Asociación Insular de Guardianes v. Bull Insular Line, Inc.

78 P.R. 680
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedSeptember 30, 1955
DocketNo. 10876
StatusPublished

This text of 78 P.R. 680 (Asociación Insular de Guardianes v. Bull Insular Line, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asociación Insular de Guardianes v. Bull Insular Line, Inc., 78 P.R. 680 (prsupreme 1955).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Clause XIII of the Collective Bargaining Agreement made on October 25, 1950, by the Asociación Insular de Guardia-nes de Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rico Steamship As[681]*681sociation, in representation of the Bull Insular Line, Inc. ■and other shipping companies, reads verbatim as follows:

“Clause XIII — Grievances and Complaints
“A. — The Association agrees not to suspend work as a result of any incident, dispute, controversy, or claim during the life ■of this agreement.
“B. — In the event of any incident, dispute, controversy, or claim, or any controversy on the interpretation of this agreement, the Association, through its President or Secretary-Treasurer, or any official or officials duly authorized by the first two, shall forthwith submit the questions in dispute to an authorized representative of the Company. In the event the question is not satisfactorily settled within 24 hours after it has been submitted by the Association to the Company, the same shall be submitted within the following 24 hours by any of the parties to the Arbitration Committee hereby created, which shall be composed of five (5) members, two in representation of the Union ■and two in representation of the Company, who shall not be lawyers. The fifth member shall be appointed by mutual consent by the representatives of the Association and the Company. In the event the parties fail to reach an agreement, the fifth member shall be one of the official arbitrators of the Insular Labor Department or the person appointed by the Insular •Commissioner of Labor of Puerto Rico.
“C. — The said Arbitration Committee shall give the Association and the Company an opportunity to express their respective points of view, and the decision of that Committee shall be final and binding on both parties. The Committee shall meet and enter a decision in writing within a period of ten (10) days, counted from the date of submission for its decision of the incident, dispute, controversy, or claim, unless the parties ■decide to extend this period.”

The Company discharged two of its watchmen and the question of the discharge was submitted to an Arbitration Committee. On July 12, 1952, the two representatives of the Association in the Committee and those of the Company, together with the fifth member designated by the Commissioner of Labor, met to consider and decide whether or not the discharge of the laborers was justified. At that meeting the Company’s representatives and the fifth member invited [682]*682the representatives of the Association to sign with them a “submission agreement” as a prerequisite to enable the Committee to arbitrate the complaints presented by the laborers. The members of the Committee who represented the Association refused to comply with such requirement, wherefore the Committee in full refused to arbitrate, declaring that “there is no arbitration case simply because we have been unable to implement it” through the signature of both parties-to a “submission agreement”, and “because the parties did not reach an agreement regarding the jurisdiction to be vested in the Arbitration Committee with its fifth member.” In view of this, and relying upon the provisions of the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act (Act No. 47 of April 25, 1931, Sess. Laws, p. 378), the Association and the two-discharged laborers filed a complaint against the Bull Insular Line, against the two representatives of the latter, and against the fifth member of the Committee.

The Company and its two representatives filed a motion to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction and of facts-sufficient to constitute a cause of action. At a pretrial conference the parties stipulated that the fifth member should, be eliminated as a party defendant, and also that:

“(1) The plaintiffs maintain that there is no need for a submission agreement because the manner in which the Arbitration Committee is defined and constituted in the Collective Bargaining Agreement vests the Committee with jurisdiction over all complaints or controversies which may arise between the Company and the plaintiffs; and
“(2) . . . That defendants’ contention is that the court lacks-jurisdiction, and even in the event that the court had jurisdiction to decide, their position is different, namely, that the defendant Company’s contention is that the Arbitration Committee mentioned in Clause XIII of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, refers only to complaints and grievances which may be submitted to it by a submission agreement of the parties.”

They also presented by stipulation the Collective Bargaining Agreement above referred to. The court rendered [683]*683judgment declaring that it had jurisdiction to take cognizance of the case under its consideration, and concluding definitively that “pursuant to Clause XIII of the Collective Bargaining-Agreement, supra, and by reason of the wording of that clause and the manner in which the Arbitration Committee thereby created is defined and constituted, the parties are under no obligation to sign individually a submission agreement as a means of settling the controversy and conferring jurisdiction on the arbitrators, wherefore the petition is. hereby granted.”

The only error assigned by the defendants on appeal is that “the lower court erred in declaring that it had jurisdiction of the petition for declaratory judgment filed by plaintiffs, since the facts alleged are indicative of unfair-labor practices, the investigation and award of which are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Insular Labor Relations Board.”

In ruling that it was competent to take cognizance of the case under its consideration, the trial court, in a lengthy and reasoned “Declaratory Judgment,” states as follows:

“The defendants’ contention that this Court lacks jurisdiction, to take cognizance of this petition on the ground that the facts alleged by the Asociación de Guardianes constitute at the most unfair labor practices, the investigation and award of which are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the National Labor Relations Board or of the Insular Labor Relations Board, is without merit and should be rejected by the court.
“Section 10(a) of the Taft-Hartley Act, to which the Bull Insular Line is subject, gives the National Labor Relations Board exclusive jurisdiction if the company commits any of the-unfair labor practices listed in § 8. But the enumeration by the Wagner Act and the Taft-Hartley Act of the unfair labor practices over which the National Labor Relations Board has-exclusive jurisdiction does not prevent the states from enforcing their own policies in matters not governed by the federal law . . . Labor Relations Board v. N. Y. & P. R. S. S. Co., supra. [69 P.R.R. 730.]
[684]*684“The instant case is a proceeding involving the interpretation of the arbitration clause of a collective bargaining agreement, for the purposes of its enforcement. The violation of a collective bargaining agreement is an unfair labor practice under § 8(1) (/) of the Insular Act. But that is not true under the Federal Act.

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78 P.R. 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asociacion-insular-de-guardianes-v-bull-insular-line-inc-prsupreme-1955.