United States v. Whitley

8 F. Supp. 191, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1329
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedAugust 18, 1934
DocketNo. 766
StatusPublished

This text of 8 F. Supp. 191 (United States v. Whitley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Whitley, 8 F. Supp. 191, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1329 (N.D. Ga. 1934).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above).

On the motion to dismiss the bill: The National Industrial Recovery Act, in section 3 (15 USCA § 703), expressly invests the District Court with jurisdiction to restrain violations. This bill alleges that the code was approved and violated and prays an injunction against the continued violation. I do not see where there is any possibility of the court lacking jurisdiction, although what the merits of the case" develop on trial is another thing. The bill alleges a case and .the court has jurisdiction to entertain it, and the motion to dismiss is overruled.

On the question of preliminary injunction ; I might well decide the ease as a discretionary matter. This is not a final decision. The case is still to be tried on its merits. The facts may develop differently from what they have here, but because it has been requested, and because the case is about to run out under the evidence here, I will go ahead and express my opinion as best I can, rapidly formed, about the questions that are presented. The ease is almost moot. One of the contracts, in reference to which the controversy arises, is already gone; it has been performed by the state. Whitley can do nothing more on it. The other one, according to the testimony, has only about a week to run. Actually, there is nothing involved, except Whitley’s right to hire cheap labor for a week. But the questions are big questions, important ones, and I suppose it is my duty to decide them. The general validity of the N. R. A. is before the Supreme Court to be argued at its October term, and in two months’ time, I suppose we will know all about it. I would be loath, under these circumstances, to enter into any general discussion about it. I really think the last section (303) of title 3 (15 USCA § 711) makes it improper. It provides that if any provision of this chapter or the application thereof, to any person or circumstances, is held invalid, the remainder of the chapter and the application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby. I think that pins me down .to taking this act and the provisions which are directly here involved, and applying them to the persons and the circumstances directly here involved to see whether or not they can be sustained as to those persons and under those circumstances. Now, I say that particularly because it seems to me that an effort by the Congress to regulate the whole construction industry is a pretty long shot. It seems to me it would take a good deal of ingenuity and even strain to bring it within the power of Congress. It can be done perhaps. But in this ease we have a particular industry involved, a branch of the industry, and it is not so difficult to my mind. It is a case of contractors who execute work on public roads, which are public roads of the state and also post roads of the United States and also arteries of interstate traffic. I do not regard these as new roads. They both have long been public roads and, under the evidence, there was a joint agreement between the state and the United States to improve and develop them. Perhaps some re-location was involved, but the big idea was the improvement of the old roads so as to make them more effective for all the purposes that they serve. Now, the United States helped pay for the initial stages of that development. The particular contract that is here involved is for some finishing stages on it, a separate contract but yet a part of that original plan, and these very contracts contain [193]*193references, both in’the proposal and the contracts, to the aid of the United States and to the United States legislation on the subject, and the bond goes so far as to recite that the United States could sue in their own behalf, as well as the state of Georgia for the use of the United States, concerning this work. It all goes to show that the work we are dealing with is a work in which both the United States and the state are co-operating and have an interest. It is public work and public work both as to the state and as to the United' States. Now, the code undertakes to regulate this work by prescribing maximum hours of labor and minimum rates of pay. The code has nothing beyond the act in that idea. The President, in putting those provisions in the code, has done exactly what the act contemplated, because in that section about the code, I believe it is section 5> there are very numerous references to these maximum hours of labor and minimum rates of pay, contemplated to be put in the code to be enforced, and there is no question of code going beyond the act. The case must be viewed as though Congress itself had passed this code with reference to work of the class with which we are dealing, and the constitutional question is: Could Congress regulate the hours of labor and the rates of pay on work in which it had an interest as a post road or as an artery of interstate commerce? When you read all the decisions that have been made, I cannot say the question is absolutely clear, but my best judgment is that Congress could regulate those matters, if it was purely work of the United States. It has often been done, and I suppose could rightly be done. But when the state of Georgia gets mixed up in it the matter becomes more doubtful, because in then regulating these matters the United States in a measure controls the expenditure of state money, and that is a serious thing to contemplate. But I do not feel that I am in position to say that clearly under this evidence, as an emergency measure and for the brief period of time and for the broad purpose this act professes, it is beyond the power of Congress, and I am going to refuse to overturn the construction code as applied to these post roads, and to the agreement made to improve and better them as appears in this case. The result of that ruling is that this code applies to Mr. Whitley and to all other contractors on roads of this character, even though the particular contract that they make is one in which the state furnishes all the money. Now, the code itself that was adopted contains a provision by way of exception, • on which reliance is placed in this ease. Assuming that the code is effective and applicable, when the advertisement for bids was made and when the proposals were accepted, and a contract made, if nothing had been said about this matter, the provisions of the code, of course, would have been a part of the contract. They would have been included in it because they had the force of law. Those provisions, however, contain this exception: “Where provisions concerning hours of labor or rates of pay have been established for specific projects by competent Governmental authority or agency, whether Federal, State or Political sub-divisions thereof, acting in accordance with law, any employer required to comply and who complies with the provisions so established, shall be relieved from conflicting provisions of this code.” Now, that is relied on as a defense under the claim that there was a provision thus established for these projects, made in accordance with law, with which Whitley has been required to comply, which conflicts with the code provision. Now, the first doubt about this exception is on the words, “have been established”—they are not “shall be established”, but “have been established,” with no time mentioned. Does it mean “have been established” when this code goes into effect, so that the parties are allowed to fulfill their existing contracts without embarrassment, or is it intended to allow the state and federal agencies for the future to make contracts in disregard of the code provisions? Now, if those meant were mere private parties and mere private contracts, I would not think that was a reasonable construction, that last one.

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Related

§ 703
15 U.S.C. § 703
§ 711
15 U.S.C. § 711

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F. Supp. 191, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-whitley-gand-1934.