Armstrong v. Duffy

103 N.E.2d 760, 90 Ohio App. 233, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 187, 47 Ohio Op. 233, 28 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2378, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 658
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1951
Docket688
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 103 N.E.2d 760 (Armstrong v. Duffy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Duffy, 103 N.E.2d 760, 90 Ohio App. 233, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 187, 47 Ohio Op. 233, 28 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2378, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 658 (Ohio Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By HURD, J:

This action in equity for injunction and equitable relief comes before this court as an appeal on questions of law and fact from a judgment rendered by the common pleas court of Columbiana County against the defendants, James Duffy, Charles Jordan and the National Brotherhood of Opera *190 tive Potters, permanently enjoining said defendants from enforcing certain penalties imposed upon the plaintiffs individually as punishment for alleged violation of the union constitution and by-laws. The trial resulting in the imposition of punishment, was conducted by the 55th (July 1949) National Convention of the National Brotherhood of Operative Potters, an Ohio corporation, of which the individual plaintiffs and defendants are members. The penalties against which relief is sought consist of (1) a fine of $50.00 each, and (2) a suspension of the right of each to hold office within the union for a period of ten years.

The nature of this appeal brings the case before us for trial “de novo,” it having been stipulated by the parties hereto that the record and evidence made and presented in the trial court shall be received and considered by this court as evidence on this appeal.

Fundamentally, the case involves the question of union discipline of individual members of a union, and the jurisdiction of a court of equity to grant relief from alleged oppressive measures by invocation of the injunctive process.

For brevity and convenience, the individual parties will hereafter be designated as plaintiffs and defendants as they appeared in the trial court. The corporate defendant, National Brotherhood of Operative Potters, will be referred to as N. B. O. P., or simply as the National Brotherhood.

The National Brotherhood is, in fact an International Union, originally organized in 1891 and incorporated under the laws of Ohio in 1894. It is the parent organization which is composed of 114 local unions located in the United States and Canada, all affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, which, at the time of trial had a membership of approximately 28,000 skilled and unskilled craftsmen employed in the pottery, china and "sanitary ware industry.

The defendant, James Duffy, is now and has been for many years president, and the defendant, Charles Jordan, is now, and has been since 1945, the secretary-treasurer of the National Brotherhood.

The National Brotherhood is a democratically organized union with a code of regulations and by-laws which they have termed a constitution. As these by-laws and regulations are changed from time to time, the constitution is amended accordingly, provided that the designated procedural steps are properly taken.

In February, 1948, a suit was filed in the common pleas court of Columbiana County, Ohio, entitled Finlay et al v. Duffy et al, No. 35918 (OA 57 Abs 442, OS No. 32413, 154 Oh St 390, MCO and Dis.), by all of the plaintiffs in this action, *191 with the exception of E. C. Armstrong, against the defendants Duffy and Jordan, both individually and in their respective official capacities, dealing with certain salary increases in which action an injunction was prayed for against said individuals and the National Brotherhood on the ground that the officers had taken salary increases in a manner not authorized by the constitution and by-laws. Without describing the proceedings of that case in great detail, suffice it to say that after extended hearings, the trial court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and granted the injunction, holding with the plaintiffs that the salary increases which had been taken by the president and secretary-treasurer of the National Brotherhood were unauthorized under the constitution and the proceedings had thereunder, and on June 26, 1948, entered an order enjoining the defendants, Duffy and Jordan, from taking or accepting said salary increases. As a part of the same case, as appears by the record, the common pleas court suggested in its opinion that the injunction would be dissolved if an election was held and salary raises were approved by the general trade of the National Brotherhood in accordance with its constitution. Within a few days thereafter the 54th Convention (1948) of the N. B. O. P. met in Atlantic City, New Jersey, and voted salary increases to the president and secretary-treasurer subject to the approval of the membership to be determined by a referendum vote which was ordered to be taken by the general trade in August, 1948, at which time the defendants filed a motion for a new trial in the original case, stating that a vote was being taken. This was done in pursuance of the statement contained in the opinion of the trial court.

The result of said voting was announced in September, 1948, showing that the salary increases were approved by a majority of 221 votes for Duffy and 241 votes for Jordan. Thereafter, the plaintiffs, Whippier and Finlay, together with two other members of the National Brotherhood who were not in this particular suit, discovered upon investigation that fraud had been committed in the returns reporting the votes of Local 191 of Hamilton, Canada. This discovery was made some time during the month of October, and an investigation disclosed that the president of Hamilton Local 191 had falsified the return of the votes by arbitrarily adding 300 votes in favor of the salary increases for the president and secretary respectively, and by arbitrarily adding to the number of votes not in favor by 50 votes each respectively. This fraud was later verified by President Garvin Wilson of Hamilton Local 191 who, by affidavit, admitted that he himself had *192 made the fraudulent return. With the correction of the returns of the vote in Local 191, the entire result of the referendum was changed so that the record then showed a majority of the votes were against the salary increases of the officers, Duffy and Jordan.

On November 4, 1948, L. A. Finlay and Norman Whippier, two of the plaintiffs in case No. 35918, made an affidavit based upon the fraudulent return of Local 191, stating in substance that the vote published by the national secretary was incorrect and that the vote of the trade actually was against the national president and secretary receiving the salary increases and stating that the original election returns and envelopes were important in determining the correctness of the vote and that this valuable evidence was in the hands of the defendant, Charles Jordan, and certain members of the canvassing committee. A motion was then filed on behalf of plaintiffs by their counsel, for an order directing the secretary and the members of the canvassing committee to impound the ballots and envelopes. The court granted said motion and enjoined the defendant, Jordan, individually and as national secretary of the National Brotherhood and the members of the canvassing committee of the National Brotherhood from destroying any of the election returns together with the original envelopes and ordered' the ballots impounded under order of the court.

Thereafter, on Nov. 22, 1948, the canvassing committee received a registered letter signed by Duffy as president and Jordan as secretary, protesting the votes of certain other local unions, because they had not voted from the rolls. The canvassing committee of the National Brotherhood met on Dec.

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Bluebook (online)
103 N.E.2d 760, 90 Ohio App. 233, 61 Ohio Law. Abs. 187, 47 Ohio Op. 233, 28 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2378, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-duffy-ohioctapp-1951.