Bailey v. Baltimore & O. S. W. Ry.

GORMAN, J.

The above and three other proceedings in error present the *257same questions of law, and they were argued and submitted to the court as one cause involving the same or identical facts, from which facts the same conclusions of law should be drawn.

Bach of the plaintiffs in error commenced an action against the defendant in error in the common pleas court under favor of Secs. 9012, 9013 and 9014 G. C., to recover a penalty for withholding from their wages certain sums each month to be applied in payment of their dues in the relief department of the defendant in error.

It will be sufficient for the purposes of the court to refer to the petition of Joseph Bailey. He sets up thirteen causes of action, all of which, except as to dates, are identical. In his first cause of action he sets up the corporate existence of the defendant, and that it was organized to operate a railroad in Ohio and other states, and he then avers that:

“Plaintiff, during the month of-April, 1913, was employed by the defendant as switchman. Defendant required him, as a condition of his employment, to join its relief department. Said association or department, by its rules and regulations, required him to agree to surrender or waive a right of damages against the defendant for personal injuries, and to surrender or waive his rights in said department or association, in case he asserted his claim for damages against defendant for personal injuries.
“During April, 1913, the defendant unlawfully and illegally withheld from plaintiff’s salaray as such employe the sum of four dollars for the payment of dues in said department or association, contrary to the provisions of Sec. 9012 G. C., to the plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $500.

The trial court sustained a demurrer to this cause of action and to the petition setting up the other twelve similar causes of action, on the ground that no cause of action was stated. He also sustained like demurrers to the like petitions setting up like causes of action by the other plaintiffs in error.

The question presented to this court is the correctness of these rulings.

The statutes under which plaintiffs seek to recover are Secs. 9012, 9013, and 9014 G. C. Section 9012 in part reads as follows:

“No corporation directly or indirectly shall compel or re*258quire an employe to join anjr company or association whatsoever, or withhold any part of an employe’s wages or his salary for the payment of dues or assessments in any society or organization, or demand or require either as a condition precedent to securing employment or being employed,” etc.

Section 9013 reads as follows:

“No railroad company, insurance society or association or other person shall demand, accept or enter into an agreement or stipulation with a person about to enter or in the employ of a railroad company, whereby he stipulates or agrees to surrender or waive any right to damage against a railroad company, thereafter arising for personal injury, or death, or whereby he agrees to surrender or waive in case he asserts such right, any other right. ’ ’

Section 9014 G. C., in substance provides that all rules, regulations, stipulations and agreements declared unlawful by the next three preceding sections are void. A corporation violating, or aiding or abetting the violation of either of such sections shall for each offense forfeit and pay to the person thus wronged or deprived of his rights thereunder not less than fifty nor more than $500, to be recovered by a civil action.

The demurrers for the purposes of the eases admit the truth of the averments set out in the various causes of action of the several petitions; and the sole question to be determined, therefore, is the right of the plaintiffs to recover on the admitted facts of the petitions. This in turn involves the constitutionality of these sections. If they are valid constitutional expressions of the law-making body, then clearly the petitions disclose a violation of these Secs. 9012 and 9013, and by the express terms of Sec. 9014 the defendant company, by the act of violating these sections or either of them, became liable to the injured employe in a civil action, for the penalty fixed by the statute. On the other hand, if these sections are invalid because they are in contravention of any provision of the state or federal constitution, then no cause of action exists in favor of plaintiffs and the demurrers were properly sustained.

It is claimed by counsel for defendant in error that these sections of our code are violative of the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal constitution, in that they impair the rights of *259citizens of Ohio to contract fully and freely concerning their own labor and the fruits thereof, and therefore deprives them of liberty without due process of law.

Before considering this question we shall take up the claim of defendant in error that the relief department of the defendant, which is attacked in the petition in these cases, is a valid. and lawful organization. The following cases are cited in support of this claim, in which cases it is contended that this organization has been held to be a valid and lawful one: Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry. v. Cox, 55 Ohio St. 497 [45 N. E. 641; 35 L. R. A. 507]; State v. Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry., 68 Ohio St. 9 [67 N. E. 93; 64 L. R. A. 405; 96 Am. St. 635]; Pennsylvania Co. v. State, 69 Ohio St. 536 [70 N. E. 1128] ; State v. Baltimore & Ohio Ry. Co., 88 Ohio St. 539.

The case of Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry. v. Cox, supra, was an action to recover damages for personal injuries claimed to have been sustained by Cox by reason of the negligence of the company. The company set up as a defense that its relief department was a voluntary association created for the purpose of managing a fund known as “the relief fund,” and that said relief fund was formed by voluntary contributions from employes, and appropriations when necessary to make up the deficiencies, all for the benefit of the employees who may be members thereof; that under the regulations of said relief department no employe is required to become a member of said relief department or to-contribute to said fund, and that membership therein is purely voluntary, and an employe may withdraw therefrom at pleasure; that payments by the employes to the support of said relief fund were voluntary. A demurrer to this defense was overruled, and this ruling was sustained by the Supreme Court. In deciding the ease the court, through Spear, J., on pages 512 and 513, says :

“We think the contract set up in the answer is not fairly within the inhibitory terms of the act, when reasonably construed, and this conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider the unconstitutionality of the statute.”

On pages 514 and 515, in speaking of the character of the relief department, and of the effect of the rules and regulations thereof on the members, this language is used:

*260“Nor is the contract a compulsory one. It is entered into voluntarily. If the employe conceives it to be for his interest to enter the relief class, he applies for the privilege; if not, he with like exercise of his own judgment stays out. ’ ’

It will therefore be seen that the constitutionality of these sections was not passed upon by the Supreme Court in this case; nor was the point decided that a relief department, whose rules required an employe, or one about to become an employe, of a railroad company to become a member of said relief department, is a legal or valid association. On the contrary, the kind of a relief department which the court was considering in this case was one which was purely voluntary and whose rules did not require or compel railroad employes to become members thereof, or compel them to contribute to the relief fund.

But the petition in the case before us avers that defendant required plaintiff, as a condition of his employment, to join its relief department, and that the rules of said department required him to agree to surrender or waive a right to damages against the defendant for personal injuries, and that the defendant unlawfully and illegally withheld from plaintiff’s salary the sum of $4 each month for the payment of dues in said relief department. The demurrer admits these averments to be true, and these requirements or exactions on the part of defendant company are the things prohibited by the statute, Secs. 9012 and 9013 G-. C. If the employe is not required or compelled to join the relief department but does so voluntarily, as was said in Pittsburgh, C. C. & St. L. Ry. v. Cox, supra, then there is no violation of any statute; and therefore this case does not aid us in determining whether or not the demurrer to plaintiff’s petition was properly sustained.

The case of State v. Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry. supra, was an action in quo warranto brought by the attorney-general to inquire by what authority the defendant company was engaged in transacting the business of life and accident insurance whereby it insured its employes against sickness, accident and death through its relief department, and praying for a judgment of ouster. The findings of fact upon which the case was submitted to the court shows that the defendant’s relief department was entirely voluntary and confined to its employes, none of *261whom were required to become members thereof nor to pay dues thereto except voluntarily. The court found as a matter of law that such an association conducted as a voluntary relief department, where there was no compulsion or obligation on the part of the employees to join, was not illegal; nor were the acts of the defendant company in maintaining such a relief department ultra vires or contrary to public policy. But no question as to the constitutionality of the statute under which defendant company was maintaining said relief department was raised in that ease, nor was there any question involved as to the legality of a compulsory relief department whose members were required or compelled to join, as a condition of their employment, by the defendant company whose employes’ wages were illegally taken to pay dues into said association. On page 33 the court says:

“Not a dollar of the fund ever belongs to the railway company, and it is made up primarily of a certain part of the wages of the employe retained for that purpose by his direction. * * * "While an employe is not required to become a member, none but employes could do so. * * * Is this an insurance business? It is not held out to be such. * * * The members of the fund are volunteers. ’ ’

The case of Pennsylvania Co. v. State, supra, is decided on the authority of Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry. v. Cox, supra, and State v. Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry. supra. Evidently from the title of the case and the reference to these two cases it was a case of quo warranto involving the same questions considered in the two cases cited. We can not speculate as to what questions were involved in this ease, and can not see that the citation sheds any light on the questions under consideration.

The case of State v. Baltimore & O. Ry. supra, is decided on the authority of Pittsburgh C. C. & St. L. Ry. v. Cox, supra. This case would also, as appears from the printed record, seem to have been a quo warranto proceeding; but in the absence of a report of what was there decided we can not say that this decision has any application to the questions raised in the instant cases.

There remains to be considered the ease of Copeland v. Baltimore & O. S. W. Ry., (not reported), and cited by counsel for defendant in support of their contention that this decision is *262decisive of the questions involved in the cases under consideration. This ease was brought by an employe of the defendant company to recover from the defendant all the moneys which he alleged he was compelled to pay, or which were compulsorily deducted from his wages by the defendant company as premiums for insurance in said defendant company against his own liability to injury or death. The total amount sought to be recovered was $112.30, and included weekly items of $3 extending over the period from January 15, 1911, to December 22, 1913. The theory upon which a recovery was sought in this case was that the defendant company had insured plaintiff against death or personal injury in consideration of the sums withheld each week from his wages, and that he was discharged by defendant from its employ against his will and thereby cut off from the benefits of said insurance, and that said discharge operated as a cancellation of his insurance. Plaintiff bottomed his right to recover these premiums compulsorily deducted from his wages under the rule laid down in Union Cent. Life Ins. Co. v. Pottker, 33 Ohio St. 49 [31 Am. Rep. 555], the fourth paragraph of the syllabus of which is as follows:

“If in such ease the company (insurance company) wrongfully declares the policy forfeited, and refuses to accept the premium when duly tendered, and to give the insured the customary renewal receipt evidencing the continued life of the policy, the assured is in equity entitled to demand a rescission of the contract and a return of the premiums paid thereon, with interest- from the time of payment. ’ ’

No claim was made in that case that Secs. 9012, 9013 and 9014 G. C., were unconstitutional and void, nor was this question considered or decided by this court. It appeared to this court that Copeland was seeking to recover back sums of money voluntarily paid by him to the railroad company, under a claim that he had been compelled to pay the same.

The case of State v. Pittsburgh C., C. & St. L. Ry., supra, appeared to cover Copeland’s case, and this court so stated in its opinion. There is no express provision of law warranting a recovery of money paid into the relief department of a railroad company whether paid voluntarily or involuntarily. The remedy given by Sec. 9014 C. C., appears to be the recovery of a pen-. *263alty of from $50 to $500 for a violation, of the statutes which forbid employes of a railroad company being ■ required to join relief associations or witholding a part of their wages against their will. It appears further that during the entire time that Copeland paid into the relief association of the railroad company he received the benefits of an insurance against injuries or death, and this court felt that under the circumstances he had received value for the dues paid in by him.

The trial court in the cases under consideration was warranted in sustaining the demurrers to the petitions on the language employed in the decision in the Copeland case. But this court did not intend in the Copeland case to hold Secs. 9012 and 9014 unconstitutional, nor was its decision in that ease based on such grounds. "We deem it to be fair to the trial court to say that he was no doubt misled by the language in the Copeland case, in deciding the ease before us.

As to the question of the constitutionality of the sections of the General Code, raised in these cases, we are of the opinion that it was within the province and power of the legislature to prescribe the regulations and conditions under which a railroad company, a corporation doing business in Ohio, might conduct and operate its relief departments, and to define the kind and character of relief departments or associations which such corporations could maintain. Courts must presume all statutes passed by the law-making body to be valid; and an act of the legislature should never be held invalid or unconstitutional, unless clearly or manifestly so. These sections do not deprive either the railroad company or any of its employes of the right to freely and voluntarily contract with one another with reference to the employment of the employes or their rights to benefits in the relief departments. The inhibition is to requiring or compelling employes to join relief departments 'or to submit to compulsory deductions from their wages as conditions of employment or continuance in employment.

The statutes seek to prevent the coercion of the employes. Voluntary payments of parts of their wages, or voluntarily seeking to be admitted to membership in the relief departments is not prohibited. In all the cases decided by the courts of this state, in so far as we have found, upholding the railroad relief *264■departments, the associations were either admitted or found by the court to be purely voluntary and not compulsory.

In the case of State v. Pennsylvania Co. 41 O. C. C. 17, (13 N. S. 37) the court said on page 39 :

"It is further contended as a second ground of demurrer that the amended petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action on the ground that Sec. 9010 G. C., as amended April 7, 1908, is unconstitutional and void.
"We are of the opinion that it is entirely competent for the legislature to place proper restrictions upon a corporation, such as a railroad company, in respect to its conduct and operation, and the character of relief associations that it maintains or assists in maintaining, and that it is not violative of any of the provisions of the constitution.”

Section 9010 G. C., prohibits any railroad company from establishing, maintaining or assisting in maintaining

"a relief association or society, the rules or by-laws of which require of a person or employe becoming a member thereof to enter into an agreement or stipulation, directly or indirectly, whereby he stipulates or agrees to surrender or waive a right of damages against any railroad company for personal injuries or death, or to surrender or waive in case he asserts such claim for damages, any right whatever.”

There would seem to be no good reason for holding that if such a statute is constitutional and valid, then Sees. 9012, 9014 G. C., are also valid enactments, inasmuch as these sections prohibit any railroad company from directly or indirectly eompeling or requiring an employe to join any association whatsoever or to withhold any part of his wages, and imposing a penalty of from $50 to $500 for a violation' of the sections.

In the case of Shaver v. Pennsylvania Co. 9 O. F. D. 221 [71 Fed. 931], Judge Ricks of the United States federal court for the northern district of Ohio held that Sec. 3270 R. S., a part of which is now Sec. 9012 G. C., is unconstitutional and void because violative of Art. 2, Sec. 26, of the Constitution, and of the fourteenth Amendment of the federal constitution; but the facts show that the relief association in that case was a voluntary one and in no way compulsory.

In the case of Pierce v. VanDusen, 118 Fed. 693, decided by *265the United States circuit court of appeals for this sixth district, Justices Harlan, Taft and Lurton, sitting, the court in commenting on this decision of Judge Ricks in the Shaver v. Pennsylvania Co., supra, says on pages 702-703:

“It is quite clear from an examination of Judge Eick’s opinion that he intended to decide nothing more — indeed, the case under his view of the statute required nothing more to be decided —than that the part of the act of 1890 relating to contracts or agreements whereby a right to damages against a railroad company, arising from personal injuries or death, was surrendered or waived when the employe became a member of the relief ássociation referred to, was unconstitutional, as depriving the employes of railroad corporations of their liberty without due process of law. He had no occasion in the case before him to consider the validity of the third section of that act. ’ ’

A perusal of this decision, satisfies us that the United States circuit court of appeals did not approve of Judge Ricks’ holding in the Shaver case, and that what he said in that case as to the unconstitutionality of Sec. 3270 R. S., was to be considered as obiter dicta.

Penalty statutes similar to Sec. 9014 G. C., have been frequently upheld as valid and reasonable legislation. Cincinnati, S. & C. Ry. v. Cook, 37 Ohio St. 265; Detroit T. & I. Ry. v. State, 82 Ohio St. 60 [91 N. E. 869; 137 Am. St. 758]; Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. Seegers, 207 U. S. 73 [52 L. Ed. 108]; Western U. Tel. Co. v. James, 162 U. S., 650 [40 L. Ed. 1105].

Indeed, in the case of Chicago B. & Q. Ry. v. McGuire, 219 U. S. 549 [55 L. Ed. 328], the court held that McGuire, a brakeman who after being injured accepted his benefits as a member of the relief association to the amount of $822, was not thereby barred to maintain an action against the railroad company for the injuries received. The law of Iowa as to relief associations set up in that case to defeat McGuire’s recovery, was similar to the Ohio statutes. In the fourth paragraph of the syllabus of the ease the court says:

“A state has power to prohibit contracts limiting liability for injuries, made in advance of the injuries, and to provide that the subsequent acceptance of benefits under such contracts shall not constitute satisfaction of the claim for injuries received *266after the contract. Such a statute does not impair the liberty of contract guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment; so held as to the Iowa statute relative to employees of railway companies. ’ ’

Under the employer’s liability acts of 1906 and 1908 passed by Congress, there is a provision that the acceptance of benefits from the relief department does not bar an injured employe from recovering, even though he agrees to waive his claim for damages, if he accepts the benefit for any injuries received after the agreement is entered into. This provision of these acts has been upheld as a valid exercise of the legislative power. Philadelphia B. & W. Ry. v. Schubert, 224 U. S., 603 [56 L. Ed. 911]; Pittsburg, C., C. & St. L. Ry. v. Sheets, 34 O. C. C. 641 (15 N. S. 305).

In Philadelphia, B. & W. Ry. v. Schubert, supra, the court says:

‘1 Congress has power to enforce the regulations validly prescribed by the employer’s liability act of 1908, but the provision of Sec. 5 of the act providing that exemptions from liability shall be void, and that the acceptance of benefits under the relief contract shall not be a bar to recovery are not in contravention •of any constitutional inhibition.”

Councel for defendant in error have cited in support of their contention that these sections are violative of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Federal Constitution, the cases of Missouri Pac. Ry. v. Tucker, 230 U. S., 340 [57 L. Ed. 1507] ; Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. v. Polt, 232 U. S., 165 [58 L. Ed. 554] ; Chicago M. & St. P. Ry. v. Kennedy, 232 U. S. 626 [58 L. Ed. 762].

The first of these cases involved the right of the state of Kansas to fix railroad rates for transportation of oil, gasoline, etc., and fixed a penalty of $500 for a violation of the act.

The second case involved the right of the legislature of South Dakota to enact a law allowing double damages against a railroad company for failure to pay a claim or to offer, a sum equal to what the jury finds the claimant entitled to.

The third case involved the same question as was raised in the second case.

Suffice it to say that even á cursory reading of these deci*267sions will satisfy one that the rules therein laid down have no. application to the cases under consideration. The statutes construed in these cases undertook arbitrarily, and without an opportunity to have the questions tried in a court of law or equity, to confiscate property and property rights of railroad companies. These statutes were not regulatory, but highly penal.

Sections 9012, 9013 and 9014 G. C. are purely regulatory and not confiscatory, as were the statutes passed upon in the cases above referred to.

Upon a full and fair consideration of the cases, we are not prepared to say that these statutes are so palpably and manifestly in contravention of any of the provisions of the federal constitution or of the constitution of this state as to require us to hold that the general assembly had no power to enact the same. Courts inferior to the Supreme Court should be very chary in holding acts of the law-making body unconstitutional, and should do so only in cases which are clearly in contravention of the organic law.

For the reasons stated the judgment of the court of common pleas will be reversed and the causes remanded for such further proceedings as are authorized by law.

Jones (E. H.) and Jones (O. B.), JJ., concur.