56 A.2d 380 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1947
Argued September 29, 1947. The board denied appellants' claims for unemployment compensation for four weeks after the waiting period of one week, holding that their unemployment during that time was due to the voluntary suspension of work resulting from an industrial dispute.
The sole question presented by their appeal is whether the board's findings of fact are supported by the evidence. The act provides: "In any appeal to the Superior Court the findings of the board or referee, as the case may be, as to the facts, if supported by the evidence and in the absence of fraud, shall be conclusive, and in such cases the jurisdiction of the court shall be confined to questions of law . . .": Unemployment Compensation Law, § 510,
The pertinent statutory provision involved in this appeal is § 402 (d),
It will be seen when we examine the facts that appellants' unemployment undoubtedly "resulted from an industrial dispute." But was it also "due to a voluntary suspension of work"? In this section "voluntary" has not been modified in subsequent amendments by "good cause", and such cases as TeicherUnemployment Compensation Case,
The employer, Talon, Inc., operates plants in Meadville and Erie where it manufactures slide fasteners. At the time in question it employed 3200 persons at its Meadville plant and 700 at Erie. Most of the employes were members of various craft unions affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. There were 10 of these unions, and the number of employes holding membership in them ranged from one in the Pattern Makers Association, 350 in the Tool and Die Makers, and 1900 in the Slide Fasteners Union. After a probationary period, union membership was required by the employer as a condition of continued employment.
The Tool and Die Makers had been engaged in negotiating a new working agreement, and conferences having failed to produce results, the union voted to strike, and on October 24, 1945, at about 1 p.m. walked out of the Meadville plant. Three shifts were maintained: 7 a.m. to 3 p.m., 3 p.m. to 11 p.m., and 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. Some employes continued to work until 3 p.m. but none reported for the 3-11 p.m. shift. The subsequent events are fairly described in the pivotal finding of the board: "8. After the members of the Tool and Die Makers Union established a picket line at the Meadville plant, the other employes, who were members of affiliated unions of the American Federation of Labor, failed to report for work because of their unwillingness to cross the picket lines. The employer company was at all times ready and willing to continue operations, and would have been able to do so to a very considerable extent for some time after the strike by the Tool and Die Makers. No action was taken by the employer, nor *574 was any authorized action taken on its behalf, to close the plant or to afford a basis for a reasonable belief on the part of any employes that the plant had been closed to them. The failure of the employes to work was not in any measure due to the fact that they were prevented from working; there was no violence nor were there any threats of violence on the picket line. Their failure and refusal to work was due to (a) their objections, based upon principle, to crossing a picket line, and (b) their unwillingness to risk the consequences which might be imposed by their unions by reason of crossing the picket line."
The situation at the Erie plant was essentially similar to the conditions at Meadville, and it is covered by the finding: "9. The Tool and Die Makers went out on strike at the Erie plant on or about November 8, 1945. The company also was ready, able and willing to continue operations at this plant. The suspension at the Erie plant likewise resulted from the failure or refusal of the employes to report for work after the strike by the Tool and Die Makers at that plant. Their failure to work was based upon their objections in principle or their apprehension with regard to crossing a picket line."
The claimants charged and testified that the supervisory employes sent them home and told them not to return until the strike was over or until they were notified to return, that the plant gates were closed, that their machines were broken and in the absence of the die makers there was not one capable of repairing them, and that upon making calls to the plant they were informed there was no work.
To the contrary, the employer contended and its witnesses testified that it did nothing to prevent or discourage employes from returning to their work, that indeed it urged them to return and was ready, willing and able to resume production, that the gates were open and the guards were instructed to admit all employes who displayed badges, that its supervisors sent no one *575 home, and that it was informed by union officials that no union member would cross the die makers' picket line.
In the welter of the conflicting testimony the board could conceivably have found either way. But it found for the employer, and its findings are fully sustained and warranted by substantial and competent evidence, which requires no review beyond the above brief summarization. When we discover a rational basis for the findings of an administrative agency predicated upon substantial evidence our hand is stayed. The plain legislative mandate confines our review to questions of law, and we cannot disturb findings of fact even though the record may contain, as it does in this case, other competent evidence which, had it been accepted by the board, would have justified different findings. Nor are we at liberty to substitute our findings for those of the board even when our reading of the testimony might have brought us to a different conclusion. The credibility of the witnesses, the weight of their testimony, and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it are for the board. Our duty is performed by studying the testimony in the light most favorable to the party in whose favor the board has found, giving that party the benefit of every inference which can be logically and reasonably drawn from it. These principles governing appellate review of the decisions of administrative agencies were largely developed in workmen's compensation cases, a comparable area of the law, and are applicable to appeals from the Unemployment Compensation Board of Review. See, e.g., Kennedy v. Holmes Construction Co.,
The 24 appellants took a joint appeal. Some are die makers, some are members of the other unions, and two are not members of any union. The board did not distinguish between them. It cannot be said that the non-union employes and the members of the unions which had not formally voted to strike were in President Judge KELLER'S phrase in Miller v. Unemployment Compensation Board ofReview,
The board moved to quash this appeal upon the ground that persons who have separate interests in the case may not prosecute a joint appeal. Cf. Schuetz's Est.,
Decision affirmed.