Washington Supreme Court, 1914

Neely v. City of Tacoma

Neely v. City of Tacoma
Washington Supreme Court · Decided February 11, 1914 · Crow, Fullerton, Morris, Mount, Parker
78 Wash. 92; 138 P. 557; 1914 Wash. LEXIS 984

Neely v. City of Tacoma

Opinion of the Court

Crow, C. J.

This action was instituted by Arthur V. Neely, and others, members of the fire department of the city of Tacoma, to enjoin the city, its commissioner of public safety and the chief of the fire department, from requiring *93plaintiffs to work and labor as members of the fire department more than eight hours in any one calendar day. From a judgment in defendants’ favor, the plaintiffs have appealed.

Appellants, in substance, allege, that they are members of the city fire department; that they are required to remain on duty twenty-one hours in each and every day; that, although paid monthly, their salaries are based upon the actual number of days they are on duty; that they receive pay only for their actual days of service, and that respondents, unless restrained, will continue to require them to work more than eight hours per day, and will thereby deprive them of all benefits of the laws of this state regulating hours of day laborers employed by municipalities.

The controlling issue is, whether appellants are laborers in contemplation of Rem. & Bal. Code, § 6575 (P. C. 291 § 117). The trial court found that they are not; that they are engaged by the month at monthly salaries, and that they .are not day laborers in any sense.

Appellants attack these findings, contending that they are laborers, in contemplation of the statute above cited. In support of this position, they cite the case of Davies v. Seattle, 67 Wash. 532, 121 Pac. 987, in which this court held that teamsters employed upon public works of the city were laborers. The findings and judgment of the trial court must be sustained. The only question now before us was decided by this court in Stetson v. Seattle, 71 Wash. 606, 134 Pac. 494, where, in construing the statutes of this state relating to hours of labor, including § 6575, upon which appellants rely, we distinguished the case of Davies v. Seattle, supra, and said:

“This state has not legislated upon the subject of hours for men’s work excepting in so far as it affects labor upon public works or work done ‘by contract or day labor done.’ Our laws, as they are at present written, apply only to those who work by the day and are paid by the day, or who come within the definition of contract labor upon public works.”

*94The Stetson case is controlling here. The judgment is affirmed.

Mount, Parker, Morris, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.

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