30 A.2d 718 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued (Appeal No. 302) November 17, 1942. The facts in these appeals are interrelated. The claims for unemployment compensation were consolidated for hearing before the board and they will be similarly treated here.
Phillips was employed at the Hazleton Shaft Mine which was operated by the Lehigh Valley Coal Company with Hazleton Shaft Colliery as a unit. This operation also included Hazleton No. 1 Mine as an auxiliary from which coal was transported by rail to the breaker at the shaft mine. The appeal of Phillips, by agreement, will dispose of the claims of 1,275 employees of the Lehigh Company. Appellant Howley, along with 365 others involved in his appeal, worked in the auxiliary mine.
The Lehigh Company also operated Spring Mountain Colliery and Spring Mountain Mine at Jeanesville, together with Spring Brook Colliery Mine, as an auxiliary. All of the employees working in the Hazleton and the *78 Jeanesville mines were members of local labor unions under the jurisdiction of the United Mine Workers of America. For a number of years, beginning perhaps as early as 1935, the Lehigh Company had been "robbing the pillars" in the Jeanesville mines with the avowed intention of abandoning the mines at the end of this operation. On September 24, 1940, the district officers of the union stopped work in the Jeanesville mines. There is some evidence that the strike was ordered because of "wild cat" methods of mining which, it is alleged, involved danger of trapping men in the mines by falling rock when the supports were removed. However, the testimony indicates that the union closed the Jeanesville mines not because of dangerous methods of operation, but moved by a laudable determination to induce the company to further develop the mines by legitimate methods thus providing continued employment for about 800 men who otherwise would be out of work when the "robbing" operation ended. It is contended that the strike was ordered when a development program suggested by the union was finally rejected by the company. The union later negotiated a lease of the Jeanesville mines to the Stevens Coal Company and all of the men formerly employed there returned to work on November 6, 1940, as employees of that company.
The issue of fact in the Phillips case differs from that raised by claimant Howley. Beginning September 25th and continuing until October 21, 1940, when the Stevens Coal Company took over the Jeanesville mines, Phillips and all other employees in Hazleton Shaft and Hazleton Shaft Colliery refused to work. This is admitted, but Phillips and his fellow employees contend that their refusal to work was not voluntary but that they were obliged to remain idle under the terms of an agreement between the Lehigh Company and the Union. Howley, on the other hand, testified that he appeared at Hazleton Mine No. 1 on September 25th and on succeeding *79
days and was refused work and was told by the foreman that the mine was closed. The question in both appeals is whether there is substantial evidence to support the findings of fact affirmed by the board that unemployment in all of the Hazleton mines was voluntary, resulting from an industrial dispute. Dept. L. I.etc. v. Unemployment Comp. Bd.,
Section 505 of the Unemployment Compensation Law,
The Lehigh Company, technically, was an `affected party' (Susq.Col. Co. v. Unemploy. Comp. Board, *80
The obvious weakness of appellee's position in Howley's appeal is that the findings of fact affirmed by the board, upon which its order rests, are based wholly upon the report of the investigator. From the report, the referee found in substance that the company each day gave notice in the usual manner that the mines were open for work; that there was no dispute of any nature between employer and employees at Hazleton; that there was concert of action between the employees of the Hazleton and the Jeanesville mines and that all of the men at Hazleton refused to work, in support of the strike at Jeanesville. There may be circumstances outside of the investigator's report rebutting Howley's testimony that he reported for work and was refused employment, but they were not made the basis of any of the findings. The report itself had no probative value and as evidence it was all hearsay. The proceeding was *81 not invalidated by its admission over objection, but there was error in accepting it as competent evidence of basic facts.
The rule of construction applicable to administrative bodies when the statute provides in effect, that the rules of evidence prevailing in courts of law shall not be controlling, has been thus stated in Consolidated Edison Co. v. National LaborRelations Bd.,
A report of an investigator, when ordered, should be made a part of the record for the information of the Board and should be open to the claimant. What the investigator himself has observed, bearing on the issue, may become competent proof if the opportunity of cross examination is afforded. Heinhold v. Pgh.Brass Mfg. Co.,
We agree that an investigation under the circumstances *83
was necessary and proper, and the report had value. The duty of the referee and the Board is not fulfilled merely by hearing the witnesses who voluntarily appear. The Board is charged with the duty of safeguarding the fund. If the employer does not appear and in justice to the fund additional testimony is required, it is the duty of the referee or the Board to call witnesses who can supply it. Act 1936 Supra, § 506,
The appeal in the Phillips case will be affirmed. It was his contention that there was no strike, sympathetic or otherwise, in the Hazleton mines but that the men suspended work because of an "equalization" agreement between the union and the company which required them to lay off whenever Hazleton had worked four days more than Jeanesville. It is conceded that during the year Hazleton had worked 137 days and Jeanesville but 133. The report of the investigator contains a copy of an award of the Anthracite Coal Strike Commission, applicable to operators with more than one colliery, ordering a division of working time equitably between the separate operations with a permissible tolerance of as much as 20%. This was not evidence but became so on the admission of the union officials that this order applied to all collieries in the absence of a specific agreement between the union and the operator relating to equalization of working time in the two operations. There is some evidence of negotiations between the Lehigh Company and the union beginning in 1935 but the evidence is wholly insufficient *84 to establish an "equalization" agreement reducing the permissible tolerance to four days. All that the evidence established was the promise of the officers of the company and a policy to equalize the working time in the two operations as nearly as possible. The only conclusion from the evidence is that the men in the Hazleton Shaft Mine and Colliery by common consent suspended work in support of the strike at Jeanesville. Their unemployment was voluntary and resulted from a labor dispute. It is unimportant that the Board based its order on findings from the investigator's report. The evidence will support no other conclusion.
The order in 302 October Term, 1942, is affirmed. The record in 311 October Term, 1942, is remitted to the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review for further proceedings in accordance herewith.