ROBERT A. HOLDERBY, Respondent, v. INTERNATIONAL UNION OF OPERATING ENGINEERS, LOCAL UNION NO. 12 (an Unincorporated Association) et al., Appellants.
L. A. No. 23488
In Bank
Dec. 29, 1955.
45 Cal. 2d 843
Aaron Sapiro for Respondent.
The plaintiff became a member of the union in October, 1952. From November, 1952, until March, 1953, he was delinquent in his dues and for that reason was suspended from membership by the executive board of the union on February 5, 1953. Thereafter he applied for reinstatement and assigned illness as the reason for his delinquency. On March 17, 1953, the executive board addressed a letter to him stating the conditions of his reinstatement as follows: “... it was the recommendation of the Advisory Board, concurred in by the Executive Board, that you be granted the privilege of Reinstating your membership by the payment of back Per Capita tax, Reinstatement Fee of $5.00, dues for the current month, and three months dues in advance.” The executive board waived certain оf the above items and gave a credit for $10 paid prior to March 17. It stated in its letter that there remained a balance of $19 due and that in addition it required the plaintiff to furnish a doctor‘s certificate substantiating his illness. It appears that the requirements for reinstatement were consistent with the union‘s constitution. On April 29 a report certifying that the plaintiff had been a рatient at a veterans’ hospital was mailed to the financial secretary of the union. On May 27 the plaintiff made final payment of the amount required for reinstatement plus dues to that date. Soon thereafter he was issued a referral slip for a work assignment on which the notation “dues paid rein 12” appeared. It may be assumed that the notation was in recognition of the payment of dues and the plaintiff‘s reinstatement in Local 12.
On June 6, 1953, the executive board of the union met and purported to reject the plaintiff‘s application for reinstatement. The minutes of its meeting state that “A motion was made, seconded and carried that all previous action of
On July 1, 1953, the plaintiff commenced the present action. Article XVII, section 1(a) of the union‘s constitution provides in part as follows: “Any General Officer who shall have filed in a Local Union charges against a member thereof, and any officer or member of a Local Union, may appeal to the General Executive Board from the adoption of any action by said Local Union, or from any decision rendered by the General President. Any Local Union, or member thereof which belongs to a local, State or Provincial Organization or Joint Executive Board may appeal to the General Executive Board from any act or decision of said local, State or Provincial Organization or Joint Executive Board. . . .” Section 3 of that article states: “No suit or other action at law or equity shall be brought in any court by any member, officer or subdivision of the International Union of Operating Engineers until and unless all rights, remedies and provisions for hearing, trial and appeal within the Organization shall have been properly followed and exhausted by the member, officer or subdivision complaining. . . .” Prior to commencing this action the plaintiff did not avail himself of the remedies provided in the constitution for a review by the general executive board of the action taken against him.
The plaintiff claims that on May 27, after he had fully complied with the requirements on which his reinstatement was conditioned, he automatically became fully reinstated to membership in the union; that thereafter the purported denial of his application for reinstatement was in realty an exclusion from membership without compliance with procedures estаblished in the union‘s constitution, and that he was improperly deprived of valuable rights conferred upon him as a member of the union. (See Lawson v. Hewell, 118 Cal. 613 [50 P. 763, 49 L.R.A. 400].) There is no question
The trial court agreed with the plaintiff, specifically finding that “in accоrdance with the said letter of March 17, 1953, the reinstatement of the plaintiff had been completed by May 28, 1953“; that he was a member in good standing on June 6, 1953, the date the alleged exclusionary action took place; that “he was entitled to all the rights and privileges of membership at the said time,” and that, “by reason of said action on the part of the Executive Bоard, plaintiff was thereby in effect, expelled from the defendant Local Union No. 12. . . .”
The foregoing findings of the court are supported by substantial evidence, and on appeal may not be successfully controverted by the defendant. However, it is contended that the plaintiff failed to exhaust the remedies available within the union and that he is not now entitled to judicial relief.
It is the general and well established jurisdictional rule that a plaintiff who seeks judicial relief against an organization of which he is a member must first invoke and exhaust the remedies provided by that organization applicable to his grievance. (Lawson v. Hewell, supra, 118 Cal. 613; Levy v. Magnolia Lodge No. 29, I.O.O.F., 110 Cal. 297 [42 P. 887].) This rule is analogous to the rule requiring the exhaustion of administrative remedies as a condition precedent to resorting to the courts (see 2 Cal.Jur.2d 304), and to the rule requiring the parties to a contract for arbitration of disputes to exhaust those remedies before seeking judicial relief. (See Cone v. Union Oil Co., 129 Cal.App.2d 558 [277 P.2d 464], and cases collected at p. 563.) Such rules are based on a practical approach to the solution of internal problems, complaints and grievanсes that arise between parties functioning pursuant to special and complex agreements or other arrangements. They make possible the settlement of such matters by simple, expeditious and inexpensive procedures, and by persons who, generally, are familiar therewith. Such internal remedies are designed not only to promote the settlement of grievances but also to promote more harmonious relationships, and the courts look with favor upon them.
The plaintiff claims that an exception to the general rule made it unnecessary that he pursue the internal remedies
It is only when the organization violates its rules for appellate review or upon a showing that it would be futile to invoke them that the further pursuit of internal relief is excused. The violation of its own rules which inflicts the initial wrong furnishes no right for direct resort to the courts.
The statement of the exception in the Weber case, discussed only incidentally with other points considered determinative, is said to have resulted from a holding in Simpson v. Salvation Army, 49 Cal.App.2d 371 [121 P.2d 847]. In that case the court set forth the exception in almost identical language, with citations, and then stated at page 375: “Obviously, that exception is not here involved.” In one of the two cases there relied on (Neto v. Conselho Amor Da Sociedade, 18 Cal.App. 234 [122 P. 973]) the court stated the exception, citing the other case as authority therefor, but refused to apply the exception. Thus the аuthority for the quoted language is easily traced to that other case, Schou v. Sotoyome Tribe, No. 12 (1903), 140 Cal. 254 [73 P. 996]. The holding in that case, however, does not justify the interpretation the plaintiff in the present case would place upon it. There relief was sought by the plaintiff Mrs. Schou in behalf of her husband, a member of the Sotoyome Tribe of the Improved Order of Redmen of California, a fraternal аnd benevolent organization. His application for sick benefits was refused on the ground that the affliction for which he sought relief
The foregoing account of Mrs. Schou‘s inability to obtain an appeal within the machinery provided, although she herself complied with all requirements made known to her, caused the court to сonclude it to be “perfectly clear” that she “was relieved from further compliance, or attempt at compliance, with the regulations and procedure of the order touching appeals. Before an order can hold a member to strict observance of its rules regulating procedure on appeal it must show that in all matters touсhing his substantial rights it has itself observed these regulations, and this the defendant did not do. Its dereliction in this regard excuses a claimant from exhausting his remedy within the rules of the order.”
It is apparent from the foregoing that the court in the
A violation of other laws and wrongs done within the organization are intended to be conciliated and corrected by the appellate machinery provided therein, if properly invoked by an aggrieved party and applied by the organization. If recourse to such appellate machinery is not sought an aggrieved party foregoes his right to a judicial review regardless of the breach of its own rules by the organization in causing the grievance in the first instance. If the organization fails to apply its appellate machinery after it is properly invoked and in еffect prevents an appeal from being taken, the aggrieved party, under the Schou case, need not pursue such an appeal further. Any implications in the statement of the exception to the general rule in the cases heretofore cited are accordingly limited.
In the present case the plaintiff made no attempt to obtain an internal appeal, and there is nothing to indicate that an appeal would not have been accorded him in which to seek redress for the alleged wrongs. He falls squarely within the rule that when an internal appeal is open to him he has no right to invoke the aid of the courts.
The judgment is reversed.
Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
CARTER, J.—I dissent.
The majority in this case hоlds that a member of a union cannot obtain relief in the courts when he has been expelled without the notice or hearing required by the union‘s constitution and by-laws because he did not appeal the expulsion to a higher authority in the union which he had the right to do under the circumstances. This exhaustion of remedies within the union is the universal rule on the subject but there arе exceptions to it, one of which is that it does not apply where
In a case like the one here an appeal would be an idle act and thus unnecessary, for the majority states: “There is no question but thаt the provisions in the union‘s constitution for the expulsion of members were not followed. That document requires that formal charges be filed and a hearing be had.” That being true the appellate body could do nothing else but reverse the expulsion; if it did not a court would do so. In effect the appeal could serve no useful function.
Finally, it should be remembered thаt the constitution and by-laws of the union constitute a contract between the members and the association and one of the reasons for the rule that an expelled member must pursue his remedy within the association before resorting to the courts is that the contract requires him to do so. However, where the member has been expelled in violation of thаt contract the association has repudiated it and it is no longer binding on the member. A breach of contract or a refusal to perform by one of the parties excuses the other party, not at fault, from performance on his part. (Twomey v. People‘s Ice Co., 66 Cal. 233 [5 P. 158]; Gold Min. & Water Co. v. Swinerton, 23 Cal.2d 19 [142 P.2d 22]; Central Oil Co. v. Southern Refining Co., 154 Cal. 165 [97 P. 177].) Hence in this case plaintiff was excused from performance of the contract requiring an appeal to a higher authority in the union because of the union‘s repudiation and violation of the contract requiring a notice and hearing.
I would, therefore, affirm the judgment.
