Austin v. Southern Pacific Co.

123 P.2d 39, 50 Cal. App. 2d 292, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 926
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1942
DocketCiv. 11882
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 123 P.2d 39 (Austin v. Southern Pacific Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Southern Pacific Co., 123 P.2d 39, 50 Cal. App. 2d 292, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 926 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

GOODELL, J. pro tem.

This appeal was taken from a judgment for respondents after the demurrer of each of them to the third amended complaint had been sustained without leave to amend.

It appears from said complaint that appellant was employed by respondent railroad in January, 1911, as a chef and had worked continuously as a cook for the same employer ever since; that in June, 1933, he was reduced in rank from chef to second cook and was never restored to his former rating; that his seniority entitled him to chef’s rating, and that others, junior in service, had been advanced over him and given that rating; that in 1933 he had been “held out of service” for two months, at which time he was entitled to a salary of $147.50, but as second cook had received only $110 a month, and that he had run as second cook from September, 1933, until July, 1938, when he was “displaced from his employment . . . because of lack of seniority.” (This last allegation is hard to reconcile with the allegation of continuous service.) Further, that there are now working for the respondent railroad numerous chefs whose seniority status is not as high as his, in preference to whom he should now be employed, and that his position with respondent railroad “is at a hazard.”

The complaint alleges on information and belief that prior to this action, the exact date of which plaintiff does not know, respondent railroad “secretly, deliberately, and without notifying plaintiff, entered into a written contract” with re *294 spondent union “defining the seniority status of its dining ear employees” whereby “the seniority status of plaintiff as an employee with said company was fraudulently and arbitrarily determined by said contract in such fashion that plaintiff lost his correct seniority ranking” and that he “was not given any notice of the making of said contract, and does not know its exact terms and conditions and has no way of ascertaining” them. Further, that respondent railroad’s action in denying him his correct' seniority status is due solely to the action of the respondent union in making said contract, and that unless the union is restrained from interfering with his seniority status he will lose his employment with respondent railroad for a considerable portion of time as well as the difference of $27.50 per month between the pay of chef and that of second cook; that his dispute with the respondent railroad did not arise because of any dissatisfaction with his services; that he is 66 years old, knows no other kind of work, and the earning of his livelihood is threatened. A demand for restoration was alleged and its refusal, and finally, that “plaintiff took the matter of his seniority status up with the National Railroad Adjustment Board . . . and submitted to them the facts herein set forth” but that the board denied him any relief.

The prayer is for the restoration of appellant by respondent railroad “to his proper status on their seniority lists”; that the respondent union be restrained from interfering with him, his employment, and his seniority status, and that the respondent railroad be required to pay appellant such money as may be due him.

It should be noted that two distinct contracts are mentioned in the pleading, the first, appellant’s contract of employment with respondent railroad by which, presumably, he acquired his claimed seniority, the second, the contract between respondent railroad and respondent union, by which he claims to have lost it. With respect to the first contract: Although an unbroken service of over 28 years is pleaded, the allegations show nothing more than an employment from month to month (sections 3001, 2, 3, Labor Code) terminable at the will of either party (section 2922, Id.). The circumstance that the employment was merely at will does not mean that the employee is without protection of such rights as he might have thereunder (Truax v. Raich, 239 U. S. 33 [36 Sup. *295 Ct. 7, 60 L. Ed. 131, Ann. Cas. 1917B 283, L. R A. 1916D 545], but the inquiry arising upon the face of this complaint is, just what are those rights ? Counsel for appellant concedes that the employment was at will, terminable at any time, but couples that concession with the claim “that the employer, as long as he keeps the employee in his employment, should give him the seniority status that he is entitled to by virtue of a long term of service with said employer . . .”. But in the pleading there is nothing to tell the court what is “the seniority• status that he is entitled to” or why he is entitled to it. The complaint alleges that in June, 1933, when he was demoted “plaintiff was entitled to a rating as a chef cook . . . because of his seniority status” with the respondent railroad. That is the only allegation connecting his contract of employment with his claimed seniority. If he bases such seniority on his contract of employment it would seem that to make out any kind of a case, appellant should have alleged when and how the seniority right became fixed— whether by an express promise made to him or to somebody acting on his behalf; whether by statute, or by a rule, practice, or custom of the employer; its extent or limit; by what terms or to what extent the employer bound itself to respect it, how it might be forfeited, lost or otherwise terminated, and perhaps how it affected appellant’s contemporaries and juniors in service. The demurrers of both respondents specially directed attention to this defect in the pleading. The case of Battle v. Atlantic Coast Line R. R. Co., 132 Ga. 376 [64 S. E. 463], cited by respondent union, decided (1909) before the enactment of the Railway Labor Act, is directly in point. There the plaintiff sued two railroads after a consolidation, on the ground that he had acquired seniority. There were as here, general and special demurrers to the complaint. The court said: “. . . no cause of action was set out against either defendant. While the petition made frequent references to the plaintiff’s ‘rights’ of priority in the line of promotion in his work, it failed to show that there was any such legal right, or exactly what it was, or how it arose. It showed no contract on the part of any of the companies mentioned, made with him, to employ him for any definite length of time, or not to discharge him except under certain specified circumstances, or that it would promote him in any particular manner.” Again: “But it was not shown that he had any contract with the first company which gave *296 him any definite rights, privileges, or rank, or that he had any contract with the second company on that subject.” The action of the court in sustaining the demurrers was affirmed.

The appellant has not charged a breach of the contract of employment itself, for the complaint alleges a continuous service. The alleged grievance is the loss of appellant’s “seniority status,” but there is nothing to tell the court the right upon which the suit is based, or the source of such right except the bald statement that the appellant was entitled to the rating as chef because of his seniority status. Taking this allegation at its face value it shows the loss of rating in 1933 by the sole action of the respondent railroad without any interference by the union.

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Bluebook (online)
123 P.2d 39, 50 Cal. App. 2d 292, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-southern-pacific-co-calctapp-1942.