The People v. Redfield

10 N.E.2d 341, 366 Ill. 562
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1937
DocketNos. 23997, 23998. Judgments reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 10 N.E.2d 341 (The People v. Redfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Redfield, 10 N.E.2d 341, 366 Ill. 562 (Ill. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Herrick

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff in error (hereinafter referred to as defendant) is an employment agent licensed by the Department of Labor of this State. Defendant was convicted in the municipal court of Chicago in separate prosecutions for two separate violations of paragraph 11 of section 5 of “An act to revise the law in relation to private employment agencies and to repeal an act therein named,” approved July 10, 1935. (State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 48, p. 1570.) That portion of section 5 involved here provides, “No such licensed person shall require any person who has applied for and obtained a position through such licensed person to sign any note authorizing a confession of judgment for payment of any fees or require any applicant for a position to sell, transfer or assign any salary or wages due the applicant or to become due from his employer.” Section 12 of the act makes a violation of its provisions punishable by a fine not exceeding $25, and, in default of payment, the offender may be committed to the county jail or house of correction for a period not exceeding thirty days. The defendant sued out a writ of error from this court in each case and, on motion here, they have been consolidated for hearing.

The causes were heard on a stipulation of facts, from which it appears that defendant obtained a position for an applicant who was unable to pay cash for her services or to meet defendant’s credit requirements. ■ Defendant required the applicant to sign a promissory note authorizing a confession of judgment, and also to assign a portion of her wages due or to become due from her employer, as security for defendant’s fee. Defendant charges that the portion of section 5, above quoted, under which she was prosecuted, is an unreasonable exercise of the police power and a violation of her rights under section 2 of article 2 and section 22 of article 4 of the constitution of Illinois, and of section 1 of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States.

Judgment notes and wage assignments are not peculiar to employment agencies. Promissory notes containing a warrant of attorney authorizing a confession of judgment against the maker have long been used in financial transactions in this State. They are the conventional form frequently required by banks of their borrowers. Common usage in all kinds of businesses, as evidence of credit extended, has established them as currently prevailing in everyday credit dealings. The legitimacy of the confession of judgment clauses in contracts is recognized by our Civil Practice act. (State Bar Stat. 1935, chap, no, sec. 50, par. 5.) It is the same with wage assignments. They are a customary form of security required of an employee seeking credit either from pawnbrokers, installment-plan merchants, wage-loan corporations, small-loan companies, so-called “loan sharks,” and others. Express statutory sanction is given wage-loan corporations (State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 32, pars. 478, 480,) and to small-loan companies (State Bar Stat. 1935, chap. 74, par. 50,) to take wage assignments as security for money lent. Their legality has long been recognized in this State. (State Street Furniture Co. v. Armour & Co. 345 Ill. 160.) Such contracts are not against public policy and are valid if made for a valuable consideration and untainted with fraud. Monarch Discount Co. v. Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Co. 285 Ill. 233.

No legal barrier has been erected by legislative enactment against one requiring either a judgment note, an assignment of wages, or both, from one seeking credit either for services rendered, for merchandise bought or for a loan, save by the act here in question. Such right is forbidden solely to a licensed employment agent as security for his unpaid fee. By the prohibition contained in the act an employment agent is denied the right to demand two different forms of security for the service he renders that, nevertheless, may lawfully be exacted by every person in every other profession or business. The defense of such a discriminatory classification must find shelter, if any, under the wings of the police power. To do so there must be a rational basis for the distinction. The legislative acts dependent for their validity upon the exercise of the police power are limited to those having reference to the comfort, health, safety or welfare of society. Enactments under the pretense of an exercise of the police power which deprive a person of a constitutional right cannot be sustained. It is established that the business of conducting an employment agency is both lawful and beneficial. (Mathews v. People, 202 Ill. 389; Price v. People, 193 id. 114; Adams v. Tanner, 244 U. S. 590, 61 L. ed. 1336.) An employment agency is not inherently immoral or dangerous to the pub-lice welfare. The service rendered in acting as the paid representative of another to find a position in which to earn an honest living is “useful, commendable and in great demand.” (Adams v. Tanner, supra.) There is nothing in the nature of the business which in any way threatens or endangers the public health, safety or morals. Ex parte Dickey, 144 Cal. 234, 77 Pac. 924, 66 L. R. A. 928.

The Supreme Court of the United States has declared that an employment agency is essentially a private business and held unconstitutional a State statute attempting to fix or limit prices for its services that may be charged by such agency. Ribnik v. McBride, 277 U. S. 350, 72 L. ed. 913.

The Supreme Court of Washington held unconstitutional an ordinance which singled out employment agents and made it unlawful for them, alone, to make a wilful misrepresentation to a person seeking employment and to take a fee for obtaining such employment. Among other things the opinion in that case declared, “The vice of the section under discussion lies in this, that it makes an act criminal in one who may be engaged in a lawful business, while the act committed under like circumstances by another might not be so. * * * From the very nature of things there can be no dissimilarity of condition or situation between the employment agent who indulges in a false pretense and any other person who resorts to deceit or fraudulent representation to accomplish a wayward purpose. * * * Those engaged in a business lawful and orderly in itself, although subject to license and regulation, cannot be made a class upon which a penal statute shall operate to the exclusion of others, for the crime defined is not peculiar to the business of employment agencies, but common to all and to be sustained, must include within its terms all who may likewise be guilty. * * * It is the act with which the law is concerned, rather than the business in which one may be engaged when he commits it. * * * It makes the act of one engaged in a particular business criminal, while the same act committed by another in a different business may go unchallenged by the city.” City of Spokane v. Macho, 51 Wash. 322, 98 Pac. 755.

An Illinois statute of 1899 made it unlawful for any person doing business in this State to induce workmen to change from one place to another in this State or to bring workmen into the State by means of false representations concerning the character of the work, the amount of compensation, the conditions of employment or the existence of any labor trouble.

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Bluebook (online)
10 N.E.2d 341, 366 Ill. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-redfield-ill-1937.