Arrell v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen

79 Pa. D. & C. 581, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 384

This text of 79 Pa. D. & C. 581 (Arrell v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Delaware County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrell v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, 79 Pa. D. & C. 581, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 384 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Bretherick, J.,

Plaintiff in this action of trespass seeks to recover damages because of his alleged illegal expulsion from defendant association. The case is presently before us on defendant’s preliminary objections to the complaint.

The material allegations of the complaint may be stated briefly as follows:

Plaintiff is a resident of this county; and defendant is an unincorporated association whose activity is union representation of employes of Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Company, and which regularly conducts such activity in the Townships of Upper Darby and Haverford, this county.

In or about October 1940 plaintiff entered the employ of Philadelphia Suburban Transportation Company as a bus operator and trolley operator; and on or about November 22, 1940, he became a member of defendant lodge, and remained a member thereof in good standing until sometime in 1948.

On or about July 12, 1948, John Conlin was president of defendant lodge, and was also an employe of the transportation company. As an incident to his employment, Conlin had been granted an employe’s complimentary book of transportation tickets, which was available to his wife for the purpose of securing free transportation over the lines of the transportation company.

While plaintiff was operating a trolley car of the transportation company along West Chester Pike in [583]*583the Township of Upper Darby, on or about July 12, 1948, he was presented with a ticket from Conlin’s complimentary book by a female passenger not Conlin’s wife, and the offering of the ticket by such person was contrary to the rules and regulations of the transportation company.

In accordance with his obligation and duty as an employe, plaintiff notified his superiors of the illegal use of the ticket.

Within a few days thereafter, Conlin confronted plaintiff in the Sixty-ninth Street Terminal, “and made various and sundry threats to him interspersed with vile and obscene language”.

On July 27, 1948, while plaintiff was operating a street ear of the transportation company along West Chester Pike at Llanereh, “he was illegally and unjustifiedly required to leave the said trolley car” by members of defendant lodge who constituted the grievance committee, “and was illegally required to attend a hearing in the lodge room” at Llanereh to answer alleged charges of Conlin, the charges being: (1) Violation of his obligation; (2) conduct unbecoming a Brother; (3) violation of section 27% of the brotherhood constitution.

The complaint charges that the f oregoing action was in contravention and in violation of the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of Pennsylvania, and the constitution of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, certain provisions of the latter being set forth in full text in the complaint.

As a result of the hearing, plaintiff was expelled from defendant lodge, and, in consequence, lost his employment with the transportation company.

By letter bearing date August 11, 1948, plaintiff was advised by the president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen that defendant lodge had theretofore been notified by the president that plaintiff’s ex[584]*584pulsion from the local was illegal. Defendant lodge thereupon reinstated plaintiff to membership, and plaintiff was permitted to return to his employment.

Thereafter, according to the complaint, the secretary of defendant lodge, acting within the scope of his office and authority, notified plaintiff of a hearing to be held on August 16, 1948, on charges made by Conlin identical with the earlier charges.

It is alleged that the charges filed violated and failed to comply with the requirements of section 144 of the Constitution in that they were not sufficiently detailed, and “in that they include a charge for offenses provided in section 27% which are expressly excepted from the offenses which are specified as the basis for trial, as provided in section 144”.

It is further alleged that the trial committee, at the hearing on August 16, 1948, accepted testimony in support of Conlin’s charge of “informing”, which properly could be a basis for expulsion only in proceedings under section 27% of the constitution and bylaws of the brotherhood. Section 27% is set forth in full text in the complaint and appears to provide for a special form of proceeding in cases involving the offense of “informing”, including trial before the president of the brotherhood.

Plaintiff avers that there was no testimony before the trial committee of facts constituting conduct in violation of plaintiff’s obligation, or conduct unbecoming a Brother; that the uncontradicted testimony was that plaintiff, in the course of his employment, had been presented a ticket from an employe’s complimentary book bearing the name of Mrs. John Conlin, and that plaintiff had complied with the rules of the transportation company in reporting the incident and turning into his superior the ticket thus presented.

The complaint charges that the hearing was unlawful and was a “concerted action” by the members of [585]*585defendant lodge, acting at the behest of Conlin, its president, “to willfully, intentionally, spitefully and illegally deprive him of membership in said Sam Harvey Lodge No. 998, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, and thereby effect the loss of employment by the said Paul K. Arrell”.

As a result of the hearing, it is said, plaintiff was expelled from membership in defendant lodge on August 24, 1948, and, in consequence, plaintiff was notified by the transportation company on the same date that he had been expelled.

Plaintiff avers that in accordance with the constitution of the brotherhood, he presented successive appeals to the president and to the board of directors of the brotherhood, which appeals were denied. Thereafter, he says, he attempted a further and final appeal to the board of appeals of the brotherhood, “but the said appeal was not recognized because it was averred, on August 17, 1949, that the appeal should have been presented within ninety days from the date of the action of the board of directors, which occurred on May 10, 1949”. It is averred that plaintiff “has exhausted every and all remedies available to him within the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen”.

It is unnecessary, in our view, to detail the averments of the complaint with respect to the damages claimed by plaintiff. It is sufficient to say that plaintiff claims that both of his expulsions from defendant lodge were wrongful and violative of his rights under the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of Pennsylvania and the constitution of the brotherhood. Plaintiff seeks both punitive and compensatory damages, the latter including, inter alia, claims for loss of wages, sums paid out for medical expenses, etc.

Defendant alleges in its preliminary objections that the complaint shows on its face that plaintiff has failed to exhaust the internal remedies available to him [586]*586within defendant lodge “by not properly appealing to the board of appeals as provided by the said constitution of the defendant lodge”.

The rule is firmly established that courts will not entertain jurisdiction unless all remedies afforded by the bylaws and constitution of an association have been exhausted, for it is from them that the rights of the members are derived and determined: O’Neill et al. v.

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Bluebook (online)
79 Pa. D. & C. 581, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrell-v-brotherhood-of-railroad-trainmen-pactcompldelawa-1951.