Appellants are trustees of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Trust Fund, which provides health and welfare benefits for electrical workers and their dependents. They sued Medel Electric Company (Medel), an employer of electrical workers, for contributions allegedly due on behalf of Medel’s employees pursuant to a contract between Medel and IBEW Local 26. After trial, the court ruled for Medel, concluding that the trustees had failed to prove the existence of a contract. We hold that the trial court was “plainly wrong.” D.C.Code 1973, § 17-305(a). Accordingly, we reverse. 1
I.
On January 2,1968, Local Union Number 26 of the IBEW entered into an agreement with Medel providing “that the wage scales, insurance provisions, and all other terms and conditions of employment now in effect by agreement between the Union and the National Electrical Contractors’ Association [NECA], Washington Chapter, shall apply to and be in effect between the Union and the Company.” 2 This agreement was to remain in effect from January 2, 1968 to June 30, 1970, and was “automatically [to] continue in full force and effect from year to year, [unless] either party gives written notice to. the other of a desire to terminate the agreement, whereupon this agreement shall terminate sixty days after such written notice is given.”
As required by the collective bargaining agreement between the IBEW and NECA, Medel paid a sum per hour worked by each covered employee into the IBEW Trust Fund. Medel’s payments continued through January 1976. In turn, Local 26 carried out its obligation to refer electrical workers to Medel. Medel ceased making trust fund contributions, however, in February 1976, without notifying Local 26 of an intent to terminate the contract. At that time, Medel employed 34 electricians who had been referred by the Local.
The trustees contend that contributions on behalf of these employees must continue until Medel terminates its obligation by written notice, effective 60 days thereafter. Alleging that no such notice has been given, the trustees seek an accounting and payment of the trust fund contributions due under the terms of the collective bargaining contract. Medel responds that it had no contractual obligation to continue contributing because it never signed forms of agreement sent by Local 26 requesting consent to the revised terms of the collective bargaining agreement between the national union and NECA. Medel also argues that in April 1976, Local 26 committed a breach of its agreement with Medel by refusing to ■ refer any more electricians. This breach, according to Medel, precludes any liability for contributions thereafter.
The trial court found “that the plaintiff has failed to carry the burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence with respect to the contract and its existence at the time that these funds became due and payable by the defendant.” The court also apparently agreed that the union’s refusal to refer additional employees barred recovery by the trustees: “I think that if [the con
II.
We cannot agree with the trial court.
A. First, the terms of the January 2, 1968 agreement plus Medel’s concession that it never gave the required notice confirm that a binding contract existed in February 1976. Medel concedes that it was bound to observe the terms of the collective bargaining contract from January 2,1968 to June 30,1970. It argues, however, that we cannot properly imply an agreement that Medel was obligated to continue its adherence to that contract thereafter. We need not imply anything. The express terms of the contract between Medel and Local 26 itself refute Medel’s contention. These parties plainly agreed to adhere to the collective bargaining contract after June 30, 1970, unless one party gave a written notice of termination. Since Medel concedes that it gave no such notice, it remains bound by the terms of the collective bargaining contract. We cannot read in ambiguity or a contrary intent that disregards the terms of the Medel-Local 26 contract itself.
See Vogel v. Tenneco Oil Co.,
Medel urges, alternatively, that its refusal to sign agreements to adhere to new collective bargaining contracts after June 30,1970 relieved it from any further obligation under its agreement with Local 26. Again, Medel’s argument is defeated by the clear language of its contract with Local 26, which incorporates by reference the terms and conditions of employment set forth in the main collective bargaining contract between the IBEW and NECA, including “terms and conditions of employments made effective ... by modification of existing agreements.” When a contract incorporates another writing, the two must be read together as the contract between the parties.
3
Weber v. Anspach,
Even if Medel did intend to terminate its agreement with Local 26 by refusing to sign the later agreements, Medel did not manifest that intent in the manner established by its contract with Local 26: written notice of an intent to terminate in 60 days. In
Pio v. Kelly,
In
Carr v. Settle Construction Co.,
We reach the same result here. Courts have not readily found terminations of employer participation in trust agreements intended to provide security and protection for employees.
See United Brick & Clay Workers of America v. District 50, UMW,
III.
Medel also argues that even if its contract with Local 26 was in effect in February 1976, it at least was discharged from any obligation to make contributions to the trust fund after April 1976, when Local 26 committed a breach of contract by refusing to refer any more electricians to Medel. Even if we assume that the Local did act as Medel alleges, 4 a breach of contract by the union is not a defense against the trustees here.
In
Lewis v. Benedict Coal Corp.,
While the Court stated that it may be desirable generally to limit third-party beneficiary recovery to amounts in excess of any damage suffered by the promisor,
Medel argues that Benedict is inapplicable because, unlike Benedict, Medel was not a direct party to the collective bargaining contract. All of the policy reasons expressed in Benedict, however, extend to a non-signatory employer which has adopted the collective bargaining contract by reference. Medel also has an interest in the survival of the trust, because it presumably would have to pay for some benefit plan if the trust were to fold due to employer damage claims more properly directed at the union. Also, electrical employees and their dependents, the ultimate beneficiaries of the trust, would be harmed as much by damage claims asserted by a non-signatory employer as by an employer party to the contract. We hold, therefore, that any grievance of Medel against Local 26 cannot be asserted against the trustees in this suit. 7
IV.
We reverse and remand to the trial court for entry of judgment for the plaintiff-appellants and a determination of damages.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The trial court had jurisdiction to consider the trustees’ complaint. The Labor Management Relations Act, 29 U.S.C. § 185 (1976) provides for federal district court jurisdiction to consider “[s]uits for violation of contracts between an employer and a labor organization representing employees in an industry affecting commerce.” The Supreme Court has held, however, that the state courts have concurrent jurisdiction to interpret such contracts. See
Humphrey v. Moore,
. NECA is an employer organization which negotiated a collective bargaining agreement with the IBEW on behalf of individual employers. Medel has never been a member of NECA.
. We therefore find no relevance in Medel’s argument that it was not a member of NECA, and that NECA therefore could not bind Medel. No question of agency is presented here. Me-del and Local 26 simply incorporated by reference the IBEW-NECA agreement — whatever it turned out to be — as the definition of Medel’s relationship with its employee-electricians.
. The Local 26 employee in charge of referrals testified at trial that he made his last referral to Medel on June 18, 1976, and that referrals were discontinued because of Medel’s refusal to pay into the trust fund.
. Employees benefited by union trust funds are third-party beneficiaries of collective bargaining contracts. See
Manning v. Wiscombe,
.
Benedict
has been consistently followed and applied in varying factual contexts.
See Manning,
supra at 1313 (non-member signatory to a collective bargaining contract could not assert a defense of inadequate representation by union in a suit by trustees);
Lewis v. Mill Ridge Coals, Inc.,
.This holding also applies to Medel’s contention that it did not have to contribute to the trust fund on behalf of an employee allegedly refused union membership because of his age. If the union did commit an unfair labor practice in this employee’s case, that claim must first be presented to the NLRB; it cannot be asserted as a defense here.
See San Diego Bldg. Trades Council v. Garmon,
