The plaintiff, the Connecticut Company, brought this action in the Superior Court
The plaintiff is a motorbus carrier operating, under a franchise from this state, in and between Hartford, Meriden, New Haven, Stamford, Middletown and Norwich. It serves an area with a population of approximately one million people and carries annually about fifty-five million passengers. Its gross annual revenue from operations in this state exceeds $1,000,000 annually. It operates busses for exclusive charter service outside the state, but its revenue from this source is less than $50,000 a year. The defendants represent, for the purpose of collective bargaining through a state conference board, 1100 employees of the plaintiff who are paid by the hour. The plaintiff has recognized the defendants as the sole bargaining agencies for its employees in the classifications of drivers and mechanics. During the past fifty years, the plaintiff and rеpresentatives of its employees have bargained collectively concerning wages, hours and other terms and conditions of employment, originally through a committee of the employees and, since 1939, through the defendants. Uniform contracts covering all divisions represented by the defendants have been negotiated for the employees. These contracts took the form of memoranda of agreement before 1939 and formal agreements thereafter. Each agreеment dealt with basic wages and working conditions for its term and constituted the entire agreement between the parties for the employees covered. There have been twelve
The agreement concerned in the present litigation was made on October 26, 1955. It provided that the rates of pay and working conditions contained in an agreement dated May 3, 1950, should be continued for a period of thirty-six months beginning October 1, 1955, and ending September 30, 1958, except as modified by the agreement of October 26, 1955. The two agreements, together with a supplemental agreement which was executed on November 1, 1957, and modified the cost of living escalator clause in the 1955 agreement, constitute the last contract of the parties. Parenthetically, it is of some importance to note the composition of these documents. The agrеement of May 3,1950, contains three parts. Part one deals with rates of wages and “working conditions” for operators; part two, with rates of wages and “working conditions” for hourly rated shop and garage employees; part three, with general provisions relating to bus operators and hourly rated shop and garage employees. The agreement of October 26, 1955, similarly contains a part one, a part two and a part three, each dealing with the items covered in the corresponding part of the 1950 agreement. The sections decisive of the present controversy, §§ 92 (c) and 96, are included in part three of the 1950 agreement. Section 96, as amended, is repeated in part three of the 1955 agreement, while § 92 (c) remained in force without change during the period of the 1955 agreement. The determination of the instant case revolves around the proper interpretation of these two sections.
Section 96 provides as follows: “This Agreement
On July 24,1958, the plaintiff gave to the defendants timely notice of a resolution of its directors authorizing its director of labor relations and its general manager “to prepare a new contract for the negotiating committee of . . . [the defendant unions] for the period beginning October 1,1958,” and authorizing its proper officers to notify the unions “that the present contract dated October 26, 1955, and as amended is to be terminated and all of its provisions cancelled at midnight September 30,
On September 30, 1958, the defendants requested in writing that the unresolved issues between the parties “be submitted to arbitration in accordance with section 92 of our agreement,” appointed David Zimring as their arbitrator, and requested the plaintiff to appoint its arbitrator. On October 3,1958, the
This litigation was precipitated by negotiations between the plaintiff and the defendants. Speaking generally, the dispute before the court may be said to be a labor dispute in that the protagonists are management and labor, resрectively. But the question for decision is the interpretation of the provisions of a contract governing the relationship of the
In ascertaining intent, we consider not only thе language used in the contract but also the circumstances surrounding the making of the contract, the motives of the parties and the purposes which they sought to accomplish.
Amalgamated Assn.
v.
Con
The written contract before us contains many provisions, most of them separable. Each provision is an; agreement as to a particular feature of the contractual relationship. Section 96 fixes the term of the entire contract. It allows an automatic renewal of the-entire contract unless written notice of termination is given. It is a necessary, indeed an essential, provision, separate and distinct from any other. It' contains no statement of any cause for a termination but leaves it to the will of either party. Section-92 (c), however, gives to each party during the term-of the contract the power to prevent the automatic-renewal of any of its provisions relating to “the-basic wage scales, or any of these Working Conditions, or both,” by giving a sixty-day written notice as set up in § 96. It is significant that the contract contains in part one a basic wage scale and' sixty-one paragraphs dealing with what are described as “Working Conditions” for operators, and in part two a wage scale for hourly rated and garage-employees and twenty-five paragraphs of “Working-Conditions.” It is a clear assumption from the language used in these sections that either party could terminate the entire contract by giving the notice-required in § 96, or, by proceeding under § 92 (c),. prevent the automatic renewal of any of the basic-
The interpretation urged by the defendants is contrary to the clear intent expressed by the language used. However, they claim that a notice under 92 (c) and 96 could lead only to a negotiation, .and, if agreement failed, to arbitration of all issues in dispute. An interpretation such as this could result in the compulsory arbitration of an entirely new -contract to cover future relations. It could also make the contract of 1955 interminable at the will of either party. The trial court heard evidence in .great detail concerning the negotiations had and agreements made between the plaintiff and the representatives of its employees. The defendants arguе that these negotiations and agreements show conduct of the parties supporting a practical interpretation of the contract and that this interpretation is the proper one. While the conduct of the parties ■cannot compel a construction contrary to an intent ■expressed in the plain language of a contract, we have, nevertheless, considered the conduct here.
From 1916 until 1939, the plaintiff negotiated ^agreements with its employees acting through а committee, and after 1939, with a state conference board composed of representatives of the defend•ants. The facts concerning these negotiations and •agreements are for the most part unchallenged. The •defendants claim that the conclusions drawn from them by the trial court were unwarranted. We have •examined the finding, the exceptions to it, and all
The trial court found that until the notice of termination of the agreement was given by the company on July 24, 1958, the notices given by both* parties were notices of proposed changes in the contract in force and were not treated by the parties-as notices to terminatе the entire existing contract. Bather, these notices expressed a desire of one or the other that the agreement be “modified” or “changed in part” as to basic wages and working;
As stated hereinbefore, the interpretation urged by the defendants would mean that any notice of termination could lead only to the arbitration of a new or modified agreement. They say that the arbitration provisions amount to an implied no-strike agreement. See
W. L. Mead, Inc.
v.
International Brotherhood,
126 F. Sup. 466. The intent of the parties to a contract cannot be found by implication unless a contrary intention cannot be supposed or any other inference made. The implication must be a necessary one and quite as obvious from the terms of the contract as though the intent implied was expressed in fact.
First Ecclesiastical Society
v.
Besse,
If it was the intent of the parties that §§ 92 (e) and 96 require compulsory arbitration of the terms of a new contract, the requirement would apply with equal force to both parties. The trial court has found that the defendants’ proposals for inclusion in a new contract, if granted by the company or allowed by the arbitrators, would amount to an additional expenditure of $2,750,000 in a year. The plaintiff’s offer would require an additional expenditure of $440,000 over a two-year period. The plaintiff has сontinued, on a day-to-day basis, the wage scale and working conditions contained in its recent contract. The parties have continued negotiations in good faith. There has been no strike or lockout on this occasion, nor was there any during the previous fifty years. If arbitration is compulsory, the parties must submit their respective fates to three arbitrators, two of whom are admittedly partial because each represents one of the parties. The decision of the third would be cоntrolling. The plaintiff claims that any interpretation of this contract which would require compulsory arbitration is unlawful under the rule of
Boston Printing Pressmen’s Union
v.
Potter Press,
141 F. Sup. 553, aff’d,
The clause (§96) providing for the continuance of the life of the contract, unless notice of termination is given, is a common one in labor-management agreements. See
United Electrical Radio & Machine Workers
v.
Union Mfg. Co.,
One further claim made by the defendants con
The defendants claim that the court had no jurisdiction to issue a permanent injunction to restrain them from proceeding with an action to compel arbitration. They allege that there is a controversy between the parties which constitutes a “labor dispute” under General Statutes § 31-112 (c). The case at bar was begun by writ, summons and complaint dated May 12,1959. The defendants also brought an action against the plaintiff in the Superior Court to compel arbitration, but the trial court has permanently enjoined the prosecution of that action. In the action brought by the defendants as well as in the present аction, the interpretation of §§ 92 (e) and 96 would have been in issue. A resolution of that issue is necessary to a disposition of either case. The pleadings in the instant case raise the issue, it has been fully tried, and the declaratory judgment of the trial court disposed of it. It is inconceivable that the plaintiff or the defendants would have questioned that judgment except, as is done here, by the process of an appeal. Under these circumstances
The trial court was correct in concluding that the contract between the plaintiff and the defendants had been legally terminated and that the plaintiff was under no obligation to arbitrate issues arising out of the negotiation of a new contract. The trial court was in error, however, in granting injunctive relief.
There is error in part, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment as on file except as modified to accord with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
