164 F.2d 4 | 8th Cir. | 1947
These appeals come before us on one record from an interlocutory order of temporary injunction entered after trial of the issues presented by the application for temporary injunction in a class action presenting diversity of citizenship and requisite amount involved, in which the passenger train porters working on the lines of the two above named railroads through their labor unions and union officials as plaintiffs invoked the jurisdiction of the court to preserve to them by injunction the performance of certain enumerated items of passenger train operating work on the lines of the two railroads, which work they had been doing for a long time and were doing at the time of the order, and which they claimed the right to perform by virtue of their collectively bargained contract with the railroads. The trainmen working for the railroads on the passenger trains on the lines, acting through their labor unions and union officers, were claiming the right to do the work in question by virtue of their collectively bargained contract with the railroads, and were demanding the work from the railroads and filing claims and threatening to file further claims against the railroad for pay for that work when the work is denied them and train porters or others are permitted to do it.
The appellant representatives of the railroad trainmen contend in this court, as they did in the court below, that the facts pleaded as well as the facts shown in evidence in this case, disclose that the controversy presented is a jurisdictional labor dispute within the purview of the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq., and a labor dispute within the meaning of the Norris-LaGuardia Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 101 et seq., and that the District court should not have undertaken to interpret the agreements of the passenger train porters or of the railroad trainmen with the railroads for the purpose of settling by injunctional orders or decree, the dispute as to whether one or both of the two classes of employees, the train porters and the trainmen, should perform the work in question. ' They contend that the court should have stayed exercise of its power to issue injunctional orders and should have relegated the parties to the tribunals specifically provided by Congress in the Railway Labor Act for mediation and for determining the interpretation and application of collective bargaining contracts such as are shown to be involved in this case, in order to finally settle the labor dispute arising out of them, and that the issuance of the temporary injunction in the first instance was erroneous.
Our study of the 'record, including the stipulation of facts and the evidence, convinces that these contentions are fully sustained, and that the issuance of the temporary injunction was erroneous in view of the statutes and the decision of the Supreme Court in Order of Railway Conductors v. Pitney, 326 U.S. 561, 66 S.Ct. 322, 325, 90 L.Ed. 318.
In that case, as in this, it was sought to have the court adjudicate and settle through injunctive process, jurisdictional labor disputes involving the claims of two groups of employees of the railroad, each claiming the right by virtue of its respective collective bargaining agreement with the railroad, to do certain items of railroad work. The court observed that “interpretation of these contracts involves more than the mere construction of a ‘document’ in terms of the ordinary meaning of words and their position. * * * For O. R. C.’s [Order
So in this case, neither the agreement between the railroad companies and the train porters, nor that between the railroad trainmen and the railroads, states in so many words that the railroads agree to give the work in question to either of the groups or both. Each of the parties resorts to usage, practice, custom and argumentation to support its particular interpretation and claim, and in the several instances in which the real dispute here involved, whether train porters should be permitted to perform the items of work in question or whether railroad trainmen have the exclusive right, has been submitted to the Adjustment Board for determination and award by contesting parties, the reports of the proceedings show the citation and consideration by the Board of scores of prior awards of the Board of asserted relevancy.
The plaintiffs in this case have attempted to escape the impact of the statutes limiting the issuance of injunctions to settle labor disputes without resort to administrative process by casting their bill of complaint in the form of an action to enjoin a common law tort. They charge the train'men with wrongful conduct amounting to tort, committed and threatened against the railroads to compel the railroads to breach or cancel their contracts with the porters, and have argued that the injunction sought on that ground is not within the purview of the federal Acts. But examination of the
A further contention for the porters is that the Railway Labor Act does not afford them adequate administrative remedy to preserve their claimed right to do the work in question and be compensated therefor because the Mediation and Adjustment Boards provided for in the Railway Labor Act are made up in part of persons chosen by labor unions in which the porters, who are colored men, are not eligible for membership. But there is nothing in the record to indicate that racial consideration has anything to do with this labor dispute. The provisions of the Act assure that the Boards shall be evenly balanced in membership between management and labor whose conflicts of interests give rise to and engage the exercise of the jurisdiction, always in full view of the fact that unless they work together the railroad industry will not work at all. In the situation here presented, any possible interest to get the work in dispute for white union members is offset and in conflict with the obvious interest of management to have satisfactory men on the passenger trains who are unrestricted by the craft classifications and who for less pay are ready, willing and able to do short tasks along the run — ’“such tasks as may be required,” “such duties as may be assigned,” in addition to their other work that takes up most of their time. There is no reason to anticipate unfairness to colored porters on account of their color by reason of the constitution of the Boards.
It is also argued for the porters that inadequacy of administrative remedy results to them because they cannot take their claims to the same Adjustment Board which has jurisdiction over the claims of the trainmen. But the complete answer is that their claims are claims against the railroads. Insofar as the railroads propose to terminate the existing contract with the porters and to change their working conditions, the statute gives the porters the right to resort to the Mediation Board, 45 U.S.C.A. § 155, and that Board is required to use its best efforts to bring about an amicable settlement, 45 U.S.C.A. § 152. The railroads are required to exert every reasonable effort to maintain agreements concerning working conditions and to settle all disputes in order to avoid interruption to commerce, 45 U.S.C.A. § 152,. First. The abstract question whether there are some things in the operation of a train
The railroad companies present two appeals, No. 13,564 and No. 13,565, complaining of the issuance of the temporary injunction against them and of its form and of the terms upon which it was conditioned. They contend it should be dissolved. .Their arguments and briefs are illuminative and have been considered. But the temporary injunction, insofar as it runs against the railroads, was induced solely by the court’s conclusion that the trainmen were guilty of past and threatened tortious conduct, wrongfully coercing the railroads into their proposed action, which it considered enjoin-able. It. is clear from the record that no injunction would have been issued against the railroads except upon that consideration and such was the theory of the plaintiffs’ case as against the railroads. The legal right of ‘the railroads to proceed as they have done and intend to do in respect to their contract with the train porters, is clearly accorded them in the statute, 45 U.S.C.A. § 152, Seventh, and cannot be questioned. Our conclusion that there was no tortious conduct on the part of the trainmen justifying the temporary injunction against them therefore necessitates that it be dissolved as to the railroads as prayed in their appeal.
We concluded that the case must be remanded with direction to dissolve the temporary injunction and for further proceedings in accord with this opinion. It is so ordered.
The items of v/ork in dispute are: 1. Inspect ears and trains and test signal and brake apparatus for the safety of train movements, as per Carrier’s rules.
2. Use hand and lamp signals for the protection and movement of trains and engines, including the necessary flag protection on the head end of trains, or through block.
4. Couple and uncouple cars and engines and the hose and chain attachments thereof, both en route and at some passenger terminals.
5. Pick up, set out, place and switch loaded and unoccupied passenger cars en route and at some passenger terminals.
6. Read the conductor's train orders and familiarize himself with them to determine where opposing trains are to be met or passed, and observe position of all train order signals and see that train orders affecting the movement of trains are picked up en route.
The porters do not perform or claim the right to do all of such work required on passenger train runs. They perform and help members of other groups to perform short tasks that come within the description, in addition to doing the work that takes most of their time which is extraneous to train operation.
See i. a.,
Award No. 5907, Docket No. 9899. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen— Southern Pacific Lines in Texas and Louisiana.
Award No. 7251, Docket No. 14777. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen — The Texas and Pacific Railway Company.
Award No. 6640, Docket No. 7400. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen— The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Ee Railway Company — Eastern and Western Lines.
Award No. 5900, Docket 9898. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen— Southern Pacific Lines in Texas and Louisiana.
Award No. 5906, Docket No. 9898. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen — Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company.