This action is brought by a citizen of the state under section4 of the Labor Law to procure the cancellation of a contract entered into between the city *Page 247 of New York and the defendant Thompson-Starrett Company for the construction of the new municipal building in the borough of Manhattan and to restrain the defendant Prendergast from making any payments thereon. The defendant contractor sublet the granite work to the Mount Waldo Granite Works, a Maine corporation. The work of quarrying, cutting, dressing and trimming the granite was done in the state of Maine and the workmen were paid $3 per day, the prevailing rate of wages there. The prevailing rate of wages for the same class of work in the city of New York is $4.50 per day. Wherefore, it is charged that section 3 of the Labor Law was violated. The contractor and the sub-contractor both agreed to comply with the provisions of the Labor Law.
This is not a taxpayer's action, or an action by the city for breach of contract. The only complaint which the plaintiff as a citizen can make is that said section 3 has been violated, and we are concerned on this appeal only with the construction of that section.
There has been no material change in the statute, as far as the question now before us is concerned, since the decision inBohnen v. Metz (126 App. Div. 807; affirmed on opinion below,193 N.Y. 676), and we are of the opinion that that case is decisive of this. In that case the contractor with the city ordered doors, windows and woodwork to be specially manufactured. The manufacturer employed his workmen more than eight hours a day and did not pay them the prevailing rate of wages in the city of New York. There are two possible distinctions between that case and this: 1, in that case the manufacturer did not fasten the woodwork to the building and, 2, his work was all done in this state.
The second distinction certainly does not help the appellant. Apart from the rule that an intention will not be inferred from general language of an act to give it extra-territorial effect, there is internal evidence, which I shall not stop to point out, to show that the act was not *Page 248 designed to increase the wages paid to workmen in Maine; and the learned counsel for the appellant concedes that the legislature had no such benevolent purpose. He says in effect that the purpose was to do by indirection what it was supposed could not be done directly, to cause the work to be done where the public building or work in its completed form was located, by the expedient of requiring the prevailing rate of wages there to be paid all workmen on the work itself and on all materials entering into it, irrespective of where the material might be prepared. That may have been in the minds of those interested in securing the legislation, but we cannot ascribe such a purpose to the legislature. It is to be observed that we are not now considering a question of legislative power, but only one of legislative intent. If this statute was intended to take work from the stonecutters of Maine, it was also intended to do the like by workmen in different parts of this state where wages and the cost of living are lower than in others. It is not to be supposed that it was intended by such indirection to discriminate in favor of the workmen of a particular section. Certainly, nothing short of express words to that effect would justify us in ascribing such a purpose to the legislature.
The first distinction hereinbefore stated between this and theBohnen case is the one relied upon by the appellant, but it is without substance. If the sub-contractor in this case had merely cut, trimmed, dressed and fashioned the granite blocks to order, the cases would be precisely alike. Calling one a manufacturer and the other a sub-contractor does not create a substantial difference, nor does the fact that the sub-contractor, in addition to supplying the granite blocks, did the necessary trimming and altering at the job and set them in the walls of the building. There is no question but that the prevailing rate of wages in New York city was paid for the latter work. A single sentence of the statute, literally construed, *Page 249 would require the prevailing rate of wages at the job to be paid the workmen on all materials entering into it down to the nails, screws and bolts. As the late Mr. Justice HOUGHTON well observed in the Bohnen case, it "would follow the iron beams necessary for the building to the mines, the woodwork to the logging camp, and the stone to the quarry." The appellant, evidently appreciating the absurdity of a literal construction, adopts a middle course and does not complain of the wages paid the stonecutters who cut the broken rock into rough blocks; but if his construction is correct, they and even the quarrymen, if there be a prevailing rate of wages for quarrymen in New York city, are included in the requirement. There is no middle ground between a literal construction leading to the result just indicated and a reasonable construction to accomplish the purpose evidently intended.
The distinction sought to be made between a contract of purchase of materials manufactured to order and one of sub-letting of the like work is a distinction in name only, and is not made by the statute, the language of which is, "contractor, sub-contractor or other person." The practical question would be the same if there was no contract of purchase or of sub-letting, and if the principal contractor was himself the manufacturer, or, as in this case, the owner of the granite quarry.
Under the amendment to section 1 of article 12 of the Constitution, adopted by the People in 1905, the legislature undertook to regulate the wages and hours of work, and provide for the welfare of persons employed by the state, municipal corporations or commissions. If the intention was, as the literal reading of a single sentence of the statute indicates, to require the prevailing rate of wages at the job to be paid on all materials entering into public work, no contractor could afford to undertake such work at the hazard of a forfeiture of his contract for what he would be wholly unable to prevent. Moreover, this *Page 250 case is a fair illustration of the result of such a construction to the municipalities of the state. The sub-contract price for the granite work alone was two million dollars. If New York city wages had to be paid in the manufacture and preparation of all materials, no matter where the work might be done, the result upon the vast undertakings of a city like New York would be almost prohibitive. If the act is to be thus construed, it should have been entitled "An act to discourage the undertaking of public works." Of course, as counsel for the appellant well says, we have nothing to do with the question of policy. If the legislature, in the exercise of its constitutional power, has so provided, our duty is to give the act effect as it is written. But, in determining the intention of the legislature, we are not bound to close our eyes to the consequences of the construction contended for. We, therefore, look for something in the context to show that the legislature did undertake intelligently to accomplish the purpose which they must be supposed to have had in mind, i.e., to provide for the welfare of workmen in this state, and we find it in the sentence next succeeding the one, the literal construction of which supports the appellant's contention. That sentence is: "Each such contract hereafter made shall contain a stipulation that each such laborer, workman or mechanic, employed by such contractor, sub-contractor or other person on, about or upon such public work, shall receive such wages herein provided for." The significant words are those quoted in the opinion in the Bohnen case, "on, about or upon such public work," which were obviously used in the same sense as, and, therefore, qualify the meaning of, the words in the preceding sentence, "upon all such public works, or upon any material to be used upon or in connection therewith." Upon reading that sentence in the light of the explanation just suggested, a reason for its broad language at once occurs to the mind, i.e., to prevent evasions and to make it impossible for a contractor *Page 251 to escape paying the prevailing rate of wages to any of the workman employed on the work, as, for example, by the intervention of sub-contractors or materialmen, who might undertake to do the necessary work on the job of preparing and fitting all materials so as to be put in place. At any rate, it is plain that the broad language of the one sentence is qualified by the more restricted language of the succeeding sentence. It would be unwise in this case to undertake a precise definition of the phrase "on, about or upon such public work" as used in the statute. It is sufficient to hold that the quarrymen and stonecutters in Maine were not employed "on, about or upon" the public work of constructing the municipal building in the city of New York within the intent of the act, and we reach that conclusion regardless of whether they were employed by the principal contractor, by a sub-contractor or by another person who might have contracted to furnish the granite blocks cut, dressed and trimmed to order.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.