Burch v. Foy
Citation | 62 N.M. 219,308 P.2d 199,1957 NMSC 17 |
Decision Date | 07 February 1957 |
Docket Number | No. 6117,6117 |
Parties | S. G. BURCH, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Thomas P. FOY, Defendant-Appellant. |
Court | Supreme Court of New Mexico |
Richard H. Robinson, Atty. Gen., Fred M. Standley, Walter R. Kegel and Howard M. Rosenthal, Asst. Attys. Gen., for appellant.
Harry L. Bigbee, Donnan Stephenson, Santa Fe, for appellee.
This is a suit by plaintiff-appellee against the district attorney of the Sixth Judicial District to enjoin him from enforcing the criminal provisions of Chapter 200, Laws of 1955, against him, and to declare said act unconstitutional. The court made and entered its order declaring the above law unconstitutional and permanently enjoined the defendant from enforcing or attempting to enforce the same, and the state appeals.
The plaintiff, among other things, alleges:
employees are classified as 'service employees' by the Act referred to in the next paragraph, or whose employees are not covered by said Act.
'4. He is the employer of four or more persons in connection with the aforesaid business, certain of whom are presently paid less than the wages prescribed by the aforesaid Wage and Hour Act if said Act is applicable to said business.
'8. Among his principal competitors in Deming are numerous so-called 'Drug Stores' which sell at retail the same or substantially similar types of variety and sundry articles of merchandise in Deming in close proximity to his stores.
The facts as disclosed by the petition, answer, and stipulation of counsel are substantially as follows: The plaintiff owns and operates a five and ten cent store in Deming, New Mexico; it is located in the same block as is a Walgreen Drug Store and a Rexall Drug Store, both of which employ more than four employees, and handle the same type of merchandise; both maintain a fountain and lunch counter. These two drug stores carry substantially the same type of merchandise as does the plaintiff. No food or drink for consumption are sold by the plaintiff in his establishment. Plaintiff employs more than four persons who are paid a weekly salary of less than the wages prescribed by Chapter 200, Laws of 1955. Defendant determined that the above Act is applicable to plaintiff's business and threatened to proceed to enforce or attempt to enforce the criminal provision against him. Among plaintiff's competitors are numerous other drug stores which deal in the same type of merchandise as plaintiff, and substantially all of them sell food and drink in their establishments, although the plaintiff does not.
It is further stipulated that the term 'flat rate schedule' used in the Act has a meaning in the automobile repair field. That is the only technical meaning known. It is not known whether this is the only field where a flat rate schedule is used.
Based upon the above stipulated facts the court concluded as a matter of law:
Section two of Chapter 200, Laws of 1955, provides in part as follows:
'Definitions.
'(a) 'Employ' includes suffer or permit to work.
'(b) 'Employer' includes any individual, partnership, association, corporation, business trust, legal representative or any organized group of persons employing four or more employees at any one time, acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer in relation to an employee, but shall not include the United States, the state or any political subdivision thereof.
'(c) 'Service employees' shall be interpreted to mean persons employed in the following establishments and occupations:
'(1) restaurants, cafes, drug stores, and other establishments furnishing food or drink for consumption on the premises; [emphasis ours]
* * *
* * *
'(d) 'Employee' includes any individual employed by any employer, but shall not include--[Here follows the exemptions] * * *'
Section three.
'Minimum Wages.
'(a) Every employer, except as provided in the foregoing section shall pay to each of his employees wages at the following rates:
'(1) Not less than 75 cents an hour, provided, however, that service employees as hereinbefore defined shall be paid a minimum base rate of not less than 50 cents per hour.'
Under point one defendant-appellant argues that 'Chapter 200, Laws of 1955, is a valid enactment under the police power of the state, based upon a reasonable classification of subject matter by the Legislature.' Says he, that the apparent basis of the court's decision is that under the said chapter the plaintiff is required to pay all of his employees a minimum wage of 75cents per hour while his competitors in the drugstore business are only required to pay a minimum wage of 50cents per hour. That the court assumes that the minimum wage advantage is available to plaintiff's competitors with respect to all of their employees and bases its decision upon that premise. That the premise is false and that the law may and should be construed to grant the privilege of paying this lower minimum wage only to such employees of plaintiff's competitors as are actually engaged in the occupation of furnishing food or drink for consumption on the premises. We are not impressed with this argument.
A statute must be read and given effect as it is written by the Legislature, not as the court may think it should be or would have been written if the Legislature had envisaged all the problems and complications which might arise in the course of its administration. But defendant argues that the act should be construed to mean that only employees of such competing drug stores as are actually engaged in selling and serving food and drink to its customers are 'service employees' and need only be paid fifty cents an hour, and that all other employees of defendant should be classified otherwise. If it was the intention of the Legislature to designate such employees working in a drug store who actually sell and dispense food and drink, as 'service employees' and all other employees otherwise, then the statute needs clarification which we think should come by way of Legislative amendment. Courts must take the act as they find it and construe it according to the plain meaning of the language employed. If the act is to be given a different effect, in this respect, it must be by an act of the Legislature.
The act does not attempt to distinguish between persons employed in a drug store such as waiters from clerks, and other employees, but says 'service employees' shall be interpreted to mean persons employed in the following establishments and occupations; drug stores; nor does it single out drug stores that serve food and drink, but refers to all drug stores. Clearly then under section 2(c)(1) every person employed in such drug store is a 'service employee' whether he actually sells and serves food and drink, or not. To interpret the provisions of the act to mean that only those employees of a drug store, that have lunch counters and fountains, and actually serve food and drink on the premises are 'service employees' would be to enlarge the terms of the act both as to words and meaning. Courts cannot read into an act something that is not within the manifest intention of the Legislature as gathered from the statute itself. This would be judicial legislation. Where the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, as the act in question, there is no room for construction thereof. De...
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