36 N.W.2d 414 | Wis. | 1949
This action was commenced by certain members of a labor union, Local Division No. 1128, Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway Motor Coach Employees of America, against the union, its officers, and the employer, Duluth-Superior Bus Company.
The defendant, Duluth-Superior Bus Company, is a common carrier of passengers for hire operating an interurban line in the city of Superior, and an interstate line between the cities of Superior, Wisconsin, and Duluth, Minnesota.
The plaintiffs were first employed as bus drivers by the Superior White Company, an independently operated bus company, operating between the cities of Duluth and Superior, which began business in 1922, and some of the plaintiffs began work that year, and others shortly thereafter. All of the other members of the defendant union were, prior to the fall 1927, employees of the Duluth Street Railway Company, and were operators of streetcars in Duluth and Superior.
In 1925, the Duluth-Superior Coach Company was organized and purchased the Superior White Company. This company was at one time known as the Superior City Bus Company and is now the present employer of all the members of the defendant union under the name of Duluth-Superior Bus Company.
Streetcars have not been operated in the city of Superior since 1935. At that time the streetcar operators were retained in the employ of the Duluth-Superior Bus Company as bus drivers. The plaintiffs were all operating buses prior to 1935, and will be hereinafter referred to as "bus drivers." The streetcar operators who retained employment will be referred to as "streetcar operators," many of whom have been in the employ of the company for many years. *346
For many years there has been a dispute between the former streetcar operators and the original bus drivers regarding seniority, the contention of the bus drivers being that seniority rights should date from the time that the employee began driving a bus, which would place the plaintiffs at the head of the seniority list. The former streetcar operators claim that the seniority should date from the date the employee was employed by the company, which would have the effect of placing the bus drivers lower on the seniority list. Several seniority lists were drawn up and agreed to between the parties during the course of years, and an arbitration was had in March, 1937.
On April 6, 1937, the original bus drivers and the former streetcar operators and the Duluth-Superior Bus Company entered into an agreement, which agreed on a seniority list, referred to as the "compromise seniority list." This contract was in writing, and signed by all of the interested parties and contained, among other provisions, the following:
"The old streetcar operators and the old bus operators, whose names are hereto subscribed, accept and shall, so long as employed by third party, abide by said seniority list; and, each for himself, agrees to accept and be bound by the seniority given him in and by said list; and said car and bus operators further agree that said seniority list shall be binding upon all of third party's employees operating buses wholly or partly in Superior, Wisconsin."
Thereafter the employees organized the defendant labor union. The plaintiffs joined the union and now are members thereof. The constitution and general laws of the union contain the following provision:
"Sec. 83. The International Association and the L.D. in which a member holds membership shall be his exclusive representative for the purpose of collective bargaining as to wages, hours, working conditions, pensions, union security and check-off, and other conditions of employment, and for the negotiation and execution of contracts with employers pertaining to such matters. Both the International Association *347 and the L.D. in which a member holds membership are by him irrevocably authorized to act for him before any committee, board of arbitration or arbitrator, court or other tribunal in any matter affecting his status as employee and to represent and bind him in the presentation, prosecution, adjustment and settlement of all grievances, complaints, or disputes arising out of his employment relationship."
There was dissatisfaction with the seniority list and in 1946, the matter was submitted to a board of arbitration, the majority of whom determined as follows on February 28, 1946:
"Now therefore, it is hereby determined that the employer and the union above referred to can make any agreement .as to seniority any time they choose, or have a meeting of the minds.
"It is further determined that the equities of fairness and justice are in favor of the continuation of the so-called compromise list as agreed upon and heretofore used by both the individual employees and by the union and the employer, and that said compromise list, a copy of which is hereto attached, marked `Exhibit A' and hereby made a part hereof, should continue as the seniority list of the employees of the Superior Division of the Duluth-Superior Transit Company and the Duluth-Superior Bus Company."
At a special meeting of the union on July 9, 1946, it was decided that the matter of seniority be reopened. The union notified the company on July 12, 1946, that it desired to negotiate certain changes in the collective-bargaining agreement, including the matter of seniority. Negotiations were had between the union and the company which resulted in a written agreement dated October 14, 1946, whereby the company granted the union's request in the matter of seniority by stating as follows:
"5. Superior seniority — It is agreed that the company wilt grant in substance the union's request. The manner of how it shall be granted is to be determined after the legal problems have been reviewed."
A new seniority list was prepared by the union and put into effect as of November 1, 1946, which determined seniority *348 from the date of hire by the old streetcar company, and no consideration was given to the fact that the original bus drivers had entered that type of employment first, as was done in the previous contracts and the compromise agreement of April 6, 1937.
The plaintiffs protested the matter to the union and requested a hearing pursuant to the by-laws of the union. At a regular stated meeting of the union the membership voted to deny the request. The plaintiffs then appealed to the general executive board, who denied their appeal. They then appealed to the national convention, where their appeal was also denied.
A new collective-bargaining agreement was negotiated between the company and the union in 1947, which contained the following provision:
"The seniority of bus operators of the Superior division shall be as shown by the `working list' effective November 1, 1946."
The plaintiffs then commenced this action in the circuit court for Douglas county, Wisconsin, praying that the court adjudge the agreement null and void and that the union, its officers, and the company be restrained and enjoined from in any way giving effect or attempting to give effect to the new seniority list or from doing any act that would in any way interfere with the seniority rights of the individual plaintiffs. The trial was had on April 28, 1948, and on June 4, 1948, the trial court rendered a decision in which it was held that the agreement of 1937 could not be changed without the consent of the plaintiffs. Judgment was entered July 9, 1948, adjudging the 1937 agreement a valid contract and adjudging the 1946 seniority list void and of no effect, and granted to the plaintiffs the injunction as prayed for.
Thereafter the defendants moved for an order vacating and setting aside the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and judgment, and for a new trial for the reasons that these were *349
entered without compliance with and contrary to the provisions of secs.
Any other material facts will be stated in the opinion. The question involved in this case is whether the agreement entered into by the original bus drivers, the former streetcar operators, and the Duluth-Superior Bus Company on April 6, 1937, which agreed on a seniority list, known as the "compromise seniority list," is a valid and enforceable contract.
Seniority rights are things of value to the employees which are capable of determination. The main consideration in determining these rights is length of service. It was stated in Dooley v. Lehigh Valley R. Co. (1941),
"`Seniority' rights result from desire of railway labor organizations to protect men of extended service in right to their jobs and to select their jobs in preference to men who have had shorter periods of service."
After the merger of the bus company and the streetcar company, all employees, individually and collectively, entered *350 into an agreement determining seniority rights based on length service.
The union was thereafter formed and accepted the seniority list of April 6, 1937. The compromise seniority list was approved by the arbitration board which stated:
"It is further determined that the equities of fairness and justice are in favor of the continuation of the so-called compromise list as agreed upon and heretofore used by both the individual employees and by the union and the employer;, and that said compromise list, a copy of which is hereto attached, marked `Exhibit A' and hereby made a part hereof, should continue as the seniority list of the employees of the Superior division of the Duluth-Superior Transit Company and the Duluth-Superior Bus Company."
Seniority rights here do not flow from any union bargaining but exist because of a Written agreement or contract involving the "compromise seniority list" which existed before the union was formed or before its present members joined, and was in effect for some years. (See Annotations in 142 A.L.R. 1055 and 153 A.L.R. 60, and cases cited therein.) The individual rights of seniority in this case were determined and remain fixed.
Bargaining for seniority rights is quite different than bargaining for wages, hours, working conditions, etc. The latter conditions affect the union as a whole and are ever changing. A collective-bargaining agreement may be necessary and its results are final and binding under the union's by-laws when the union bargains for benefits for all its members.
In its letter of July 12, 1946, to the employer, the union set out sixteen different matters which it desired to bargain with the employer. All points except No. 2 (seniority of Superior division bus operators to be determined by the union [italics ours]) were proper matters for collective bargaining. The agreement of 1937 in no way affected the union's rights to bargain on any of the other points set out. *351
The Duluth-Superior Bus Company has stated in its brief "that its position in this litigation is that it will say nothing as to the relative merits of the claim of either group either from an equitable or a legal standpoint."
Sec. 9 (a) of the Taft-Hartley Act (29 USCA App., sec. 159 (a)) provides as follows:
"(a) Representatives designated or selected for the purposes of collective bargaining by the majority of the employees in a unit appropriate for such purposes, shall be the exclusive representatives of all the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining in respect to rates of pay, wages, hours of employment, or other conditions of employment:Provided, That any individual employee or a group of employees shall have the right at any time to present grievances to their employer and to have such grievances adjusted, without the intervention of the bargaining representative, as long as the adjustment is not inconsistent with the terms of a collective-bargaining contract or agreement then in effect: Providedfurther, That the bargaining representative has been given opportunity to be present at such adjustment."
Our decision in this case in no way conflicts with the above provision. We hold here that seniority was determined by the 1937 agreement. This also applies to sec.
"Representatives chosen for the purposes of collective bargaining by a majority of the employees voting in a collective-bargaining unit shall be the exclusive representatives of all of the employees in such unit for the purposes of collective bargaining, provided that any individual employee or any minority group of employees in any collective-bargaining unit shall have the right at any time to present grievances to their employer in person or through representatives of their own choosing, and the employer shall confer with them in relation thereto."
J. I. Case Co. v. National Labor Relations Board (1944),
"`The board asserts a public right vested in it as a public body, charged in the public interest with the duty of preventing unfair labor practices.' National Licorice Co. v. LaborBoard,
Here the private contract does not conflict with the functions of the bargaining agent nor the company. It does not bar the union from bargaining for any advantages regarding wages, working conditions, etc.
Appellants also relied on International Union v. J. I.Case Co. (1947),
"Collective bargaining is a continuing and developing process by which, under present law, the relationship between employer and employee is to be molded, and the terms and conditions of employment progressively modified along lines mutually satisfactory to all concerned. Changing conditions require continuing collective bargaining and changed contracts of employment. The written contract of yesterday does not become a final and permanent result. NationalLabor Relations Board v. Newark Morning L. Co. (3d Cir.)
There are no cases cited involving seniority rights which had once been established by contract as here. The matters in dispute were matters between the union and the employer, *353 and not wholly matters between the members of the union as in the present case. Also, the authorities hold that there must be some change in economic conditions to enable the contract to be changed.
It was stated in Yazoo M. V. R. Co. v. Sideboard (1931),
"So that, although only a few years ago the .courts were holding that an individual member of a labor union could not maintain an action for the breach of an agreement between an employer and the union of which the plaintiff was a member in respect to wages and other rights fixed in the contract [cases cited], these rulings have been left in the rear in the advancement of the law on this general subject, and the holdings now are that these agreements are primarily for the individual benefit of the members of the organization, and that the rights secured by these contracts are the individual rights of the individual members of the union, and may be enforced directly by the individual. Piercy v. Louisville N. Ry. Co.,
The case of Piercy v. Louisville N. R. Co. (1923),
"The primary purpose in the organization of labor unions and kindred organizations is to protect their individual members and to secure for them a fair and just remuneration for their labor and favorable conditions under which to perform it. Their agreements with employers look always to the securing of some right or privilege for their individual members, and the right or privilege so secured by agreement is the individual right of the individual member, and such organization can no more by its arbitrary act deprive that individual member of his right so secured than can any other person . . . .
"Doubtless under the terms of his agreement as a loyal member [of the union], it was his duty to acquiesce in the will of a majority inside the order upon any question of policy or any difference of opinion that might have arisen affecting the welfare of the organization. But here we have a personal right acquired by him as against the railroad company under contract, and we have the Order of Railroad Conductors asserting the right to waive for him the benefits of that contract."
See Leeder v. Cities Service Oil Co. (1948),
There is no evidence here showing any such change which would justify an amendment of the contract of 1937. The change in this case was merely to give the former streetcar operators *355
better seniority than they had under the compromise agreement. They were in the majority in the union and arbitrarily, unfairly, and capriciously changed the contract to suit themselves. Under such facts, the courts have held the change unlawful. In Hartley v. Brotherhood (1938),
"A different situation might be presented had the agreement of 1932 been accomplished as a result of bad faith, arbitrary action, or fraud directed at plaintiff on the part of those responsible for its execution."
We hold that the union acted arbitrarily and without authority.
It is stated in 142 A.L.R. at page 1060:
"That seniority rights of individual members of a union under a collective-bargaining contract made between it and an employer are property rights which the court will protect in a proper case even against the action of the union, if arbitrary or otherwise clearly wrongful," and is demonstrated byEvans v. Louisville N. R. Co. (1940),
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed. *356