Opinion of the court by
CHIEF JUSTICE HAZELRIGGReversing.
The appellee is engaged in the mining business, employing more than ten men, and, although able financially to do so, failed to pay in lawful money an employe on the 16th of April, 1899, the wages due him for the preceding month. A demurrer to the 'indictment, which was found on April 26, 1899, and which charged substantially the foregoing facts, was sustained by the trial court; hence this appeal by the Commonwealth. Section 244 of the Constitution provides that “all wage-earners in this State employed in factories, mines, workshops or by corporations shall be paid for their labor in lawful money.” Section 1850 of the Kentucky Statutes provides that one who violates the provisions of section 244 of the Constitution shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and be punished by a fine of not exceeding $500 for each violation. A still later statute (section 2739a, Kentucky Statutes), it being the law under which the present indictment was found, provides as follows: “Section 2739a. (1) That all persons, associations. companies and corporations employing the service of ten or more persons in any mining work or mining in dustry in this Commonwealth, shall on or before the sixteenth day of each month, pay for the month previous, such servant or employes on his or their order in lawful money of the United States the full amount of wages due such *49servant or employes rendering such services. But if such person, corporation or company, after using due diligence, is unable to make said pajunent as above required, be or it shall within fifteen days thereafter make out a pay-roll and statement of amount due each employe and also a due-bill for said sum bearing interest from said sixteenth day of the month, and deliver same to each of said employes.” A succeeding section makes it unlawful for one employing such servants or employes to coerce or require them to deal with, or purchase merchandise from, any person or company^ or at any place or store, or to exclude laborers from work, for failing to deal with any person, or at any place or store, or to blacklist them for such failure, etc. A third section makes a violation of the preceding sections a misdemeanor, and fixed the punishment of the offender at a fine of not less than $50, nor more than $100.
A preliminary objection to the indictment by the appellant is that, as the operator has fifteen days after failing to pay within which to execute his due-bill, no indictment can be found until after the expiration of this time. It will be seen, however, that one who is able to pay is given no such time. The averment of the pleading is that the appellee is amply able to pay the wages in question, and hence the indictment charges an offense under the terms of the law, and was not prematurely found.
In the second place it is claimed that the statute is a special one, in that its operation is limited to those mine owners who work ten or more miners, and is therefore obnoxious to the constitutional provision prohibiting special legislation “regulating labor, trade, mining, or manufacturing.” Sub-section 24, section 59 Const. The Oonstitu-' tion does so prohibit, but we do not regard this as special *50legislation, within the.meaning of the law. In so far- as the statute may discriminate in favor of wage-earners engaged in mining work or industry, — a discrimination vigorously denounced in some jurisdictions and as vigorously upheld in others, — the statute simply follows the lead of the organic law, and can not, therefore, be said to be contrary to it. And, when we look to the purpose in view in the adoption of such legislation, we think the classification or apparent discrimination made in the statute is permissible, because it is natural and reasonable, and, moreover, entirely consistent with the end sought to 'be accomplished by the organic law. The abuse sought to be corrected was the imposition practiced on the miners by the operation of mines by forcing them, directly or indirectly, into dealing with the “company stores,” where goods at exorbitant prices were paid for wages instead of money. This evil can hardly be practiced at small concerns, or where less than ten miners are employed. In effect, the lawmakers said there is in small concerns using less than ten men practically no such evil as the Constitution seeks to suppress; therefore we ignore the small concerns, and apply the benefit of the Constitutional provision to that portion of the class only which needs the benefit. The organic law makes the general classification in the first instance, and this fact cuts short all discussion of its constitutionality which might otherwise grow out of the special application to miners. The statute then erects a class within a. class, and this is allowable if based on reasonable, natural, and consistent grounds. We think the indictment charges an offense under the law', and the demurrer ought to have been overruled. Judgment reversed for further proceedings.