Boston & M. R. R. v. David

167 F.2d 722, 22 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2133, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3163
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 1948
DocketNo. 4307
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 167 F.2d 722 (Boston & M. R. R. v. David) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston & M. R. R. v. David, 167 F.2d 722, 22 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2133, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3163 (1st Cir. 1948).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment ordering the respondent in an action brought under § 8(e) of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 891, 50 U.S. C.Appendix, § 308(e), to “reinstate the petitioner to the position of sheet metal worker helper, which was his permanent position when he left to enter service and training, or to a position of like seniority, status, and pay, and pay to the petitioner as interim damages the wages he would have earned as such, less what he has otherwise earned, from the date of his application to the date of his reinstatement, the petitioner to recover taxable costs.”

It is assumed by both parties and the Amicus Curiae, and the ordering of interim damages confirms the assumption, that the effect of this judgment is to order the respondent to give the petitioner actual employment for wages' in the specific capac[724]*724ity named in its Concord, New Hampshire, shops. Since the District Court’s memorandum opinion further confirms this assumption we shall treat the judgment appealed from as having the effect attributed to it.

The following basic facts which are not in dispute will serve to present the questions for consideration on this appeal.

The petitioner went to work for the respondent. as a laborer in its Concord shops on October 2, 1940. In 1941, pursuant to the terms of a collective bargaining agreement entered into on April 1, 1947, between the respondent and the union which represented the various crafts and classes of its shop employees, the petitioner was advanced to the rating of sheet metal worker helper. On July 22, 1942, pursuant to the terms of a modification of the above collective bargaining agreement dated June 23, 1941, he was upgraded to sheet metal worker temporary, and on March 18, 1943, while holding this rating, he was inducted into the armed forces of the United States. It is now conceded that he was not qualified at the time of his induction, and at the time of trial still was not qualified, to do the work of a full fledged sheet metal worker; that he was temporarily rated as such under the modification of the basic collective bargaining agreement only for the purpose and as the means of giving him an incr'ease in pay; and that during his military service he was retained on the respondent’s roster of employees in his permanent classification of sheet metal worker helper on furlough or leave of absence in the armed service and given seniority in that classification dating from his first employment as a helper in 1941.

He was honorably discharged from the armed forces on December 16, 1945, and on January 28, 1946, he applied to the respondent for reinstatement to the same position he had held at the time he was inducted, that is, sheet metal worker temporary. There is no question but that the circumstances of 'the petitioner’s military service and his discharge therefrom entitle him to the reemployment benefits of the Act, nor is there any question as to his qualifications to do the same work for the respondent now that he was doing for it when he was inducted.

It is fúrther conceded- that at the time of the petitioner’s application for reinstatement the respondent’s operations in its Concord shops had reverted to normal from the expanded war-time conditions ■ prevailing there when the petitioner was inducted; that in January 1946 it was not employing and since that time has not employed any sheet metal workers temporary or any sheet metal workers helpers at that place, or “point” as it is .called in railroad parlance; and that at the time of the petitioner’s application for reinstatement and ever since, all of the sheet metal work in the respondent’s shops has been done by two employes, both of whom are mechanics, a term synonymous with journeymen in railroad parlance, one of them being a sheet metal worker of over twenty years standing and the other a freight car repair man of approximately the same seniority but who has been doing sheet metal work only since 1946. Under these circumstances, the petitioner having indicated upon applying for reinstatement that he would not accept employment at any other “point” than Concord, or any other employment there'but the equivalent of the job he had when he was inducted, the respondent placed the petitioner on its roster as a sheet metal worker helper on furlough, giving him cumulated seniority, that is, the seniority he would have had if he had remained in its shops continuously. . This position did not carry with it immediate employment for wages, but it did give the petitioner the right to be recalled to work in the order of his seniority among other helpers on the same roster whenever the respondent should require the services of sheet metal workers helpers at its Concord shops, and it also gave the petitioner, in the order of his seniority, the right to “bid ■off” other jobs for which he might be qualified.

The respondent contends that although it did not give the petitioner employment in the sense of work for a wage, it gave him a “position” in the sense of a place upon its roster with the same seniority he would have had if he had remained continuously [725]*725at work for the respondent, and that this is all the reemployment provisions of the Selective Training and Service Act require ■of it. The petitioner on the other hand contends that the respondent’s action does not satisfy the statute. He says that he is entitled to be put to work at a wage, not merely carried on the respondent’s roster in his permanent classification on furlough.

At the trial the court below, although it admitted oral evidence of the terms and conditions of the petitioner’s employment as fixed by the basic collective bargaining agreement and the subsequent modification thereof, refused to admit the agreements themselves in evidence as exhibits. Then it found that the petitioner’s permanent position with the respondent was that of sheet metal worker helper, and ordered his reempolyment by the respondent in that capacity; its ratio decidendi being that ■sheet metal work was still being done in the respondent’s Concord shops, that although the respondent was employing full fledged mechanics, to do that work, they were performing as part of their work the functions formerly performed for them by their helpers, and that one of the men so employed was junior to the petitioner on sheet metal work. Therefore the court below considered that the petitioner, since he had done sheet metal work before, even though only temporarily, “could be again assigned to sheet metal work or resume the work of helper.”

The respondent-appellant assigns ■error in three respects. It says (1) that the petitioner, because he applied for reinstatement in a position higher than the one to which he was entitled, i. e., sheet metal worker temporary, when his permanent classification was only sheet metal worker helper, failed to apply for reinstatement within the meaning of the Act within the 90 day period prescribed therefor by the December 8, 1944 amendment (58 Stat. 798) to subsection 8(b) of the Act; (2) that the collective bargaining agreements were improperly excluded; and (3) that on the facts disclosed the respondent had fully restored the petitioner in his former position in accordance with the rule of Fishgold v. Sullivan Drydock & Repair Corp., 328 U.S. 275, 66 S.Ct. 1105, 90 L.Ed. 1230, 167 A.L.R. 110, by placing him on its roster as a sheet metal worker helper on furlough and giving him cumulated war-service seniority.

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167 F.2d 722, 22 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2133, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 3163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-m-r-r-v-david-ca1-1948.