This is a bill in equity brought by the plaintiffs, representing that they are officers, members and business agents of Local No. 379 of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen, and Helpers of America, comprising approximately two thousand five hundred members, whose interests are the same as those of the plaintiffs, that they are too numerous to mention, and that their interests will be fairly and fully represented without their being joined as parties. By the bill the plaintiffs seek to enforce an award made by the board of conciliation and arbitration on a submission to arbitration by the plaintiffs, and the defendants with respect to the “question of duration of contract and wages.” The case was referred to a master, and after his report was filed the judge, reciting that the report had been filed prior to the decision in Boott Mills v. Board of Conciliation & Arbitration,
The award in question fixing the rate of pay for drivers at seventy-two cents an hour retroactively from December 13, 1939, to July 1, 1940, and at seventy-five cents an hour from July 1, 1940, to April 1, 1941, was made on April 1, 1940. Since it thus appears that the duration of the award has expired under its terms, the only possible relief that the plaintiffs could obtain, if the award is valid, would be by way of damages. It is unnecessary to recite in detail the subsidiary findings of the master upon which he based his ultimate findings in response to the direction óf the judge as set forth above. An examination of all the findings of the master satisfies us that those ultimate, decisive findings are. not inconsistent with any of his subsidiary findings. Therefore his ultimate findings must stand. See Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital,
The defendants, relying largely upon Boott Mills v. Board of Conciliation & Arbitration,
Since we are of opinion that the plaintiffs could not prevail in any action based upon the award, we deem it appropriate to dispose of the case without regard to the form of the proceeding. It is established by the findings of the master that the board in arriving at its decision considered the report of the experts appointed without giving the defendants an opportunity to examine it and to introduce evidence to meet it, and that the defendants through their representative protested this action of the board and refused to accept its decision.. While the master has found that the defendants knew that the report had been filed and that they made no request for a hearing to present evidence or to meet the “evidence of the report” until after the board had rendered its decision, we are of opinion that it
In the performance and exercise of their duties the board acts as a quasi judicial tribunal. • As was said by the court in Boott Mills v. Board of Conciliation & Arbitration,
It is unnecessary to decide whether the award of the board was invalid for other reasons assigned by the defendants. The final decree dismissing the bill was entered rightly.
Interlocutory decrees affirmed.
Final decree affirmed with costs,
