382 U.S. 884 | SCOTUS | 1965
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I would grant certiorari in this case. While petitioner presents other interesting and important questions concerning the right of trial by jury under the Seventh Amendment and concerning the power of a district court to grant summary judgment, my opinion is addressed to the question of whether the courts below were right in denying petitioner Simmons a court trial of her claim that she had been wrongfully discharged without “just cause” in violation of the collective bargaining agreement under which she was employed. The ground for refusing to let her try her case was that her employer and her union had agreed between themselves that her discharge was for “just cause.” I think the courts below were wrong. The material facts upon which I base my conclusion are these :
Petitioner was one of about a dozen employees working at the lunch counter in respondent’s restaurant in a railway station. For about a year prior to petitioner’s discharge, profits at the lunch counter lagged behind those expected by respondent. Respondent suspected that this was due either to the mishandling or to the actual stealing of its funds or goods. The collective bargaining agreement provided that no employee should be discharged without “just cause” and that prospective discharges would be discussed by the employer and the union. Pursuant to the contract, the company’s representative went to the union’s representative to discuss what could be done in order to improve the profit situation at the lunch counter. The company representative suggested that all of the counter employees be discharged and others take
This case points up with great emphasis the kind of injustice that can occur to an individual employee when the employer and the union have such power over the employee’s claim for breach of contract. Here no one has claimed from the beginning to the end of the Hildreth lawsuit or this lawsuit that either of these individuals was guilty of any kind of misconduct justifying her discharge. Each was one of twelve employees engaged in
I would not construe the National Labor Relations Act as giving a union and an employer any such power over workers. In this case there has been no bargain made on behalf of all the workers represented by the union. Rather there has been a sacrifice of the rights of a group of employees based on the belief that some of them might possibly have been guilty of some kind of misconduct that would reduce the employer’s profits. Fully recognizing the right of the collective bargaining representative to make a contract on the part of the workers for the future,
I cannot believe that those who passed the Act intended to give the union the right to negotiate away alleged breaches of a contract claimed by individual employees.
The plain fact is that petitioner has lost her job, not because of any guilt on her part, but because there is a
See Union News Co. v. Hildreth, 295 F. 2d 658; Hildreth v. Union News Co., 315 F. 2d 548, certiorari denied, 375 U. S. 826.
61 Stat. 143, 29 U. S. C. § 159 (a) (1964 ed.).
Lead Opinion
C. A. 6th Cir. Certiorari denied.