22 N.E.2d 145 | NY | 1939
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *16 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *18 This is an appeal by an employer from an order of the Appellate Division unanimously affirming an order of Special Term directing the employer to offer reinstatement to two discharged employees.
After an investigation by the State Labor Relations Board of charges filed with it by the Retail Employees' Union, Local 830-C.I.O., the Board issued its complaint alleging that the employer had been engaging in unfair labor practices within the meaning of section 704, subdivisions 1, 3, 4, 5 and 10, of the State Labor Relations Act (L. 1937, ch.
The appeal to this court is taken as of right on the ground that a substantial constitutional question is involved, as will presently appear. The fact that we decide the constitutional question against appellant does not make it the less a ground for appeal. No appellant should be required to insure that his answer to the constitutional question will be adopted by the court.
The argument presented by the employer on this appeal may be summarized as follows:
Although it is engaged in the business of selling at retail, it makes substantial purchases and sales in interstate commerce, and is thereby brought within the scope of the National Labor Relations Act (U.S. Code, tit. 29, ch. 7). Article
We come then to a decision of the questions presented.
First. Whether appellant's labor relations are within the scope of the National Labor Relations Act.
Appellant's business is that of selling radios, refrigerators, sporting goods and miscellaneous merchandise. In 1936 the total purchases by appellant amounted to $4,385,000. Of *20 this amount $2,706,000 was purchased by appellant from manufacturers located outside of the State of New York. In that same year appellant's total sales were approximately $7,350,000. Of these $1,200,000 consisted of sales in interstate commerce. Thus, approximately sixty-one per cent of appellant's purchases and seventeen per cent of appellant's sales involved interstate transactions. It may be observed that most of appellant's purchases are stored in its New York warehouse for a period of from two weeks to several months before being resold to appellant's retail customers. These in brief are the facts upon which appellant relies to establish that it is subject to the jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board.
It may well be that appellant's activities are sufficient to bring it within the national jurisdiction based on the commerce clause. (Consolidated Edison Co. v. National Labor Rel. Bd.,
Second. Whether by the operation of article
This question may be resolved, based on its application to different factual situations, as follows: Where both the National and State acts are identical in aims and requirements; where they are in conflict; and there is a middle ground where the State and National acts are identical in *21 aims and requirements, but the State act adds requirements in addition to, but in harmony with, those of the National act. The case at bar involves statutes within the first category.
We may eliminate as non-existent in the case at bar any claim that the State Labor Relations Board is attempting to act through the enforcement of the National Labor Relations Act in the same manner that State courts often enforce causes of action created by Federal statutes.
We may further assume that the police power of the State would warrant the application of the State Labor Relations Act to the labor relations of appellant if the National Labor Relations Act were not in existence. (Minnesota Rate Cases,
The present proceeding is concerned with the duty imposed upon the employer not to discharge its employees for certain causes. The measure of the employer's duty with regard to the employees who have been accorded relief below is the same under the Federal and the State statutes. In so far as is pertinent here, both the National *22
Labor Relations Act and the State Labor Relations Act provide that employees shall have the right to bargain collectively and to join labor organizations of their own choosing, and the employer may not discriminate against any employee in order to discourage or circumvent the realization of collective bargaining. (
From a study of authorities it does not appear that the National Labor Relations Act ipso facto precludes the State legislation applicable to the same situations.
In Dickson v. Uhlmann Grain Co. (supra) the court upheld a defense that the contract sued upon was illegal under the Missouri bucket shop law, even though the contract was executed upon grain exchanges located in Chicago and not only were subject to but legal under the Federal Grain Futures Act (
In Crossman v. Lurman (
On the other hand, in Southern Ry. Co. v. Railroad Comm. ofIndiana (
Appellant, to establish the proposition that when Congress has acted in a field within its competence State legislation is necessarily superseded, relies on Napier v. Atlantic CoastLine R.R. Co. (
To the foregoing cases may be added the Second Employers'Liability Cases (
Appellant argues that it is the intent of Congress, as expressed in the National Labor Relations Act, to preclude consistent State regulation of the same subject-matter and *24
that this intent is purportedly established by the absence of a saving clause in the National act and by the fact that the National Labor Relations Board is given exclusive jurisdiction to enforce the terms of that act. The significance of the lack of a saving clause in favor of State legislation is considerably diminished by the fact that there was no like legislation in existence when Congress adopted the National act. Furthermore, where the result would be to curtail what is otherwise an exercise of the State's police power, such an intent is not to be inferred, but must be clearly manifested. (Kelly v.Washington,
That the National Labor Relations Board is given exclusive jurisdiction under the National act is of significance only in fixing the appropriate agency to enforce the National act, and is not relevant to the question whether a consistent State law may co-exist with a National act.
We reach the conclusion, therefore, that the State Labor Relations Board may enforce the State act at least until such time as it is ousted by the exercise by the National Labor Relations Board of its jurisdiction under the National act. At what point the State Board would be displaced need not be considered. (Cf. Lake Erie, A. W.R.R. Co. v. PublicUtilities Comm.,
Appellant seeks to create a twilight zone, in which it may disobey its plain duty, required by both statutes, upon the pretext that its conduct is dictated by the other statute. In so far as is possible within the framework of our Federal form of government, such a result should be avoided. To permit State enforcement of a State law consistent with a Federal law on the same subject until such time as the appropriate Federal agency asserts its own jurisdiction in no way lessens the supremacy of the *25 national laws as required by article VI of the Constitution.
The same question was considered in Wisconsin Labor RelationsBoard v. Rueping Leather Co. (
Third. Whether the State Labor Relations Act, by its own terms, excludes its application to the appellant's employees. New York Labor Relations Act (Labor Law), section 715, provides:
"Application of article. The provisions of this article shall not apply to the employees of any employer who concedes to and agrees with the board that such employees are subject to and protected by the provisions of the national labor relations act. * * *."
Appellant contends that since its employees are protected by the National act, the State law, because of the above provision, does not apply. Such is not the language of the statute. It does not exempt from its jurisdiction all who are subject to the National act but only those as to whom the employer and the Board agree are subject to the National act. In the case at bar the Board has not agreed with the employer that the latter is subject to the National Labor Relations Act. Hence, appellant is not exempted by the operation of this section.
If an employer, by merely making claim that it was subject to the jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board, could oust the State Labor Relations Board from jurisdiction, then, if for any reason the National Labor Relations Board should decline jurisdiction, the employer might be freed from regulation by either agency. This would not seem to be a reasonable construction of section 715.
The order should be affirmed, without costs.
CRANE, Ch. J., LEHMAN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN and RIPPEY, JJ., concur; O'BRIEN, J., taking no part.
Order affirmed. *26