The defendant maintains at 529 West Twenty-eighth street a station from which milk' is distributed to its drivers for delivery to customers on various wagon routes. At six-thirty a. m. on the morning of February 26, 1917, one Price, an inspector connected with the State Industrial Commission, found a thirteen-year old boy carrying a wicker basket containing several quart bottles of milk into premises 306 West Forty-first street. The milk belonged to the defendant, came from defendant’s establishment or station at 529 West Twenty-eighth street, and was being delivered from one of its wagons, driven by one Schmidt, who had been in the employment of the defendant for several years. Schmidt, without the actual knowledge of the defendant, had personally employed the boy to help him, and the boy had been working with him for six months. Schmidt paid the boy two dollars and fifty cents a week out of his own wages, which were sixteen dollars a week. Schmidt claimed when questioned by the inspector,
The defendant claims that the judgment is unjustified in fact and law, on the ground that the defendant neither employed the boy nor permitted him to work in connection with its establishment. The defendant contends that while a corporation is liable for the acts of its officers, it is not liable criminally for the acts of mere employees which acts are forbidden by the company itself and done without its knowledge or consent.
The first and underlying question is, whether this offense is malum in se or malum prohibitum. It was distinctly held in People v. Taylor (192 N. Y. 398) that a violation of a similar section of the former Labor Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 32 [Laws of 1897, chap. 415], § 70, as amd. by Laws of 1903, chap. 184), relating to factories, which was a police regulation intended for the protection of the public health, was not malum in se, but malum prohibitum. It was further held in People v. D’Antonio (150 App. Div. 109, 111) that in the case of an act
The purpose and effect of a statute such as this is to impose upon the owner or proprietor of a business the duty of seeing to it that the condition prohibited by the statute does not exist. He is bound at his peril so to do. The duty is an absolute one, and it remains with him whether he carries on the business himself or intrusts the conduct of it to others. The principle was well stated by Cooley, C. J., in People v. Roby (52 Mich. 577): “It will be observed that the requirement that the saloons and other places mentioned shall be closed is positive. The next section of the statute provides that any person who shall violate this, among other provisions, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and shall be punished as therein prescribed. In terms, then, the penalties of the statute are denounced against the person whose saloon or other place for the sale of intoxicating drinks is not kept closed, and no other fact is necessary to complete the offense. * * * The section under which Roby is prosecuted makes the crime consist, not in the affirmative act of any person, but in the negative conduct of failing to keep the saloon, etc., closed. * * * Many statutes which are in the nature of police regulations, as this is, impose criminal penalties irrespective of any intent to violate them; the purpose being to require a degree of diligence for the protection of the public which shall render violation impossible.”
After discussing numerous authorities, the learned judge continued: “But the statute requires the proprietor at his peril to keep the bar closed. The purpose in doing so is that persons shall not be there within the reach of temptation. This respondent did not keep his bar closed and he has therefore disobeyed the law. And he has not only disobeyed the law, but the evil which the law intends to guard against has resulted; that is to say, there has been, either with or without his assent,— it is immaterial which,— a sale of intoxicating liquors to a person who took advantage of the bar being open to enter it.”
But even if the liability of the defendant in this case were based upon that of a master for the consequences of an act of his servant, a clear case was made out. It is no answer to the charge to say that the driver hired the boy in the furtherance of his own purposes. The driver was conducting no independent business of his own. The only business that was being done was the defendant’s business of delivering milk. When it is said that the employee must at the time complained of be acting within' the scope of his employment and in the furtherance of his master’s business, that does not mean that the prohibited act must have been one. calculated to further the master’s business. It merely means that the act must be done by the employee in the course of and while furthering his master’s business. In the case at bar, as above pointed out, while the employment of the boy was primarily to serve the driver’s personal ends, it was not only done in the course of and while furthering the defendant’s business, but was an act calculated to benefit the defendant by minimizing its losses.
The proof shows that the defendant permitted the violation of the statute. “ Permit ” in such a case does not mean to consent to with knowledge; it is synonymous with suffering an act to be done, in the sense of being negligent or indifferent in
It, therefore, appears that, whether the liability be based upon the absolute duty of the owner to prevent the employment of boys under age in connection with the owner’s business, or upon the master’s responsibility for the act of his servant in. the course of his employment in the master’s business, which act was suffered or permitted by the negligence or indifference of the master, the judgment of conviction was right and should be affirmed.
Smith, J., concurred; Page, J., dissented.
The statute which defendant has been convicted of violating provides that “ No child under the age of fourteen years shall be employed or permitted to work in or in connection with any mercantile or other business or establishment specified in the preceding section.” (Labor Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 31; Laws of 1909, chap. 36], § 162, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 866.)
There are two things which the statute forbids: First, the employment of a boy under the prescribed age, and second, permitting such a boy to work.
The duty cast upon the proprietor of an establishment or business referred to in section 161 of the Labor Law is, therefore, two-fold. He may not employ or consent to the employment of a boy under fourteen years of age, nor must he permit such a boy to work.
The evidence shows clearly that the boy Attilio did work in connection with the defendant’s business in delivering milk, and the defense was based upon the claim that defendant did not employ him, but that defendant’s driver employed him in order to lighten his own work. Assuming, though not deciding, that this constituted a defense against the charge of “ employing,” I think that the evidence fully justified the conviction of defendant of violating the statute in “ permitting ” the boy “ to work.”
It was clearly shown that it was well known to defendant’s superior officers that it was quite customary for its drivers to employ boys to work as the Attilio boy was employed and it is equally' clear that no effective steps were taken to prevent the practice, which even when discovered was invariably condoned. This was a direct encouragement to the drivers to persist in the practice, and I think justified the conviction of the defendant of having violated the statute in permitting the boy to work.
Clarke, P. J., concurred.