40 N.W.2d 504 | Wis. | 1949
On an appeal to this court by Clarence Belanger and ten other plaintiffs from an order of the circuit court for Douglas county denying their motion, under sec. 269.56 (8), Stats., for supplemental relief based on a declaratory judgment recovered by plaintiffs in an action against the defendants, Local Division No. 1128, Amalgamated Association of Street, Electric Railway Motor Coach Employees of America, and its officers and their employer, Duluth-Superior Bus Company, defendants made a motion in this court to dismiss plaintiffs' appeal.
A declaratory judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in their action against the defendants was affirmed on March 8, 1949, by this court on the defendants' appeal from that judgment. (Belanger v. Local Division No. 1128,
On June 7, 1949, in said action for declaratory relief, plaintiffs, for the purpose of securing supplemental relief under sec. 269.56 (8), Stats., obtained an order requiring defendants to show why the bus company should not be required to place the seniority agreement of April 6, 1937, into effect forthwith, and why such other and further supplemental relief as may be just should not be granted to plaintiffs pursuant to sec. 269.56 (8), Stats. Thereupon the bus company filed an affidavit stating that the contract between it and the defendant union, which was in effect at the time the action was started in 1947, had since been terminated, and that there was in effect at the date of the affidavit a contract dated September 1, 1948, which terminated August 31, 1949. The circuit judge decided on July 22, 1949. that the new 1948 contract, not having been before the court or the subject of *277
litigation, the court had no right to put into effect the 1937 agreement instead of the 1948 agreement; and that if the court had made the order requested by plaintiffs it would, in effect, be an injunction, or have the same effect as an injunction, and he questioned whether he had this power in view the provisions of sec.
Defendants' contention cannot be sustained at the present stage of this appeal. In sec. 269.56 (8), Stats., of the Declaratory Judgment Act, it is expressly provided that:
"Supplemental relief. Further relief based on a declaratory judgment or decree may be granted whenever necessary or proper. The application therefor shall be by petition to a court having jurisdiction to grant the relief. If the application be deemed sufficient, the court shall, on reasonable notice, require any adverse party whose rights have been adjudicated by the declaratory judgment or decree, to show cause why further relief should not be granted forthwith." *278
In the declaratory judgment, affirmed in the former appeal, the seniority contract of April 6, 1937, was held valid and effective as against later attempts by defendants to change the same, without plaintiffs' consent, by subsequent collective-bargaining contracts and thereby avoid the provisions of the April 6, 1937, contract in relation to plaintiffs' rights thereunder. Consequently, they were entitled under sec. 269.56 (8), Stats., to have, on their application for supplemental further relief, a hearing and an adjudication as to whether they had the right to have specific' performance in relation to their rights under and by virtue of the contract of 1937; and upon the trial court's denial thereof were entitled to appeal from and have a review of the adjudication in question. In relation to the jurisdiction of the court to grant supplemental relief after the entry of judgment in an action under sec. 269.56 (8), Stats., there are in point the following statements and conclusions inMorris v. Ellis,
"The contention is that sec. 269.56 (8) does not authorize the retention by a court of any jurisdiction after entering a declaratory judgment. True, it does not, but it does not follow that a court may not retain jurisdiction to enter such subsequent orders as will make effective the declaratory relief. An action for declaratory relief is essentially equitable in character. Rosenberg v. Whitefish Bay,
"The intimation that the supplemental relief contemplated by the statute is limited to further declaratory relief cannot be sustained. It includes any relief essential to making effective the declaratory judgment entered by the court. See Borchard, Dec. Judg. (1934), p. 172; 11 Ind. Law Rev. 376." *279
Consequently the motion to dismiss the appeal must be denied.
By the Court. — Motion denied.