Boblitt v. C., C., C. St. L. ry.co.

56 N.E.2d 348, 73 Ohio App. 339, 29 Ohio Op. 65, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 604
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 22, 1943
DocketNo. 885
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 N.E.2d 348 (Boblitt v. C., C., C. St. L. ry.co.) 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
Boblitt v. C., C., C. St. L. ry.co., 56 N.E.2d 348, 73 Ohio App. 339, 29 Ohio Op. 65, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 604 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinions

This appeal on questions of law and fact brought to this court for trial de novo an action *Page 340 which is in form one for an injunction, but in fact is to settle a dispute that has existed since 1911 between two local lodges or divisions, as they are called, of the Order of Railway Conductors of America, a voluntary labor organization (herein referred to as the O.R.C., or the Order). A division of O.R.C. usually consists of the conductors working on an operating division of a railroad system, and their seniority district usually coincides with the operating division.

The plaintiffs are five members of division No. 481 of O.R.C. who work on the Sandusky division of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago St. Louis Railway Company system, which will be referred to by its popular name, the Big Four Railroad. That division extends from Sandusky, Ohio, through Berwick to Springfield, Ohio. The plaintiffs brought this as a class action representing themselves and all other conductors working on the Sandusky division.

The real defendants are the O.R.C. and its executive officers and Division No. 193 of O.R.C. and its executive officers. That division is composed of conductors who work on the eastern division of The Toledo Ohio Central Railroad Company system, herein called the T. O.C. That operating division extends from Toledo through Fostoria and Berwick to Thurston, Ohio.

The Big Four Railroad and the New York Central Railroad Company which, as lessee, has operated the T. O.C. system since 1922 and the Big Four since 1930, are nominal defendants. Their position is that this is a dispute within the O.R.C., the representative of all of their conductors for collective bargaining purposes, and they are willing to follow its directions or those of the courts in the employment of their conductors.

In 1911 the Big Four, by contract, acquired "trackage rights" over that part of the eastern division of *Page 341 the T. O.C. from Berwick to Toledo, a distance of about 47.5 miles, and has since operated passenger trains over that road in connection with its Sandusky division south of Berwick. Part of the time since 1911 some of those trains have made scheduled stops to receive and discharge passengers at Fostoria and occasionally at smaller towns on that line.

Whenever Big Four trains have handled local passengers on that part of the T. O.C., the conductors of Division No. 193, and the other operating workmen — engineers, firemen and trainmen — on that division have asserted claims to a share of the work on those trains. Division No. 481 has disputed this, claiming that the T. O.C. conductors have not been deprived of any work by reason of the Big Four passenger trains handling local passengers at Fostoria and that under the constitution and statutes of the order they are not entitled to work on those trains.

In 1917, officials of the order, to whom the controversy had been referred, ruled that T. O.C. conductors should have a share of the work in question. About that time the Big Four discontinued passenger service at Fostoria, and the O.R.C. ruling was not put into effect. In 1921, when that service was resumed, the officers of O.R.C. directed that its former order be observed, and after seven months the Big Four again discontinued the service and the controversy subsided until 1929 when the T. O.C. men, claiming that some passengers were being handled at Fostoria, insisted on a share of the work as directed by the former order of O.R.C. officials. Nothing was done about this claim until 1934, when settlement of the matter by the conductors and other train and engine workmen was attempted by a contract with the Big Four entered into October 17, 1934, under the supervision of grand officers of the four brotherhoods. By it, the T. O.C. conductors were to be allowed to work on the Big Four *Page 342 trains up to 4,500 miles each month. Thereupon the Big Four discontinued one-half of its passenger train service at Fostoria and a new dispute started as to the interpretation the contract should have under the changed conditions.

Again the grand officers of the four brotherhoods were called in and under their supervision a new contract was executed April 6, 1936, by the eight general chairmen of each of the orders on both railroad systems. By this, the T. O.C. conductors were to be permitted to work on Big Four trains up to 5,000 miles per month.

This contract being unsatisfactory to the conductors of division No. 481, they appealed to the general committee of adjustments of the O.R.C. of the Big Four system, which voted disapproval of the contract, and thereupon the matter was referred to the jurisdiction committee of O.R.C., which is composed of the president, senior vice-president, assistant to the president and two general chairmen from each of the four districts into which the United States and Canada are divided under the laws of O.R.C. It is the supreme authority within the order for the settlement of disputes. After a full hearing, this committee confirmed the disposition of the matter as made by the contract of April 6, 1936. Thereupon the plaintiff's, having exhausted their remedies within the order, filed this action, claiming that the action of the officers of the order was unreasonable, arbitrary, capricious and oppressive and in contravention of the statutes of the order and deprived them and those they represented of valuable seniority rights.

On August 15, 1935, on the application of the New York Central to the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio, it was permitted to discontinue the one passenger train a day each way it had operated over the eastern *Page 343 division of its T. O.C. line. At that time the timetable of the N.Y.C., Sandusky division, which is in evidence, shows it was operating two trains a day each way which stopped at Fostoria and Luckey and one each way at Pemberville, and immediately following the discontinuance of the T. O.C. trains, three trains each way stopped at Fostoria.

This whole controversy turns upon the application of statute 62 of O.R.C., which plaintiff's claim was violated by the rulings of O.R.C. officers. The material part of that statute is as follows: (the lettering is added for reference purposes herein)

(a) "Whenever one railroad is absorbed or leased by another railroad the conductors on the road absorbed or leased shall retain their right and seniority as heretofore on the road absorbed or leased. When it becomes necessary to re-adjust the service of the merged roads, the trains and runs shall be manned by conductors of the respective roads in proportion, as nearly as practicable, to the mileage run on the territory of each.

(b) "Where trackage rights are hereafter granted to a foreign road, which reduces the business of the road over which trackage rights are acquired by foreign roads, a number of conductors equal to those displaced will be employed in running trains on such foreign railroads, while on the same trackage where conductors have been displaced; on the termination of trackage rights or agreements being returned, a number of men equal to the traffic returned will go with the traffic under the bulletin system provided on the line.

(c) "When differences arise between conductors on the property absorbed or leased, or where trackage rights are acquired, or where services of different railways are pooled and said differences can not be adjusted by general committees for the lines involved *Page 344

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.E.2d 348, 73 Ohio App. 339, 29 Ohio Op. 65, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boblitt-v-c-c-c-st-l-ryco-ohioctapp-1943.