LOS ANGELES METROPOLITAN TRANSIT AUTHORITY, Respondent, v. THE BROTHERHOOD OF RAILROAD TRAINMEN (an Unincorporated Association) et al., Appellants.
L. A. No. 25676
In Bank
Oct. 3, 1960
Respondent‘s petition for a rehearing was denied October 27, 1960.
Likewise, in the quiet title action the judgment was that Mrs. Reynolds’ title to the shares awarded her in the divorce action as her half of the community property “is quieted against any and all claims of every kind, character and description that said Robert Perrin Reynolds may have into [sic] said shares of stock.” The judgment nevertheless directed that new certificates be issued to Mrs. Reynolds.
Since the judgment purported merely to quiet Mrs. Reynolds’ title to the shares as against Mr. Reynolds, there was no basis for decreeing that new certificates, representing title good as against all the world, be issued to her, without requiring surrender of the outstanding certificates in accordance with the terms of section 2477 of the Corporations Code.
The judgments are reversed.
Gibson, C. J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., Peters, J., White, J., and Coughlin, J. pro tem.,* concurred.
Bodle, Fogel & Warren, Bodle & Fogel, George E. Bodle, Daniel Fogel and Stephen Reinhardt for Appellants.
Musick, Peeler & Garrett, Gerald G. Kelly, Roderick M. Hills, Frederick B. Warder, Jr., Bruce A. Bevan, Jr., Thomas J. Reilly, Charles H. Tillinghast and Richard T. Apel, for Respondent.
In the absence of legislative authorization public employees in general do not have the right to strike (see 31 A.L.R.2d 1142, 1159-1161), and the questions presented here are whether the act creating the transit authority gave its employees such a right and, if so, whether the statute is constitutional as applied to the employees represented by the brotherhood.
Subdivision (c) of section 3.6 of the act provides: “Employees shall have the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.... Notwithstanding any other provision of this act... the authority... shall enter into a written contract with the accredited representative of [its] employees governing wages, salaries, hours and working conditions....” (Italics added.)
Language identical with the italicized words of subdivision (c) first appeared in section 2 of the
When legislation has been judicially construed and a subsequent statute on the same or an analogous subject is framed in the identical language, it will ordinarily be presumed that the Legislature intended that the language as used in the later enactment would be given a like interpretation. This rule is applicable to state statutes which are pat-
Terms such as “concerted activities” are commonly used by courts as well as legislative bodies to refer to strikes. This court, for example, on a number of occasions has used the words “concerted action” as an inclusive term referring to strikes, picketing, and boycotts. (See, e.g., Petri Cleaners, Inc. v. Automotive Employees etc., Local No. 88, 53 Cal.2d 455, 469 et seq. [2 Cal.Rptr. 470, 349 P.2d 76]; Park & T.I. Corp. v. International etc. of Teamsters, 27 Cal.2d 599, 603 [165 P.2d 891, 162 A.L.R. 1426]; James v. Marinship Corp., 25 Cal.2d 721, 729 [155 P.2d 329, 160 A.L.R. 900].) Our codes provide that technical words and phrases, and others which have acquired “a peculiar and appropriate” meaning in law, are to be construed according to such meaning. (
Other provisions of the act support the conclusion that the Legislature granted plaintiff‘s employees the right to strike. The employees of the two transit companies taken over by plaintiff had the right to strike prior to acquisition, and the act provides that, when plaintiff acquires any privately owned public utility, it must observe all labor contracts of the utility and that no employee “shall suffer any worsening of his wages, seniority, pension, vacation or other benefits by reason of the acquisition.” (Italics added.) (§ 3.6, subd. (e).) The fact that the Legislature contemplated a right to strike on the part of plaintiff‘s employees also appears from subdivision (h) of section 3.6 which provides that plaintiff‘s statutory obligation to bargain collectively extends to all matters which are “proper subjects of collective bargaining with a private employer.” The question whether employees may strike and the circumstances under which they may do so are proper subjects of collective bargaining, and clauses
The right of public employees to strike has been sustained in two other jurisdictions even though the statutes did not, as here, contain provisions which specifically authorized the public employees in question to engage in collective bargaining and other concerted activities. Local 266 etc. A.F.L. v. Salt River Project Agr. Imp. & Power Dist., 78 Ariz. 30 [275 P.2d 393, 396 et seq.], involved employees of an irrigation district which under section 7 of article 13 of the Arizona Constitution was declared to be a political subdivision of the state “and vested with all the rights, privileges and benefits, and entitled to the immunities and exemptions granted municipalities and political subdivisions under this Constitution or any law of the state or of the United States.” A statute provided that the district could enter into “all necessary contracts.” The court, stating that the function of the district, which supplied power to 100,000 users, was business and economic and not political and governmental, held that the provision permitted but did not require collective bargaining contracts and that since such contracts were legal the employees could strike to enforce a demand for collective bargaining. Board of Education v. Public School Employees’ Union, 233 Minn. 144 [45 N.W.2d 797, 800 et seq., 29 A.L.R.2d 424], concerned the interpretation of a Minnesota statute, applicable to employees generally, which prohibited the issuance of injunctions against strikes. The statute excepted from its provisions policemen, firemen, or any other public officials
No case has been found which has denied public employees the right to strike where, as here, the employees were specifically authorized by statute to bargain collectively and engage in other concerted activities. The following cases are distinguishable because the public employees did not have the benefit of such legislation: Newmarker v. Regents of University of Calif., 160 Cal.App.2d 640, 646 et seq. [325 P.2d 558]; City of Los Angeles v. Los Angeles etc. Council, 94 Cal.App.2d 36, 46 et seq. [210 P.2d 305]; Norwalk Teachers’ Assn. v. Board of Education, 138 Conn. 269 [83 A.2d 482, 484 et seq., 31 A.L.R.2d 1133]; City of Manchester v. Manchester Teachers Guild, 100 N.H. 507 [131 A.2d 59, 61 et seq.]; International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers v. Grand River Dam Authority, - Okla. - [292 P.2d 1018, 1020 et seq.]; City of Pawtucket v. Pawtucket Teachers’ Alliance, - R.I. - [141 A.2d 624, 627 et seq.]; Weakley County Municipal Electric System v. Vick (Tenn. App.), 309 S.W.2d 792, 801 et seq.; Port of Seattle v. International Longshoremen‘s & W. U., 52 Wn.2d 317 [324 P.2d 1099, 1101 et seq.]. Some of these cases are also distinguishable upon other grounds. For example, in the two California cases as well as the one from Tennessee it was held that collective bargaining contracts would be illegal under statutes setting forth particular methods of establishing wages and working conditions and that, accordingly, a strike to enforce collective bargaining demands would be a strike for an unlawful purpose. Here, as we have seen, the employer must bargain collectively and must enter into a written contract with the brotherhood to establish wages and working conditions.
The case of United States v. United Mine Workers of America, 330 U.S. 258 [67 S.Ct. 677, 91 L.Ed. 884], cited by plaintiff, is not helpful in determining the proper construction of statutory language permitting employees to engage
There is no merit in plaintiff‘s claim that provisions of the act granting plaintiff managerial discretion with respect to such matters as the fixing of salaries show that subdivision (c) of section 3.6 was not intended to give the employees the right to strike. The act specifically provides that, “notwithstanding any other provision,” plaintiff must enter into a written contract governing working conditions with the accredited representative of the employees. In order to obtain such a contract the employees are authorized to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of col-
In passing upon the constitutionality of the act as applied to the employees represented by the brotherhood, we are not confronted with the problems which might be posed by legislation giving the right to strike to public employees such as policemen, firemen, and public officers exercising a portion of the state‘s sovereign powers. Plaintiff‘s contention is that subdivision (c), as above construed, is invalid because it assertedly constitutes a delegation of governmental authority to private persons and is discriminatory. We do not agree.
Permitting employees to strike does not delegate to them authority to fix their own wages to the exclusion of the employer‘s discretion. In collective bargaining negotiations, whether or not the employees strike, the employer is free to reject demands if he determines that they are unacceptable.
Plaintiff claims that its position differs from that of private employers, arguing that it could be compelled by mandamus to provide service even though its employees were on strike. However, there is nothing in the act warranting the conclusion that plaintiff does not have discretion to reject unacceptable demands of striking employees, and it could not be forced to provide service where this would require it to abandon that discretion. No case has been found holding that a statute permitting public employees to strike constitutes an improper delegation of governmental authority, and courts both in this state and elsewhere, although not specifically discussing the delegation point, have recognized that statutes which permit strikes by publicly employed teachers, electrical workers, maintenance workers, and longshoremen may be validly enacted. (Local 266 etc. A.F.L. v. Salt River Project Agr. Imp. & Power Dist. (Ariz.), supra, 275 P.2d 393, 396 et seq.; Board of Education v. Public School Employees’ Union (Minn.), supra, 45 N.W.2d 797; see Newmarker v. Regents of University of Calif., supra, 160 Cal.App.2d 640, 646; City of Manchester v. Manchester Teachers Guild (N.H.), supra, 131 A.2d 59, 62; Port of Seattle v. International Longshoremen‘s & W. U. (Wash.), supra, 324 P.2d 1099, 1102-1103.)
If any state of facts can reasonably be conceived which would support a classification made by the Legislature, the existence of that state of facts is presumed, and one who challenges the classification has the burden of showing that it is arbitrary. (State v. Industrial Acc. Com., 48 Cal.2d 365, 371-372 [310 P.2d 7]; City of Walnut Creek v. Silveira, 47 Cal.2d 804, 811 [306 P.2d 453].) The Legislature could have concluded that conditions existing in the area relating to the availability of transit workers made it necessary to give plaintiff‘s employees the right to strike in order to obtain an experienced and efficient working force. For example, at the time the act was adopted in 1957, transit service was principally provided in the area by privately owned utilities whose employees were represented by labor unions and had the right to strike, and many of these employees might have refused to work for plaintiff if deprived of that right. The act contemplated that plaintiff would acquire such utilities and, as we have seen, provided that their employees should not suffer any loss of benefits. Plaintiff has made no showing that the conditions which exist with respect to other transit systems are the same as those in the Los Angeles area.
The judgment is reversed.
Traynor, J., Peters, J., White, J., and Dooling, J., concurred.
SCHAUER, J., Dissenting.—In my view Judge Charles R. Thompson, the learned trial judge who decided this case below, was correct in his determination that the employes of plaintiff, as public employes, are without the legal right to strike against plaintiff, and in enjoining them from so doing.
My principal objections to the opinion of the Chief Justice are three:
1. This is the only case in the judicial history of this state or the United States, so far as our research discloses, in which
2. The precise language—the so-called 16 words—relied upon in the opinion of the Chief Justice as implying a grant of such right to strike against government has been construed exactly to the contrary by the United States Supreme Court under comparable circumstances.
3. The substance of other provisions of the subject act (hereinafter quoted in certain material parts) and the character of its composition (showing almost meticulous care in detailing and delimiting the powers, duties, rights and obligations of the authority members and employes) tend strongly against the implication found by the Chief Justice.
Admittedly plaintiff here is a public as distinguished from a private corporation and plaintiff‘s employes who are here represented by defendant union are public employes. The only issue is whether the state has granted such public employes the right to strike against their employer in support of a collective bargaining demand. That right, if it exists, must be found in the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority Act of 1957 (Stats. 1957, ch. 547; amended by Stats. 1959, ch. 519). Inasmuch as that act does not expressly grant any such right it becomes necessary to:
(a) Determine whether we shall abide by the heretofore unbroken rule that the right will not be deemed to exist unless specifically granted in unmistakable terms and
(b) if the majority decline to follow such rule, to examine the statute and pertinent authorities to ascertain whether the position of the Chief Justice—that a right to strike against the public employer is implied by the language he quotes—is tenable under established law when the quoted language is considered in full context.
Chapter 3 of the subject act is entitled “Creation and Or-
“Sec. 3.1. There is hereby created the ‘Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority.’
“Sec. 3.2. . . . The powers of the authority are those granted by this act. . . .
“Sec. 3.4. The authority is composed of seven members who shall be appointed by the Governor. . . .
“Sec. 3.6. (a) The authority shall appoint a chairman . . . and shall appoint1 or provide for the appointment of other officers . . . and employees as may be necessary for any purpose of the authority, including . . . the . . . operation, maintenance, and policing of the system. . . . The compensation of all . . . agents and employees shall be fixed by the authority. . . . The consent of the Department of Finance shall not be required in carrying out the provisions of this Section 3.6. . . . [Italics added.]
“(c) Employees shall have the right to self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection. It is declared to be in the public interest that the authority shall not express any preference for one union over another. . . .”
There follow detailed provisions specifying how an arbitration board shall be selected and how, where there is a dispute, it shall be determined whether a labor organization represents a majority of the employes or whether the proposed unit is appropriate.
The language of the subject act which the opinion of the Chief Justice holds to include by implication the right to strike against government, is that portion of chapter 3 (hereinabove more inclusively quoted) which provides that the public employes “shall have the right to self-organization, . . . to bargain collectively . . . and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other
As Judge Thompson (in the superior court) pointed out in his Memorandum of Opinion, although it is reported in 31 American Law Reports 2d 1149, et seq., that the trend has been toward giving public employes union rights and collective bargaining, the same article further declares that (p. 1159) “in every case that has been reported, the right of public employees to strike is emphatically denied.” (Italics added.) Thus the conclusion is impelled that if, in Judge Thompson‘s words, “the drastic right to strike against this public agency is given or established it should be done by the Legislature and in clear, precise and certain language after specifically considering the question so that there can be no doubt on the subject, rather than by being read into the Act by implication with resort to speculation and conjecture. . . . [U]nder all the facts and circumstances of this case the right to strike is not impliedly contained in the Act and . . . therefore the employees, through their union . . . do not legally have the right to strike . . .” against plaintiff.
This conclusion is further supported, if not compelled, by the decision of the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Mine Workers (1947), 330 U.S. 258, 269-279 [67 S.Ct. 677, 91 L.Ed. 884], in which the court was dealing with the
“It is true that Congress decreed in § 20 of the Clayton Act that ‘no such restraining order or injunction shall prohibit any person or persons . . . from recommending, advising, or persuading others . . .’ to strike. But by the [p. 270] Act itself this provision was made applicable only to cases ‘between an employer and employees, or between employers and employees, or between employees, or between persons employed and persons seeking employment. . . .’ [W]e cannot construe the general term ‘employer’ to include the United States, where there is no express reference to the United States and no evident affirmative grounds for believing that Congress intended to withhold an otherwise available remedy from the Government as well as from a specified class of private persons.
“By the Norris-LaGuardia Act, Congress divested the federal courts of jurisdiction to issue injunctions in a specified class of cases. It would probably be conceded that the characteristics of the present case would be such [p. 271] as to bring it within that class if the basic dispute had remained one between defendants and a private employer, and the latter had been the plaintiff below. So much seems to be found in the express terms of §§ 4 and 13 of the Act. . . . The specifications in [p. 272] § 13 are in general terms and make no express exception of the United States. From these premises, defendants argue that the restraining order and injunction were forbidden by the Act and were wrongfully issued.
“Even if our examination of the Act stopped here, we could hardly assent to this conclusion. There is an old and well-known rule that statutes which in general terms divest pre-existing rights or privileges will not be applied to the sovereign without express words to that effect. It has been stated, in cases in which there were extraneous [p. 273] and affirmative reasons for believing that the sovereign should also be
Continuing with its decision the court said further: “[p. 273] But we need not place entire reliance on this exclusionary rule. Section 2, which declared the public policy of [p. 274] the United States as a guide to the Act‘s interpretation, carries indications as to the scope of the Act. It predicates the purpose of the Act [as, I interpolate, so does
It should here be once again noted and emphasized that
The two cases (Local 266 etc. A.F.L. v. Salt River Project Agr. Imp. & Power Dist. (1954), 78 Ariz. 30 [275 P.2d 393, 400-402 [13-18]]; Board of Education v. Public School Employees’ Union (1951), 233 Minn. 144 [45 N.W.2d 797]) cited in the majority opinion (ante, p. 690) as supporting its reasoning and conclusion are neither analogous nor persuasive. The Agricultural Improvement and Power District whose employes were held to have the right to strike in the first of the two majority-cited cases, was, as the court there took considerable pains to point out (pp. 401-402 [15, 16, 18] [275 P.2d]), formed, owned and operated by private land-
Under the circumstances shown the holding of the Arizona court is readily understandable; it is not understandable to
And in the second of the majority‘s relied on cases, Board of Education v. Public School Employees’ Union (Minn., 1951), supra, 45 N.W.2d 797, 800-801 [1, 4], the court had before it statutory language which dealt directly and specifically with the right of certain public employes to strike. Such statutory language, as is stated in the opinion of the Supreme Court of Minnesota, appears in that state‘s “‘Little Norris-LaGuardia Act,’ popularly so called because of its near identity to the federal Norris-LaGuardia Act. . . .
“Section 185.10 of our statute provides:
“‘No court of the state shall have jurisdiction to issue any restraining order, or temporary or permanent injunction, in any case involving or growing out of any labor dispute, to prohibit any person or persons participating or interested in such dispute, from doing, whether singly or in concert, any of the following acts:
“‘(1) Ceasing or refusing to perform any work or to remain in any relation of employment;’ . . .
“The Minnesota act, M.S.A. c. 185, although modeled after the Norris-LaGuardia Act, contains one feature which materially distinguishes it from the federal act. Section 185.19 of the Minnesota act provides: ‘Sections 185.07 to 185.18 [L. 1933, c. 416, § 15] shall not be held to apply to policemen or firemen or any other public officials charged with duties relating to public safety.’
“This exception must refer to persons who are not employed by a private employer. The only other employer would be a public employer. Section 185.19 means that a municipality is not prevented from seeking and receiving injunctive relief against these designated employes if the facts otherwise warrant such relief. But a municipality has numerous employes who cannot come under any of these excepted classes. Janitors and janitor-engineers employed by the board of education are plainly not ‘officials charged with duties relating to public safety.’ If the statute specifically enumerates the employes against whom the municipality may obtain injunctive relief under M.S.A. c. 185, it would seem that it would be prevented from seeking such relief against its other employes, except as provided under c. 185. This interpretation
The court then sets out in some detail the history of the legislation it was discussing, as taken from the Journal of the Senate, and continues (p. 802), “It is apparent from this legislative history that the legislature considered the bill applicable to public employes. Otherwise, there would have been no need for § 185.19, which excepts the persons designated therein from the operation of the statute. Furthermore, this legislative history shows that the legislature did consider whether public employes should be excepted from the provisions of M.S.A. c. 185, and, having done so, concluded that there should be an exception only for policemen, firemen, and any other public officials charged with duties relating to public safety.” By contrast, in the case at bench no showing is made that California‘s Legislature even considered, much less debated and knowingly voted for, a grant to public employes of the right to strike.
Thus, neither of the two cases relied on by the Chief Justice supports the proposition that concededly public employes may derive the right to strike merely because the Transit Authority Act incorporates the 16 words which have been held to include strike rights when applied in private employment. As stated by the United States Supreme Court in International Union, U.A.W., A.F. of L. v. Wisconsin Emp. Relations Board (1949), 336 U.S. 245, 259 [69 S.Ct. 516, 93 L.Ed. 651], “The right to strike, because of its more serious impact upon the public interest, is more vulnerable to regulation than the right to organize and select representatives for lawful purposes of collective bargaining which this Court has characterized [in National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & L. Steel Corp. (1936), 301 U.S. 1, 33 [57 S.Ct. 615, 81 L.Ed. 893, 108 A.L.R. 1352]] as a ‘fundamental right‘. . . .” The statutory “interpretation” by the majority here is the more remarkable in that the only inferred classification of public employes for strike eligibility is employment by the transit authority, regardless of character of work, such as operators, clerks, police, etc.
It is to be emphasized that since a grant of a right to strike against government is essentially a partial surrender of sov-
That the holding of the majority today is contrary to the weight of authority, statutory as well as decisional, is pointed up by the fact that the Congress of the United States, after the Supreme Court‘s decision in the Mine Workers case, undertook to make certain that the views of the dissenters in that case should not become law through a change of personnel in the court. To that end the Congress on June 23, 1947, enacted
It is observed that the opinion of the Chief Justice does not discuss the policy of government to protect itself and its citizens as evidenced by the unequivocal language above quoted; nor does the opinion undertake to overrule or disapprove any of the many earlier holdings of the courts of this state which are either irreconcilable or inconsistent with the drastic ruling announced today. Among such cases are State v. Brotherhood of R. R. Trainmen (1951), 37 Cal.2d 412, 416-420 [232 P.2d 857]; Nutter v. City of Santa Monica (1946), 74 Cal.App.2d 292, 296-298 [1] [168 P.2d 741] [“[I]t was not the purpose of the Legislature, in the enactment of
The conclusion that by using the quoted 16 words the California Legislature did not intend to authorize strikes by public employes merely because the same words in different context have been held to include strikes against private employers appears doubly inescapable when the matter is considered in the light of the wealth of additional detail declaring and delimiting employes’ rights which the Legislature has expressed in other provisions of the act. In this connection it may first be noted that this Transit Authority Act comprises 13 chapters which fill over 31 printed pages of the Statutes of 1957. The 1959 amendments of the act (Stats. 1959, ch. 519) cover more than four and one-half printed pages. As already related in part, in section 3.6, subdivision (c), of the act, provision is made for representation of the employes by a labor union of their own choosing, and subdivision (d) provides in mandatory language how such choice shall be ascertained, thus plainly negating any permission to strike to achieve objectives on that score. Subdivision (c) further provides that “In case of a dispute over wages, salaries, hours or working conditions, which is not resolved by negotiations in good faith between the authority and the labor organization, upon the agreement of both, the authority and the labor organization may submit said dispute to the decision of the majority of an arbitration board, and the decision of the majority of such arbitration board shall be final.” Again, subdivision (c) repeats later that “The decision of a majority of the arbitration board shall be final and binding upon the parties thereto.” (Italics added.) The method of choosing such board is spelled out in detail. It is also specified that there shall be no discrimination against any employe or person because of race, creed, color or sex. In my view, the very fact that the Legislature has thus declared so explicitly an authorized means of settling disputes “over wages, salaries, hours or working conditions” plainly shows that it had no intention of granting the transit authority‘s employes the right to use the much more drastic procedure of calling a strike against government to settle such disputes. If the right to strike were to be granted at all, it is reasonable to infer that the Legislature would have been at least as specific in expressing the grant and in detailing the circumstances of its exercise.
It bears emphasis that the state has expressly granted to the defendant employes (§ 3.6(c)) “the right to self-organization, to form, join or assist labor organizations, to bargain collectively . . . and to engage in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining” and the subject act further expressly provides that (§ 3.6(e)) “Whenever the authority acquires existing facilities from a publicly or privately owned public utility . . . the authority shall assume and observe all existing labor contracts. To the extent necessary for operation of facilities, all of the employees of such acquired public utility whose duties pertain to the facilities
It is obvious that the last quoted section—and, in particular, the last sentence—is specific and express in declaring the authorized rights of employes of either publicly or privately owned utilities which are acquired by the transit authority but, significantly in the light of the law as declared in such cases as United States v. Mine Workers (1947), supra, 330 U.S. 258; State v. Brotherhood of R. R. Trainmen (1951), supra, 37 Cal.2d 412, 416-420 [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; and Board of Education v. Public School Employees’ Union (Minn., 1951), supra, 45 N.W.2d 797, 800 et seq., there is no mention of the grant of a right to strike against the governmental employer after the employes become public employes. The same observation applies with possibly even greater force to the amendment added in 1959 (Stats. 1959, ch. 519, p. 2488, § 3.6, subd. (h)): “The obligation of the authority to bargain in good faith with a duly designated or certified labor organization and to execute a written collective bargaining agreement . . . and to comply with the terms thereof shall not be limited or restricted by the provisions of the
Moreover, the Legislature has not only authorized both the authority and its employes to engage in collective bargaining, but it has likewise (§ 3.6, subd. (c)) authorized the authority and the union representing the employes to provide in a collective bargaining agreement for submission of any “dispute over wages, salaries, hours and working conditions, which is not resolved by negotiations in good faith between the authority and the labor organization . . . to the decision of the majority of an arbitration board, and the decision of the majority of such . . . board shall be final.” As already noted, detailed provisions follow concerning how the arbitration board shall be selected. And certainly provisions for arbitration contained in any collective bargaining agreement can be specifically enforced according to such provision. Certainly, also, in the light of such detailed spelling out by the Legislature of the rights and obligations of both the authority and its employes, including the labor organization formed or selected by the latter, to engage in collective bargaining and in arbitration, it further plainly appears that if granting the right to strike had been intended, words expressly so stating would have been added.
It may also be significant in this connection that section 4.24 of the act (as amended by Stats. 1959, ch. 519) states that: “The authority may provide for a retirement system; provided, that the adoption, terms and conditions of any retirement system covering employees of the authority represented by a labor organization in accordance with Section 3.6 shall be pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement between such labor organization and the authority.” Obviously, the language used is, in the basic premise, permissive. There is neither an express statement nor an implication in the quoted language that the Legislature intended thereby to grant to the interested labor organization the right and authority to call out on strike the authority‘s employes as a means of “per-
If the Legislature in drafting the act could and did speak in such careful and specific detail in granting, defining and protecting the bargaining and other rights of the public employes here involved, it seems obvious that if it had been intended that such employes be given the additional, drastic and heretofore universally denied, right to strike against government, that right would also have been expressly enunciated and delimited in no uncertain terms and not left for court deduction following comparison with the language used in statutes dealing with employes of private employers. The traditional rule “expressio unius est exclusio alterius” thus seems peculiarly applicable to this case.
In this connection it is appropriate to add that we are not, of course, concerned here with any question or necessity of finding within the terms of the act any specific or implied negation of the right to strike. On the contrary the burden is on defendant to show wherein the act effectively grants any such right. This necessarily follows from the firmly established general rule which none has heretofore disputed, that public employes, absent express authorization, are without the right to strike against government. The attempted analogy in the opinion of the Chief Justice in relying upon use of the so-called 16 words in statutes dealing with the rights of private employes (e.g.,
Further confirming my view of the intent of the Legislature is the fact that in chapter 5 of the subject act the transit authority (plaintiff herein) is authorized to issue revenue
It would seem to me that reading the right to strike into the act may seriously interfere with the value and salability of the revenue bonds provided for in chapter 5, which chapter contains 42 sections specifying in detail the provisions which may or may not be included in such bonds. If a strike with its potential interruption of operations was contemplated by the Legislature, then not only, under previously discussed law, should the authorization have been expressly set forth, but the act in the chapter authorizing revenue bonds should have expressly dealt with what steps the authority should take “to continuously operate the system” in the event of a strike.
The state, to provide dependable rapid transit for the public, created this publicly owned common carrier and made it independent of the Public Utilities Commission (Los Angeles Met. Transit Authority v. Public Utilities Com. (1959), supra, 52 Cal.2d 655, 661 [1, 2]) and yet, the majority today hold, a union representing the employes may lawfully call a strike and, inferentially, thereby shut down service to the public! (Cf. Northwestern Pac. R. R. Co. v. Lumber & S. W. Union (1948), 31 Cal.2d 441, 446 [2] [189 P.2d 277].) Will such interruption of service be lawful because the union has a right to cause it? Or must the authority, to avoid unlawful inter-
In conclusion it bears mention again (see ante, p. 696) that section 3.6, subdivision (a), requires that “The authority shall appoint . . . employees as may be necessary for . . . policing of the system” as well as for its operation and maintenance. In the event of a strike it would appear probable that “policing of the system” for protection of personnel and maintenance of equipment might well be all the more essential in the public interest. The opinion of the Chief Justice in declaring the grant by implication does not undertake to spell out any differentiation as among groups or classes of employes who are to have or have not the court-declared right to strike. Presumably, therefore, the police of the authority, trained in the skills necessary to protect the affected public property, would likewise be out on strike or respecting a picket line. Will the faithful but already overburdened police of Los Angeles city and the like sheriff‘s deputies of the county be called upon to fill this breach? Or will the vast properties of the transit authority go unprotected?
As has been shown, under both federal and state law as it existed at the time the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transit Authority Act was drafted and enacted, a right—actually, a privilege—to strike against government was never to be deemed granted by implication. Until today, such “right” had to be expressly granted in no uncertain language or it simply was not granted. The granting of such a privilege is a pro tanto surrender of sovereignty; i.e., a transfer of sovereignty in a limited field from the State of California to a labor union. But how limited is the field? The opinion of the Chief Justice does not attempt to discuss the potentialities of the problems with which his holding is fraught. Is the classification of public employes for strike purposes lawful? If employes of the Los Angeles transit authority are granted the “right” to strike, why not other public employes? Are the policemen of the transit authority constitutionally different from other police groups? There are other provisions of the act, as well as further considerations of the public interest, which could be recited as bearing against either the innovation of law or the implication of fact encompassed in the opinion of the
I would affirm the judgment.
McComb, J., concurred.
Respondent‘s petition for a rehearing was denied October 27, 1960. Schauer, J., and McComb, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
