Opinion by
Chauffeurs, Teamsters and Helpers Local Union No. 491 (Union), claiming to represent the nonprofessional employees of Uniontown Hospital Association (Hospital), a charitable nonprofit hospital, petitioned the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board (Board), for certification as the collective bargaining agent of the nonprofessional Hospital employees.
Shortly thereafter, N. L. Johnson, a Hospital nonprofessional employee, filed a complaint with the Board charging the Hospital with an unfair labor act in discharging him for engaging in union activities.
Both matters were consolidated for hearing and the Board dismissed both proceedings for want of jurisdiction. On appeal to the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County, that court upheld the Board. The present appeal by the Union followed.
*148 The parties have stipulated: (a) the Hospital is a charitable nonprofit hospital and exempt from taxation; (b) the Hospital’s funds are derived from Blue Cross, Medicare, the Commonwealth, United Miners Welfare Fund, the Union’s Insurance Fund, private patients, private insurance companies and private contributions; (c) Johnson was a Union member and until his discharge, a nonprofessional Hospital employee; (d) the Hospital is operated by professional and nonprofessional employees whom it pays.
We have before us a very narrow issue: did the Board have jurisdiction, under the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Act (Act of June 1, 1937, P. L. 1168, 43 P.S. §§211.1 et seq.) to entertain a labor dispute between the Union, its members and this charitable nonprofit Hospital?
The identical issue has been twice previously considered by this Court in
Western Pennsylvania Hospital v. Lichliter,
*149
The Union, conceding that
lichliter
and
Mid-Valley
are directly apposite and must be reversed if it is to succeed, urges that certain language in
Flagiello v. Pennsylvania Hospital,
It is well settled that the failure of the legislature, subsequent to a decision of this Court in construction of a statute, to change by legislative action the law as interpreted by this Court creates a presumption that our interpretation was in accord with the legislative
*150
intendment. See:
Commonwealth v. Willson Products Inc.,
We have carefully considered the Union’s contentions that Flagiello mandates a reversal of our prior decisions, that such prior decisions were based on erroneous premises and that such decisions improperly discriminate against nonprofessional employees of charitable nonprofit hospitals and find all such contentions to lack merit.
Order affirmed.
Mr. Justice Musmanno did not participate in the decision of this case.
Notes
In
Locust Club v. Hotel & Club Employees Union,
The opinion of Mr. Justice Mtjsmanno commanded the support of only two members of this Court. Two other members, each writing a separate concurring opinion, joined in the result only while two other members of this Court dissented.
It must be noted that on April 11, 1967 a bill was introduced in the House of Representatives (House Bill No. 748) which, if passed, would extend the coverage of the Act to charitable nonprofit hospitals. However, that proposed act has not been reported out of committee.
