119 A.2d 122 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1955
The claimant had registered with the employment service and had filed claims for unemployment compensation. On May 19, 1955, the employment service (public employment bureau) offered claimant a referral to Sam Cohen, Inc., as a sheet metal worker, at the time informing the claimant that the proposed employer was operating under a so-called "union shop" agreement the basic effect of which was to make it necessary for a new employee to join the union within thirty days or lose his job. The claimant refused to take the job solely because it required union membership. Admittedly the work offered was in every other respect suitable and the union was not a "company union" but was a bona fide labor organization. For this refusal the administrator held that the claimant was not entitled to benefits. Upon appeal, the commissioner *10 reversed the administrator's decision and held the claimant entitled to benefits. From that decision the administrator has taken this appeal.
The claimant sustained his burden of proving the prerequisites to eligibility under General Statutes § 7507. The basic question is whether the administrator sustained his burden of proving that the claimant was ineligible for benefits under General Statutes § 7508. Waskiewicz v. Egan,
In subsection (1) of General Statutes § 7508, certain specific requirements of suitable work are set forth. One of these is that "no work shall be deemed suitable nor shall benefits be denied . . . to any otherwise eligible individual for refusing to accept new work . . . (c) if as a condition of being employed the individual would be required to join a company union or to resign from or refrain from joining any bona fide labor organization." The phrase "company union" embraces a particular kind of union. The qualifying adjective "company" cannot be ignored or brushed aside. Indeed, in the very next line the phrase "bona fide labor organization" is used in contradistinction to a "company union."
Under the above-quoted language of General Statutes § 7508(1)(c) it is clear that only where an employee would be required to join a "company union" would an otherwise suitable job be rendered unsuitable. The finding as corrected makes it clear that the union in question was not a company union and was *11 a bona fide labor organization. Since the job was otherwise suitable, the fact that it was in a so-called "union shop" did not make it any the less so.
This conclusion is fortified by the fact that our General Assembly has refused to enact a so-called "right to work" statute. Such statutes prohibit the imposition of any requirement either of membership in a union or of nonmembership in a union from being made a condition of obtaining or retaining employment. Legislation of this type is in force in a number of states and its constitutionality as a valid exercise of the police power has been upheld.
Except in states having such statutes, a union shop may be established by agreement between an employer and a bona fide labor union.
There is no suggestion that the refusal to join the union was other than a personal idiosyncrasy of this claimant. Without clear legislative warrant, he should not be allowed to refuse a job for a mere personal whim and draw unemployment compensation benefits while idle. Alexander v. Administrator,
A similar result was reached in an unreported decision of the Superior Court, Schultz v. Administrator, rendered in Fairfield County on July 10, 1953.
The appeal is sustained, the decision of the unemployment compensation commissioner is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.