A state statute limiting the hours of labor in factories for
women, if otherwise valid, is not unconstitutional as depriving the
employer or employee of property without due process of law by
limiting the right to buy and sell labor and infringing the liberty
of contract in that respect.
Muller v. Oregon,
208 U. S. 412.
It being competent for the state to restrict the hours of
employment of a class of laborers, it is also competent for the
state to provide administrative means against evasion of such
restrictions.
C., B. & Q. Ry. v. McGuire, 219 U.
S. 549.
The wisdom and legality of the means adopted by the legislature
to enforce proper restrictions on employment of labor cannot be
judged by extreme instances of their operation.
Section 48 of the Labor Act of 1909 of Massachusetts, regulating
the hours of labor of women in factories, is not an
unconstitutional denial of due process of law because it provides
for the posting of a schedule of hours and requires the hours to be
stipulated in advance and followed until a change is made. The
provision is reasonable, and not arbitrary.
A provision in a state statute that the form of notice in which
employees' hours of labor are scheduled shall be approved by the
Attorney General of the state does not deny equal protection of the
law if the approval is confined to the form of notice, and not to
the schedules which might provide for different hours in different
cases.
Page 232 U. S. 672
In this case, the conviction by the state court of one in whose
factory in Massachusetts women were permitted to work during the
period scheduled as dinner hour, under § 48 of the Labor Act of
1909 of Massachusetts, sustained, and
held that such
statute is not unconstitutional under either the due process or
equal protection provision of the Fourteenth Amendment.
210 Mass. 387 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the constitutionality under the due
process and equal protection of the law provisions of the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Woman's Labor Act of Massachusetts, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 678
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Criminal complaint brought against plaintiff in error in the
Superior Court within and for the County of Bristol charging him
with the violation of a statute of the state
* in that he,
being superintendent of the Davol Mills, a corporation duly
established by law, and conducting a mill for the manufacture of
cotton goods, in which establishment women were employed, employed
two women by the names of Annie Manning and Nora Callahan at a time
other than the time which the statute required to be posted in a
conspicuous place in the mill where women were required to work in
laboring. The specific charge is that the women were employed at
five minutes of one o'clock (12:55 p.m.) on the 24th of February,
1910, in a room wherein was posted a notice in which it was stated
that the time of commencing work was 6:50 a.m., and of stopping
work was 6 p.m., and that the time allowed for dinner began at 12
m., and ended at 1 p.m.
A demurrer and motion to quash were filed, alleging the
unconstitutionality of the statute.
The charge was dismissed as to Annie Manning, and plaintiff in
error was convicted as to the charge in regard to Nora Callahan,
and sentenced to pay a fine of $50. The sentence was affirmed by
the Supreme Judicial Court, and its rescript having been sent to
the trial court, this writ of error was sued out.
Page 232 U. S. 679
The statute of the state which is assailed provides that no
child or woman shall be employed in laboring in any manufacturing
or mechanical establishment more than ten hours in any one day,
except as hereinafter provided in this section, unless a different
apportionment of the hours of labor is made for the sole purpose of
making a shorter day's work for one day of the week, and in no case
shall the hours of labor exceed fifty-six in a week. It is
provided:
"Every employer shall post in a conspicuous place in every room
in which such persons are employed a printed notice stating the
number of hours' work required of them on each day of the week, the
hours of commencing and stopping work, and the hours when the time
allowed for meals begins and ends. . . . The employment of such
persons at any time other than as stated in said printed notice
shall be deemed a violation of the provisions of this section,"
punishable by a fine of not less than $50 nor more than
$100.
The first contention of plaintiff in error is that the statute
restricts the right to sell and buy labor, and therein infringes
the liberty of contract assured by Article XIV of the Amendments to
the Constitution of the United States. The contention is untenable
expressed in this generality. In
Muller v. Oregon,
208 U. S. 412,
against a similar contention, a statute of Oregon was sustained
which prohibited the employment of women in mechanical factories or
laundries working more than ten hours during any one day, with
power, as in the Massachusetts statute, to apportion the hours
through the day.
But special objections are made which, it is contended, make
Muller v. Oregon inapplicable. The prohibition of the
statute under review, it is said,
"is not restricted to times and places which relate to and
naturally and logically affect a woman's health, safety, or morals,
or the welfare of herself or the public."
Such are the conditions necessary to the validity of a statute
restricting employment,
Page 232 U. S. 680
it is contended, and that those conditions are not satisfied by
the statute. Section 48, it is urged, not only prohibits the
employment of women more than ten hours a day, but that (quoting
the section)
"the employment of such person [woman] at a time other than as
stated in said printed notice, shall be deemed a violation of the
provisions of this section."
The provision is arbitrary and unreasonable, it is insisted, in
that it requires the employer to post a notice in a room in which
women and minors are permanently employed in laboring only six
hours a day, and makes it a crime if such person is allowed to work
for five minutes at a time other than as stated in the notice. But
if we might imagine that an employer would so enlarge the
restrictions of the statute, or be charged with violating it if he
did, we yet must remember that, as it was competent for the state
to restrict the hours of employment, it is also competent for the
state to provide administrative means against evasion of the
restriction.
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. McGuire,
219 U. S. 549;
St. John v. New York, 201 U. S. 633.
Neither the wisdom nor the legality of such means can be judged by
extreme instances of their operation. The provision of § 48 cannot
be pronounced arbitrary. As said by the Supreme Judicial Court, the
statute
"requires the hours of labor to be stipulated in advance, and
then to be followed until a change is made. It does not, by its
terms, establish a schedule of hours. This is left to the free
action of the parties. Nor does it in the sections now under
consideration, restrict the right to labor to any particular hours.
See People v. Williams, 189 N.Y. 131. It simply makes
imperative strict observance of any one table of hours of labor
while it remains posted."
"The end of the statute is the protection of women within
constitutional limits, and the requirement that the hours posted in
the notice shall be followed is a means to
Page 232 U. S. 681
effectuate the attainment of that end."
P. 394. In other words, the purpose of the posting of the hours
of labor is to secure certainty in the observance of the law and to
prevent the defeat or circumvention of its purpose by artful
practices.
There is a contention somewhat tentatively made by plaintiff in
error that the statute offends the equal protection clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment. It will be observed that § 48 provides that
the printed form of the "notice shall be provided by the chief of
the district police, after approval by the Attorney General." And
counsel say:
"If it be claimed that such a notice must first be approved by
the Attorney General of the state, our reply is that the statute
says the form shall be approved; but if it is held that the
Attorney General is to approve the number of hours, and that the
Attorney General may say what the number of hours shall be, then he
could approve or disapprove different notices stating different
numbers of hours of employment by different employers. This seems
to us to be a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment as denying
equal protection of the laws."
And again counsel say, as a specification of the
unreasonableness of the statute as an exercise of the police power
of the state: "By approval of different schedules by the Attorney
General, the law may operate unequally in different employments."
This supposition is based on the other -- that is, that something
else than the form of notice is to be prescribed by the Attorney
General. But counsel assert that it is the form only which the
Attorney General is to approve, and the assertion is not denied.
There is therefore nothing tangible in the contention. Besides, it
has no justification in the opinion of the Supreme Judicial
Court.
Judgment affirmed.
* Chapter 514, Acts of 1909 entitled "An Act to codify the laws
relating to labor."