Ankrum v. Employment Security Agency

361 P.2d 795, 83 Idaho 274, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 183
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1961
Docket8891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 361 P.2d 795 (Ankrum v. Employment Security Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ankrum v. Employment Security Agency, 361 P.2d 795, 83 Idaho 274, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 183 (Idaho 1961).

Opinion

*276 SMITH, Justice.

Appellant Raymond Ankrum, and others, are referred to as Claimants; respondent Employment Security Agency, as the agency; the Industrial Accident Board, as the board, and the employer group, sometimes as the operators.

This is an appeal from an order of the' board affirming the agency’s denial of unemployment compensation benefits to Claimants. The appeal is designed to test whether the board erroneously based its ruling of ineligibility on the ground that Claimants, through their representatives, participated, aided or were directly interested in a labor dispute which caused the stoppage of work. I.C. § 72 — 1366(j) (1) and (2).

Claimants are members of local unions of International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen and Helpers of America, commonly known as the Teamsters Unions, which are affiliated in Joint Councils in the area of the eleven western states.

Five of those local unions, 483 Boise; 983 Pocatello; 222 Salt Lake City; 976 Ogden; and 307 Casper, are affiliated in Joint Council 67 with headquarters in Salt Lake City.

There are 103 local unions in the eleven western states, each belonging to one of the nine or ten Joint Councils in that area.

The Joint Councils are combined in the Western Conference of Teamsters, which acts through divisions and committees; among the latter is the Over-the-Road Negotiating Committee created in 1957 by the General Hauling Division of that Conference, which committee consists of nine members and nine alternates.

The employers herein, trucking companies, ten in number, interstate motor freight carriers in the area, having terminal facilities in Idaho, are members of Inter-mountain Operators’ League. In the eleven western states there are seven or more similar employer leagues, which in January 1956 combined in the formation of a negotiating committee known as the Eleven Western States Policy Committee. During early 1958 the employers constituted this committee to consist of nine members and nine alternates, to negotiate with the similarly constituted Teamsters Over-the-Road Negotiating Committee.

Claimants, employees, are of two groups, i. e., (1) Line Drivers, or over-the-road, or highway drivers, which include sleeper-cab operators, and (2) Terminal Employees, which include local pickup and delivery drivers, warehouse maintenance, garage and service personnel, and clerical workers.

Claimants became unemployed during August 1958 when the Terminal Employees, «presented by Joint Council 38 in the *277 general area of the Sacramento Valley, California, struck on August 11, 1958, against employer members of the California Trucking Association because of a wage dispute which, the board found, arose upon refusal of the local delivery drivers to accept the terms of a proposed Master Agreement of May 27, 1958, theretofore negotiated by the union-employer representatives in the Eleven Western States Conference. Operators in the eleven western states acting collectively elected to consider the strike as a “whipsaw” tactic (referring to a union tactic of progressively striking one employer at a time), and as a strike against all operators in the Western Conference; and in accordance with their prior ultimatum to the unions, should a strike be called, all the operators in the eleven western states instituted a lockout and shut down their operations with the resulting unemployment of Claimants.

In the intricate and complicated bargaining negotiations, detailed in the evidence, the various employer and union groups, including the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, participated at various times from February to October, inclusive, 1958, at various places, including Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Stockton, Phoenix, Seattle and Washington, D. C.

Four of appellants’ assignments assert error of the board in ruling:

1.“The unemployment of claimants existed because of a labor dispute.”

2. “The labor dispute covered the entire labor area of the Eleven Western States, and was between all employer associations in the long line truck industry and all local councils, with their inclusive local Unions, in the Western Conference of the Teamsters’ Union.”

3. “In the negotiations to settle the dispute all individual employers and all local unions were involved and all were bound by the results of the restrictions.”

4. “All members of the local unions in the Western Conference of Teamsters who are employees of the operators herein involved participated, through their representatives in the dispute and all had a direct interest in its outcome.”

Appellants’ fifth assignment questions the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain those rulings, and to sustain the order denying benefits.

I.C. § 72 — 1366 (j) (1) and (2), applicable to this proceeding, reads:

“(j) A benefit claimant shall not be eligible to receive benefits for any week with respect to which it is found that his unemployment is due to a stoppage of work which exists because of a labor dispute; provided, that this subsection shall not apply if it is shown that — •
“(1) He is not participating, financing, aiding, abetting, or directly *278 interested in the labor dispute which caused the stoppage of work; and
“(2) He does not belong to a grade or class of workers of which, immediately before the commencement of the stoppage, there were members employed at the premises at which the stoppage occurs, any of whom are participating in or directly interested in the dispute.”

Certain basic elements of ineligibility set forth in subsection (j) above are undisputed, i. e., that a labor dispute existed; that Claimants’ unemployment was due to a stoppage of work because of the labor dispute, and that Claimants constituted classes of workers which, immediately before the stoppage, were employed at the various employers’ premises where the stoppage occurred.

The ultimate issue is included within the purview of the provisos (1) and (2) above, i. e., whether Claimants, or the classes of workers which they constituted, participated- in or were directly interested in the labor dispute. The answer is dependent upon whether the labor dispute which resulted in the stoppage of work in Idaho was a specific local strike restricted in scope to one area in California, or a general dispute resulting therefrom throughout the eleven western states.

Appellants’ fifth assignment, questioning the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the board’s rulings, and its order denying benefits, requires a brief review of the record in order to ascertain whether there is-evidence of a substantial nature to sustain the board’s order of denial.

Prior to 1955 within the area of Joint Council 67, bargaining between the trucking interests and their employees had been conducted between Intermountain Operators’’ League and Teamsters Joint Council 67.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
361 P.2d 795, 83 Idaho 274, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ankrum-v-employment-security-agency-idaho-1961.