272 Mass. 524 | Mass. | 1930
This is a bill in equity in which the plaintiffs, John Malloy and Martin D. Farrell, seek to establish their rights as members of the Boston Cement & Asphalt Finishers’ Union, Local 534, hereinafter called the union. The defendants John Carroll, Otto B. Nelson, John Erlandson,
The international meets biennially on the second Monday of September. AH legislative powers are reserved to the international in convention and extend to every case of legislation not delegated or reserved to subordinate associations. Its judicial powers, when not in convention, are vested in the president and executive board only. The executive board consists of three members, namely, the general president, first vice-president, and secretary-treasurer. The executive board has control of all executive business, and has power to fill all vacancies, and to settle all disputes, grievances and lockouts between employers and members of the international and of subordinate associations. Its decision in these matters is final, subject to an appeal to the convention.
Since May 31, 1915, the union has existed, and is now existing, under and by virtue of a charter granted to it as a voluntary association from the international. This charter provides that the union is subordinate to the international; it stipulates that the union will initiate members according to the constitution adopted by the international and that it may enact by-laws for the government of itself, these by-laws always to conform to the constitution of the international; that in default the charter of the union may
Following the filing of answers by the defendants, the case was referred to a master who, after hearing the parties and their evidence, filed his report. Thereafter an interlocutory decree was entered restraining the defendants “from interfering with the” plaintiffs “in the performance of their usual trade and calling and from inducing, influencing and coercing persons likely to employ the” plaintiffs “not to employ them, until further order of the court.” From this decree the defendants appealed. An interlocutory decree was entered overruling the objections and confirming the master’s report, and an order was filed for the entry of a final decree ordering that the plaintiffs be restored as members in good standing of the union, and that the defendants be restrained from interfering with the plaintiffs in the enjoyment of their rights and privileges as members of said union. Thereupon the judge reported the case to this court in the terms which follow: “I report this case to the Supreme Judicial Court on the bill, the answer, master’s report, defendants’ objections to master’s report, decree overruling defendants’ objections and confirming master’s report and the order for a decree upon a stipulation that if I was warranted in ordering that a decree be entered as ordered then such decree is to be entered; otherwise a decree is to be entered dismissing the bill.”
The material facts, in addition to those above set forth, as drawn from the master’s report are as follows: In June, 1926, the defendant John Carroll was elected business agent of the union for the term of one year and has continued so to act without further election; as such he is a member of the council and by election or selection is the president thereof. On June 3, 1927, at a meeting called for the purr pose, the union duly elected its officers for the period of one year, including the plaintiff John Malloy as president; and John Malloy, as president, appointed eight persons, all members of the union, as the executive board thereof.
On March 24,1928, Carroll and the members of his faction sent to the international a written request that an international representative be sent to Boston for the purpose of removing from office the president of the union, John Malloy, and of debarring him and five other named members of the union “from attending meetings or any other action the International or its Representative deems necessary for the
On April 27, 1928, the defendant Pratt, who was recording secretary of the union, sent to all members a post-card notice of a special meeting to be held Monday evening, April 30, 1928, which, in terms, purported to be ordered by William A. Brennan in his official capacity. As respects this call and the meeting which followed, the master states that he finds “nothing in' the constitution and by-laws of the union or in the constitution of the international which authorizes an international officer to order or call a special meeting of the union.” At this special meeting president Malloy opened the meeting and asked what it was called for. Brennan requested permission to preside, saying that he would then answer the question. Malloy refused to yield the chair. A motion was then made and seconded that Brennan be allowed to preside. Malloy refused to put the. motion. Brennan then read the telegram of April 22, and said that he granted the request therein contained; that he removed Malloy from the presidency of the union and barred him and the others referred to in the telegram from all rights except the right to work, and that he appointed John Erlandson as president of the union. Malloy refused to yield the chair to either Brennan or Erlandson, and thereupon Carroll, Brennan, Pratt, Nelson, who was financial secretary and treasurer, and a majority of the members then present left the meeting room
Brennan made a written report of his action to McGivern, the president of the international, who with the first vice-president and the secretary-treasurer constitute its executive board. This executive board approved the action of Brennan. Shortly thereafter the plaintiff Martin D. Farrell, who was the temporary financial secretary and treasurer appointed by Malloy in place of Nelson, asked McGivern to make a personal investigation of the trouble and to adjust it. McGivern advised Farrell to enter an appeal with the secretary of the international, and said he would then appoint a member of the executive board to come to Boston to investigate. Pursuant to McGivern’s advice Farrell and Malloy sent a written “protest and appeal” to the international. This set forth their version of the trouble and asked in substance how they “would carry on.” On May 31, 1928, McGivern replied to this “protest and appeal” by letter, the important parts of which read as follows: “Since my conversation with you over phone I have learned that at the time you talked with me yourself and a number of former members of Local 534 have left that Local and organized a dual local of Cement Finishers in Boston, had I known that of this I assure you that I would not have advised you to enter an appeal as I suggested. If you and your associates felt that you had cause for being dissatisfied with the action of the majority of members of Local 534, you should have remained with the Local and then appealed to the International Executive Board. The executive Board will not take any action on your appeal until you again become members of Local 534 and are placed in good standing by that local with the International, when you have done that I assure you we will give your appeal the consideration that it is entitled to under our laws.” Since the date of that letter, May 31, 1928, there has been no further correspondence between
In the meantime, on May 7, 1928, the defendant Pratt sent notices to Malloy and about thirty-three other members preferring charges against them. These notices charged a violation of rule 27, in that they refused to leave a job when requested to do so by the business agent. They were further notified of the time and place for a hearing of these charges by the executive committee of the union. In addition Malloy received notice of a charge against him of trying to break up the union and of a hearing on such charge to be had before the same executive committee at the time and place appointed in the prior notice. Malloy and most of those so notified, well knowing the character of the charges against them, appeared at the time and place mentioned in said notices, and Malloy, as president of the union, demanded the right to preside at the meeting of the executive committee, but he was refused that right by Erlandson who claimed to be president under the appointment of Brennan. Thereupon Malloy and others of his faction challenged the jurisdiction of the executive committee as then constituted, and withdrew from the meeting. The executive committee heard no evidence in proof of the charges, thus violating section 1, article 7, of the constitution and by-laws of the union, which provides: “All evidence shall be taken down in writing to be read at the regular meeting of Union”; but the committee proceeded to recommend and did recommend to the union the expulsion of the thirty-four members notified to appear before it.
At a meeting of the Carroll faction, held two days later, the executive committee, which purported to try the charges against Malloy and Farrell and thirty-two other members of the Malloy faction, recommended that the men above referred to “be expelled from membership in the union and that each be fined the sum of $50 and that the international secretary be notified of said expulsions and fines. This recommendation was accepted and adopted at said
In June, 1928, each faction held a meeting and elected officers; those of the Carroll faction have been since July, 1928, recognized by the international as the officers of the union, and those of the Malloy faction have never been recognized since the removal of Malloy as president of the union on April 30,1928. On June 30,1928, the international issued a bulletin from its headquarters to all locals containing the names of the thirty-four members of the union who had been expelled and fined $50 each for violating rules. These are the thirty-four members of the Malloy faction whom the union purported to expel and fine at the meeting held May 11, 1928. The international has refused and now refuses to recognize as union labor men Malloy, Farrell and the other eighteen who are now members of the Malloy faction, but classes them as non-union men, although they still keep up their organization and claim to be members of the union. Since April 30, 1928, Carroll, acting as business agent of the union, in several instances has procured the discharge of members of the Malloy faction working at their trades upon the representation that such members were not members of the union but were non-union labor men.
The master finds that the international, acting through its president, relies upon certain sections of the constitution, which he sets forth at length, for authority to instruct its vice-president to remove, and the removal by Brennan of, Malloy as president of the union and his appointment of Erlandson as president in Malloy’s place; and “for all other acts by it committed in connection with the affairs of the union”; that “no language either in the constitution
Finding that the international had refused to treat with the plaintiffs as evidenced by the letter of the international to the plaintiff Farrell dated May 31, 1928, supra, the
The defendants filed written objections to the report generally and particularly against specific portions thereof. They made no written requests for rulings of law except such as may be contained or set forth in their objections. The plaintiffs filed neither written objections nor written requests for rulings of law.
The defendants in their brief first present their seventh objection to the report, wherein it is stated “that further action by the plaintiffs by way of appeal to the international would have been futile and before the bringing of this complaint the plaintiffs exhausted their remedy within the international and the union,” on the ground that this is a question of law and not of fact; and on the further ground that it appears from the recitals of the master’s report that on a written protest an appeal was filed on May 21, 1928, and the only action by the executive board was a notification on May 31, 1928, that the executive board would not take action on the appeal on the ground that while a dual local, not recognized by the international, was being maintained by the plaintiffs, no appeal could be entertained; that, in substance, and effect, this was a direction as to the proper method of procedure which the plaintiffs never undertook to follow. The principle is established by many decisions that the rights of members in organizations such as are now before us must be settled in accordance with the provisions of their constitutions and that every remedy available within such organizations must be exhausted before the aid of a court can be invoked. Correia v. Portuguese Fraternity, 218 Mass. 305. Puleio v. Sons of Itala & Neighborhood Mutual Benefit Society, 266 Mass. 328. Agrippino v. Perrotti, 270 Mass. 55. Clark v. Morgan, 271 Mass. 164, 171.
While it may be doubtful whether there be any express provision in the constitution of the international or in the
There is nothing inconsistent with the opinion herein expressed, namely, that the judicial jurisdiction of the president and executive board is final when the convention is not in session, in § 25, which concerns controversies between employers on the one hand and members of the international or subordinate associations on the other; or in the provision of § 78, which has to do with the establishment of the judicial machinery to be employed rather than in conferring jurisdiction in a given type of cases. There is no indication in the record that there was a convention in session assembled at the time the appeal was made to the president and executive board of the international; consequently, that board had jurisdiction under the provision of § 5 as above interpreted; and, there being no provision for appeal from the board’s decision in such a case, the plaintiffs had exhausted all their remedies within the jurisdiction when the board refused to consider their grievances. Even if there had been a right of appeal from the refusal of the executive board to hear the “protest and appeal” to the convention, the master has found that such an appeal would be futile. Such a finding is one of fact, and is within the authority of a master
The defendants in their objection numbered eight attack the finding of the master that he finds “no language either in the constitution of the international or the constitution and by-laws of the union which expressly . . . authorizes the international or any of its officers to remove the president, or any other officer of a union affiliated with it and appoint another in his place or stead,” on the ground that a question of law based upon the language used in the constitution and by-laws was presented, and not' a question of fact. The master’s finding was none the less a question of fact because it was based on documentary evidence. The defendants have pointed out no provision of the constitution or by-laws which gives the international or its officers authority to remove from office the president of a subordinate union; and article 11 of the constitution of the union provides that if the president of the union fails faithfully to perform his duties “he shall be penalized as the Union sees fit.”
The defendants’ objection numbered six is to the general finding “that the thirty-four members named in said recommendation were not in fact expelled from the union nor were they legally fined in accordance with the provisions of the constitution and by-laws of said union,” because such finding is a conclusion of law which could not properly be drawn by the master. If obnoxious to such objection, the finding is a true deduction as matter of law.
The defendants’ objection numbered one, to the finding, “So far as it is a question of fact I find that the International,
There is nothing in the remaining objections of the defendants which would justify further consideration of their contention that the plaintiffs were properly expelled and fined in accordance with the written constitution and bylaws of the international and of the union.
The findings of the master must stand and a decree be entered as ordered.
Decree accordingly.