in perfect harmony with the ordinary understanding of the duties of a guard at a state prison. In other words, their work is to watch the inmates of the prison, and see that they do not escape. Anything else they may do is purely incidental to this primary duty. It is obvious that such work is not “mechanical labor” within any reasonable meaning of the term. But is it “manual labor”? Construed literally, of course, “manual labor” means any work done with the hand, and it may be argued that the guard who restrains a prisoner from escaping is using his hands, either directly or through the instrumentality of weapons, to make such restraint effectual. But if this meaning is to be given to the phrase “manual labor” as used in the act, then almost every occupation of man falls within that term. The dentist who cares for the teeth, the surgeon who performs a major operation, the stenographer and typist who has written this opinion, are all engaged in work which is literally as manual as that of the ditch digger, and yet no one would assume for a moment that by the phrase “manual labor” in the Minimum Wage Act, it was intended by the legislature to include any of these occupations, or the hundred of others similar thereto.

The minimum wage scale prepared by the highway commission under the law does not include a single occupation which, by any reasonable construction, *202 could be considered analogous to that of an armed guard at a state institution. An examination of this scale will show tbe practical construction wbicb has always been put upon the law by the commission. It covers only those occupations wherein it is the ordinary custom to compensate for services on a per diem basis, and not upon a monthly or annual one. It will be noted on a careful examination of the language of the act that the employees protected thereby are not only defined as mechanical or manual laborers, but the compensation paid them is expressly stated to be “wages.” The term “wages” as distinct from “salaries” has, especially in recent years, acquired a specific meaning. "Webster defines “salary” as follows:

“The recompense or consideration paid, or stipulated to be paid, to a person at regular intervals for services, especially to holders of official, executive, or clerical positions; fixed compensation regularly paid, as by the year, quarter, month or week; stipend — now often distinguished from wages.” And wages are said to be, “Pay given for labor, usually manual or mechanical, at short stated intervals, as distinguished from salaries or fees.”

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Bluebook (online)
87 P.2d 270, 53 Ariz. 197, 1939 Ariz. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-arizona-v-ash-ariz-1939.