Boston Shipping Ass'n v. International Longshoremen's Ass'n

337 F. Supp. 1007, 80 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2300
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedFebruary 2, 1972
DocketCiv. A. No. 72-632
StatusPublished

This text of 337 F. Supp. 1007 (Boston Shipping Ass'n v. International Longshoremen's Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Shipping Ass'n v. International Longshoremen's Ass'n, 337 F. Supp. 1007, 80 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2300 (D. Mass. 1972).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM and ORDER

CAFFREY, Chief Judge.

This matter came on for hearing on petitioner’s application for a mandatory injunction requiring the respondents (1) to perform certain clerical functions with reference to the off-loading and re-loading of a Portuguese vessel then tied up at the John F. Moran Terminal, and (2) to cease and desist from what petitioner alleges to be a work stoppage. The petition also alleges that conduct of respondents amounts to a breach of contract and to a failure to comply with a preliminary injunction entered by this Court on December 9, 1971, in Civil Action No. 71-2754-C, which civil action was brought by the United States under the provisions of the Taft-Hartley Act, 208 Labor Management Relations Act, 1947, 29 U.S.C.A. 178.

A hearing was held by the Court on January 31 and February 1, 1972, at which four witnesses testified in support of the petition, supplemented by three rebuttal witnesses, and five witnesses testified on behalf of the respondents. In addition, documentary exhibits were tendered by both parties.

On the basis of all the evidence, I find and rule that for some years the Massachusetts Port Authority (hereinafter MPA), which recently completed the building of the John F. Moran Terminal for the handling of containerized cargo at a cost of $15,000,000, has been investing considerable time and money in attempting to promote the use of the Port of Boston by various steamship lines in lieu of the Port of New York or other competing East Coast ports. I find that on or about January 7, the MPA succeeded in signing a contract with the Portuguese Steamship Line. On the basis of testimony that the original of the contract is in Portugal, a photostatic copy of the first nine pages thereof was [1008]*1008admitted in evidence. This contract obligates the MPA to supply berthing facilities for container vessels at the John F. Moran dock and also to supply labor, supervision and material-handling equipment for the carrier and to provide stevedoring services and terminal services. The contract also requires the Portuguese Steamship Line to use the MPA and its only contractor in the Port of Boston area for stevedoring and terminal services.

On or about January 27, a vessel of the Portuguese Line, the STOLLER GRUNDE, arrived at the Moran dock. This vessel is equipped only to carry containerized cargo which can be on-loaded and off-loaded through the use of a dockside crane. The vessel has no booms of its own. When it arrived, the vessel was carrying 20 containers to be off-loaded, and it was the contemplation of the Portuguese Line and the MPA that a number of empty containers would be on-loaded as well as several containers which were sent to Boston for carriage on this vessel by Texas Instruments, Inc., from a plant of that company located in the State of Rhode Island. This shipment by Texas Instruments through the Port of Boston would have been the first outgoing shipment the MPA has been able to arrange. An affidavit filed today establishes that the STOLLER GRUNDE refused to wait any longer in Boston for the resolution of the instant labor dispute by either the parties or this Court, and on the afternoon of February 1 she sailed from Boston to New York without off-loading the 20 containers consigned to Boston area consignees. As a result of this, the 20 containers will now have to come over the road from New York to Boston.

Were it not for the making of the MPA-Portuguese Line contract on January, 7, Texas Instruments would have made arrangements to ship out these containers through the Port of New York. One of the major problems in the successful operation of the Port of Boston is the imbalance between incoming freight and an almost total lack of outgoing freight. This imbalance, or one-sided traffic, has been a serious handicap to efforts to induce other ship lines to use the Port of Boston.

Additionally, the MPA and the Portuguese Line anticipated that containers of rag waste would also be loaded on the STOLLER GRUNDE. The rag waste, amounting to approximately 300 tons, is located on the Hoosac Pier, another facility owned and operated by the MPA. Prior to the arrival of the Portuguese vessel there were approximately 32 empty containers standing on the Hoosac Pier. In the trade, the filling of containers is called “stuffing” and the emptying of containers is called “stripping.” See Respondents’ Ex. A, p. 72, Article XVI.

The instant controversy has as one of its principal elements whether or not the procedure sought to be employed by the MPA, whereby containers would be stuffed at the Hoosac Terminal, using the clerical setup of B. S. Costello, and then delivered to the Moran facility using the clerical setup of Terminal Services, Inc. (hereinafter TSI), is consistent with prior practice and custom on the Boston waterfront. MPA was required to obtain its clerical help from TSI, another member of the Boston Shipping Association, because of the refusal of Local 1066 to allow the MPA to employ clerks directly although requested to do so. I find that the practice existed on the Boston waterfront prior to present events, under which practice, at least where a change of terminal agent was made, containers were transferred by one terminal operator from his pier and were accepted by a second terminal operator at his pier, each terminal operator using only his own set of clerks and there being no requirement that the first or transferring terminal operator employ a clerk setup separate from and in addition to the clerk setup already working at the second or transferee terminal.

I further find that the procedure under which the parties-plaintiff attempted to arrange for the transfer of con[1009]*1009tainers, both full and empty, from the B. S. Costello facility at Hoosac Pier to the TSI at the Moran Pier, was consistent with the above practice. In so finding, I accept the testimony of the witnesses Soules, Itz and Curran, called by plaintiff, and business agent McNamara of Local 1066 called by respondents, to the effect that such a practice was followed when there was a change in the identity of the terminal operator or the cessation of operations in the Port of Boston by an existing terminal operator. I further find that the contract of January 7 between the MPA and the Portuguese Steamship Line constitutes a change in identity of the terminal operator in Boston for the Portuguese Line as to containerized cargo, which is the subject matter of the instant controversy. Both parties are in agreement that the effect of the new contract is to create a situation in which the Portuguese Line has two separate terminal operators and agents in Boston. The MPA is its agent with regard to containerized shipments and B. S. Costello remains its agent for all break-bulk cargo.

It is likewise clear that the Portuguese Line is the first shipping company to have separate terminal operators and agents for the two types of cargo.

I find that the economic nub of the instant controversy is that if the Union’s position were adopted and made mandatory upon the terminal operators, the shippers would be required to employ a second clerical setup of six men for a period of nine or ten working days to do the clerical work in connection with the loading or unloading of containers, the performance of which clerical work would not require more than twelve house of actual work.

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Bluebook (online)
337 F. Supp. 1007, 80 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-shipping-assn-v-international-longshoremens-assn-mad-1972.