State v. Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Co.

17 L.R.A. 856, 25 A. 246, 18 R.I. 16, 1892 R.I. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 3, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 17 L.R.A. 856 (State v. Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Brown & Sharpe Manufacturing Co., 17 L.R.A. 856, 25 A. 246, 18 R.I. 16, 1892 R.I. LEXIS 1 (R.I. 1892).

Opinion

Eogees, J.

In this case constitutional questions were certified to the Supreme Court under Pub. Stat. E. I. cap. 220, §§ 1-9, by the District Court of the Sixth Judicial District. In the District Court complaint was brought charging’ the defendant with' violating the provisions of Pub. Laws E. I. cap. 918, of March 4, 1891, known as the Weekly Payment Law,” and upon the examination thereon the defendant moved.that the complaint be quashed and dismissed because said chapter was unconstitutional and void, being in conflict with the constitution of the United States, especially with art. 5 and art. 14, section 1 of the amendments thereof, and also with the constitution of Rhode Island, and particularly with art. 1, sections 2, 10, 16, thereof.

The District Court overruled the motion, and having adjudged the defendant probably guilty has certified the questions involved in it to this court for decision.

Chapter 918 of the Public Laws, entitled “ An Act Providing for Weekly Payments to Employés of Corporations,” was passed March 4, 1891, and is as follows:

“Section 1. Every corporation, other than religious, literary or charitable-corporations,'and every incorporated city, but not including towns, shall pay weekly the employés engaged in its- business the wages earned by them to within nine days of the date of such payment, unless prevented by inevitable casualty: provided,.however, that if at any time of payment any employé shall be absent from his regular place of labor, he shall be entitled to said payment at any time thereafter on demand.
Sect. 2. Any corporation violating any of the provisions of this act shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars, one-half thereof to the use of the complainant and the other half to the use of the State : Provided, complaint for such violation is made within thirty days from the date thereof.
Sect. 3. This act shall take effect on and after the first day of May, A. D. 1891.”

*18 The defendant corporation was chartered by an act of the G-eneral Assembly, passed at its May Session, 1868, “for the purpose of manufacturing machinery, and working in iron and other materials and for the transaction of other business connected therewith;..........with all the powers and privileges and subject to all the duties and liabilities set forth in chapters 125 and 128 of the Revised Statutes, and of any act in amendment thereof or in addition thereto.”

Chapter 125 of the Revised Statutes was entitled “Provisions respecting corporations in general,” and the last section thereof, which still remains in force, reads as follows : “All acts of incorporation hereafter granted,, may be amended or. repealed at the will of the General Assembly, unless express provision be made therein to the contrary.” There was no express provision in the defendant’s act of incorporation to the contrary.

Chapter 128 of the Revised Statutes was entitled, “Of Manufacturing Corporations,” and contained general provisions relating to such corporations.

It is agreed that the defendant’s charter is part of the record of the case, and that at the trial in the District Court the defendant offered to prove that subsequent to the passage of chapter 918 of the Public Laws it made a contract with its employés, including the complainant Curtis, to pay them otherwise than weekly and in accordance with the terms of said last mentioned chapter, and that the court excluded such evidence.

After an oral argument of this case, time was allowed for filing briefs which were to be submitted to all the members of the court, and in addition to the briefs filed by the counsel for the complainant and defendant respectively, two long and elaborate briefs favoring the constitutionality of the act have been filed by the permission of the court and by consent of the complainant’s counsel; one, in the words of its title, “in the interest of the wage earners whose interests are affected by said act”; and the other by counsel signing himself, “Counsel for Intervening Labor Organizations.”

*19 The brief filed ‘£ in the interest of the wage earners ” calls onr “attention,” in the words of the brief, “to sections 1 and 2 of chapter 220 of the Public Statutes, not for the purpose of raising a technical objection to the consideration of this cause, hut in order that the point may not be subsequently urged, and that the decision may be final and conclusive,” that the District Court “had no jurisdiction to try and determine the cause, and could only bind over the defendant to the grand jury, and so far as the record in this cause goes it does not appear that even that was done.” In other words, the point of the suggestion is that no judgment within the meaning of cap. 220 had been rendered in the District Court against the party raising the constitutional question, and consequently there was nothing that could properly be certified to this court.

We do not think the point well taken. The first nine sections of cap. 220, providing for certifying constitutional questions to the Supreme Court, were intended to provide a summary method for the authoritative decision of such questions, and for stich decision to substitute the Supreme Court for the inferior court. After such decision the cause was to be remanded to the inferior tribunal for its further action. It was not the final judgment or sentence of such tribunal that was to be rendered before the cause was certified to the Supreme Court, as is manifest from the language of sections 6 and 9. A judgment is the determination of the law as the result of proceedings instituted in a court of justice. In the case at bar, the District Court, as appears by its endorsement upon the papers, “adjudges the respondent corporation to be probably guilty,” and thereupon certified the case to the Supreme Court upon the question of the constitutionality of the act under which the complaint was made. When the case is remanded to the District Court, that tribunal will either discharge the defendant or bind it over as the decision of this court' upon the constitutional question may make propN- We are of the opinion that there was a sufficient judgi/fnt within the meaning of section 2 of chapter 220, in the Dist",'c'fc Court, against the defendant, to give this court *20 jurisdiction over the constitutional question now brought before us for decision.

The contention of the defendant is that chapter 918 of the Public Laws is unconstitutional; first, because it interferes with the liberty of the individual to contract for the sale of his labor to the best advantage as he sees fit, and also with the liberty of the corporation so to contract with the individual ; and second, because it is class legislation'of the worst kind in that it applies only to corporations, and only to certain classes of corporations at that.

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Bluebook (online)
17 L.R.A. 856, 25 A. 246, 18 R.I. 16, 1892 R.I. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-brown-sharpe-manufacturing-co-ri-1892.