ELGIN, JOLIET & EASTERN RAILWAY CO. v. BURLEY ET AL.
No. 160, October Term, 1944
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided March 25, 1946
Reargued December 3, 4, 1945
327 U.S. 661
The Commission was therefore justified in concluding that appellant‘s failure to engage in bona fide operations since January 1, 1940, was due to circumstances other than those over which appellant had no control. Appellant accordingly forfeited whatever “grandfather” rights it might have had.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE dissent.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
Paul R. Conaghan argued the cause and filed a brief for petitioner.
John H. Gately argued the cause and filed a brief for respondents.
Briefs were filed as amici curiae by Ray T. Miller, Wayland K. Sullivan, Harold N. McLaughlin and W. A. Endle for the Brotherhoods of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen; by Harold C. Heiss, Russell B. Day and V. C. Shuttleworth for the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen et al.; and by Lee Pressman, Eugene Cotton, Frank Donner, Willard Y. Morris, William Standard, David Scribner, Leon M. Despres, John J. Abt, Isadore Katz, M. H. Goldstein and Ben Meyers for the Congress of Industrial Organizations et al., in support of petitioner.
MR. JUSTICE RUTLEDGE delivered the opinion of the Court.
We adhere to our decision rendered in the opinion filed after the first argument. 325 U. S. 711.1 That opinion
The question whether the collective agent has authority, in the two pertinent respects, does not turn on technical agency rules such as apply in the simple, individualistic situation where P deals with T through A about the sale of Blackacre. We are dealing here with problems in a specialized field, with a long background of custom and practice in the railroad world. And the fact that
Furthermore, the Board is acquainted with established procedures, customs and usages in the railway labor world. It is the specialized agency selected to adjust these controversies. Its expertise is adapted not only to interpreting a collective bargaining agreement,5 but also to ascer-
We also pointed out that the Act imposes correlative affirmative duties upon the carrier, the collective agent and the aggrieved employee to make every reasonable effort to settle the dispute.6 It would be entirely inconsistent for the Act to require the carrier and the union to negotiate concerning the settlement of the grievance and, while withholding power from them to make that settlement effective finally as against the employee, to relieve him altogether of obligation in the matter. Not only is he required to take affirmative steps. His failure to do so may result in loss of his rights.7
It is not likely that workingmen having grievances will be ignorant in many cases either of negotiations conducted between the collective agent and the carrier for their settlement or of the fact that the dispute has been submitted
In view of these facts there cannot be many instances in which an aggrieved employee will not have knowledge or notice that negotiations affecting his claim are being conducted or, if they fail, that proceedings are pending before the Board to dispose of it.9 Although under our ruling his rights to have voice in the settlement are preserved, whether by conferring with the carrier and, having seasonably done so, refusing to be bound by a settlement reached over his protest, or by having representation before the Board according to his own choice, we did not rule, and there is no basis for assuming we did, that an employee can stand by with knowledge or notice of what
It may be, as we said previously, that respondents upon the further hearing will find it difficult to sustain their allegations, whether with reference to knowledge or notice in the material respects concerning which they have denied having it or otherwise. But whether this burden will be easy or impossible to carry, they are entitled to undertake it in the forum where such issues properly are triable.
The judgment is affirmed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and the previous opinion filed in this cause.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or decision of this case on the reargument.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, dissenting.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE BURTON, and I are of opinion that the judgment should be reversed. Last Term a divided Court held that a determination by the Adjustment Board of a dispute brought before it by a union recognized as the collective bargaining agent on behalf of its members is not binding, and may be upset in a district court in an independent suit involving the construction of the collective agreement, but brought by an individual member on his own behalf. 325 U.S. 711. The dissent expressed the view that “to allow such settlements to be thus set aside is to obstruct the smooth working of the Act. It undermines the confidence so indispensable to adjustment by negotiation, which is the vital object of the Act.” Id. at 755-56.
“The result of last Term‘s decision has been and will be that a union‘s authority to settle a grievance involving a claim for accrued damages will always be subject to challenge by an individual who does not get all he wants, unless the union has previously obtained an exceedingly explicit power of attorney to act on his behalf. This means that the carriers will be likely to demand proof of such authorization from every individual involved before undertaking to negotiate a grievance case, since they might otherwise be liable to any employee dissatisfied with the settlement. As we shall see, this has been what has happened on the Adjustment Board.
In many simple cases, of course, it will not be difficult for the organization to secure an authorization. In other types of cases, although many authorizations could probably be obtained, it might be impossible to obtain authority from every individual involved. And whether or not impossible, the process of securing necessary authorizations might be so prolonged as to prevent prompt disposition even of the many cases which would in the past have been speedily settled on the properties.”
The Brotherhoods of Locomotive Engineers and of Railroad Trainmen thus summarize the effect of the Court‘s decision:
“The impact of the Court‘s decision on the processes of grievance adjustment has already appeared in the suspension of the functioning of the National Railroad Adjustment Board and in indicated difficulties on various railroad properties. It is our conviction that unless this decision be reversed or substantially modified, the prompt and orderly settlement of such disputes will be impeded to a serious degree. The holding upsets long established techniques of grievance handling by employee represent-
atives and adversely affects the administration and enforcement of the collective agreements.
We point out, first, that the Court‘s decision construes the
Railway Labor Act in a way which frustrates the purposes which Congress had in mind in providing for the settlement of grievance disputes.”“The shutting down of the Adjustment Board because of the difficulty or the impossibility of securing authorizations is only one development of the decision. We are advised that some managements are insisting that local chairmen furnish powers of attorney in day to day adjustments. Considering the various factors involved, such as the volume of the grievances, the extra burden placed on the committees, and the additional delays which would be encountered, the task of compliance with the technique required by the Court‘s decision seems calculated to cause a breakdown of grievance handling by employee representatives. It is obvious that handling by individuals or on an individual basis will not work. Such a breakdown, or even the impairment of collective handling as traditionally practiced, will be serious, as prior history shows.”
“Second, the decision impairs the functioning of employee representatives under the Act, and has an adverse effect upon the maintenance of craft agreements. Representatives of employees have the statutory right and duty (1) to confer with management respecting all disputes (
§ 2 Second ) and specifically those arising out of grievances or out of the interpretation or application of agreements (§ 2 Sixth ); and (2) to represent a craft or class for the purposes of the Act (§ 2 Fourth ). The latter, of course, includes the right to negotiate craft agreements. Employees, acting through representatives, have the right to make and maintain agreements and to settle all disputes (§ 2 Fourth ,§ 1 First ). These provisions, we believe, spell out collective bargaining rights with which the Court‘s decision interferes.”
The Railway Labor Executives’ Association and the American Federation of Labor make this analysis:
“In summary, therefore, we submit that the regulatory scheme of the
Railway Labor Act requires for its effective operation a recognized authority in the collective bargaining representative to proceed in its own right to adjust disputes regarding the interpretation or application of agreements. A denial of that right will produce no real benefits to individual employees, will impair the effectiveness of representatives as stabilizing influences in this field, will deprive the carriers of any agency to which they may go to secure a final settlement of many vexatious labor controversies, and will bring about a general deterioration of relations between employees and management which will necessarily impair the paramount interest of the public in uninterrupted transportation.We respectfully submit that these results already experienced or reasonably to be anticipated from the interpretation which has been given to the
Railway Labor Act are inimical to the whole purpose of the statute and should not be maintained.”“The decision of the court in effect outlaws a method which has been successfully followed for a quarter of a century in the adjustment of disputes of the kind under consideration. Thousands of individual cases have been settled during this period and up to the time of the decision in this case, no one had questioned the authority of the employees’ representatives to act in this connection. The existence of such authority has always been considered as an integral and essential part of the collective bargaining process as it has developed under federal regulation. We have no hesitancy in saying to the court that we believe that its decision denying the existence of such authority reduces the potency of collective bargaining as an instrumentality of peace in the railroad industry to a lower level than that prevailing in 1920. We feel that the court should be advised that since the announcement of its decision the National Railroad Adjustment Board has virtually ceased to function. . . . This brief is filed with the deep conviction that the whole process of the orderly adjustment of controver-
sies, which is the fruit of railroad labor legislation obtained after long effort on the part of all concerned, is now in serious jeopardy. The potentialities of this case were not fully recognized by us when it was originally before the court.”
The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, the Order of Railway Conductors of America, and Switchmen‘s Union of North America united in this statement:
“We are compelled to conclude from this treatment of the problem that the Court proposes to apply a common-law standard, designedly suitable to the relatively simple relationship of principal and agent, as the test of the authority of a railway labor organization to handle and settle the host of grievances which must be expeditiously and effectively disposed of if the Congressional enjoinment ‘to avoid any interruption to commerce or to the operation of any carrier engaged therein’ is to be accomplished.
We wish to respectfully suggest to the Court that the entertainment of this proposed view could be commended as reasonable only if the problem under consideration were weighed wholly detached from the realities of its environment. If a strait-jacket of legal restrictions is not to shackle the railway labor organizations in the performance of the services expected of them by the Congress and the country at large as outlined in the
Railway Labor Act , the mind of the Court must be accurately attuned to the practicalities of the problems faced by these representatives.”
To these the Congress of Industrial Organizations on its own behalf and for its constituent unions1 adds:
“The Court holds that such union settlements are not permitted, that there must be settlement with the employees involved. It leaves open the question whether an employee settlement alone is sufficient or whether a joint settlement with employee and union is necessary (Slipsheet 20-21). It concedes that if employee settlements are permitted, then, as to most grievances at least, the union must be allowed to express its views (Slipsheet 20-21 and particularly note 35). We submit that the Act requires union settlements, with the right accorded to the employee to present grievances but not to participate in their disposition.
The disposition of grievances by employee settlements is precluded by the fact that such disposition, without consent of the union, whether of retrospective or prospective matters, introduces the very individual bargaining which Congress intended to eliminate (supra). That settlement of grievances is ‘bargaining’ was clearly recognized by the Court when it referred to the ‘power to bargain concerning grievances, that is, to conclude agreements for their settlements’ (Slipsheet 14). But if this ‘bargaining’ is to be conducted between the employer and the employee alone, it will be no more than a mockery. As the Court itself points out (Slipsheet 21, note 35), the ‘carrier would be free . . . to bargain with each employee for whatever terms its economic power, pitted against his own, might induce him to accept.‘”
“We earnestly urge upon the Court . . . that the collective bargaining process has always been viewed by the participants thereto as including the settlement of grievances and, more particularly, that employers and unions have always considered that they had the power to dispose of grievances on a large scale. We call to the attention of the Court the agreement
Workers, National Maritime Union of America, United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America, United Automobile, Aircraft, Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Transport Workers Union of America, United Furniture Workers of America, United Transport Service Employees of America, State, County & Municipal Workers of America, Fur & Leather Workers Union.
involved in this very case, referred to by the Court in its opinion (Slipsheet 4, note 5), by which the union and the railroad tried to settle all similar claims then existing. We cannot overestimate the serious consequences of making such agreements ineffective. They are commonly made wherever collective bargaining is established. It will be extremely disturbing to employers and employees alike when employers discover that there is no way, short of settlement with each employee, whereby pending disputes and the possibility of future legal action can be eliminated.”
Seldom if ever have the claims of policy been so marshalled on a single side of an issue requiring the interpretation of a statute which, at best, is sufficiently ambiguous to permit these considerations of policy to carry the day. The danger in “adhering” to the original decision is only too clear; it can hardly be lessened by an explanation that extracts meaning from the first opinion.
The results of the opinion of last Term, actual and potential, threatened not only the efficacy of the
The Court says that it adheres to its previous opinion. Last Term it found that it could not say that the respondents had authorized the union to settle their grievances, and remanded the case for judicial redetermination of the Board‘s decision. Whatever requirements the Court meant to indicate as sufficient to establish authorization from members of the union to the union, the opinion surely conveyed doubt whether the respondents had given authority in a “legally sufficient” way, and encouraged the respondents’ claim that they had not authorized their collective agent to settle their grievances. The Court now says that on the record it may be difficult for respondents to prove that they did not authorize the union to represent them. The difficulty becomes apparent as the Court‘s opinion proceeds. It disclaims that common law agency tests of authority are to be determinative, substitutes “custom and usage,” and puts the burden of persuasion on the respondents, having against them the weight of the Board‘s “expertise,” the presumption of regularity, and their own failure to disavow the proceedings before the Board. The hypothetical factors which the Court intimates would defeat respondents’ right to sustain this suit are the normal factors in these disputes and are revealed by the record in this case. The way in which these grievances were handled was “the usual manner“; the Adjustment Board exercising its expertness did determine that the union had authority to represent respondents; the respondents did stand by doing nothing while their claims were presented to the Board and determined by it. If the custom of the railroad industry rather than the conventional law of agency is to govern, clearly the expert, centralized Board is the appropriate tribunal for ascertaining whether the authorized bargaining agency
If the context of history into which the
A court which has held that under the
