Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, John B. Gordon Lodge No. 376 v. Southern Railway Company, Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Company

393 F.2d 303
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 1968
Docket23384
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 393 F.2d 303 (Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, John B. Gordon Lodge No. 376 v. Southern Railway Company, Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, John B. Gordon Lodge No. 376 v. Southern Railway Company, Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Company, 393 F.2d 303 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

GEORGE C. YOUNG, District Judge:

Appellants, defendants below, are the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen (a labor organization and collective bargaining representative for trainmen), John B. Gordon Lodge No. 376, a subordinate lodge of the Brotherhood, and numerous named officers and employees of either the Brotherhood or Lodge (sometimes hereinafter collectively “unions”). Appellees, plaintiffs below, are Southern Railway Company and Georgia Southern and Florida Railway Company (sometimes hereinafter collectively “railroads”).

On July 16, 1952, the Railroads and the Brotherhood entered into an agreement providing for the pooling of cabooses. The agreement contained several paragraphs concerning — in general terms — supplies and sanitary conditions on cabooses. By letter dated November 17, 1964, (Appendix A), the Brotherhood served notice under Section 6, of the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 156, of a desire to change certain provisions of that agreement relating to facilities in and conditions of cabooses operated by the railroads. Upon failure to resolve the dispute, the Brotherhood applied to the National Mediation Board to mediate. Mediation being unsuccessful, the Board offered to arbitrate but was rejected by the Brotherhood so that the Board terminated its services on October 19, 1965.

On October 23 and 30, 1965, the Railroads issued bulletins amending their operating rules requiring that thereafter both trainmen in a train crew ride in the locomotive. Prior to that change one trainman had been assigned to the locomotive and the other to the caboose.

On October 29, 1965, the Brotherhood transmitted a Section 6 notice to the Railroads concerning seating facilities for trainmen required to ride on locomotives. 1

On December 3, 1965, the appellants struck; picket lines were formed, and *305 railroad service halted. A temporary restraining order issued December 4, 1965, effective by later extension until December 23,1965. After an evidentiary hearing the Court below, on December 22, 1965, granted a permanent injunction which is appealed here.

The Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq., requires that certain procedural devices be exhausted in an attempt to amicably resolve major disputes prior to resort to self help. Elgin, J. & E. R. Co. v. Burley, 325 U.S. 711, 725, 65 S.Ct. 1282, 89 L.Ed. 1886 (1945). Included in the procedural requirements precedent to resort to self help, when a major dispute is in issue, is the requirement that a party desiring changes in an existing agreement give at least thirty (30) days written notice to the opposing party of the changes desired. Railway Labor Act, § 6, 45 U.S.C.A. § 156. The Brotherhood served such a notice by letter of November 17, 1964. It was alleged, the court below found, and it is nowhere disputed, that the strike of December 3, 1965, was in furtherance of the demands contained in the letter of November 17, 1964. (Appendix A)

Although the notice by its terms is directed toward the conditions of cabooses, appellants urge the Court to broadly construe the notice as one demanding improved working conditions generally, rather than only working conditions on cabooses. They contend that all demands contained in the notice with the exception of paragraphs 6, 14, and part of paragraph 8, are concerned with facilities for the use of trainmen which are not dependent upon a trainman riding the caboose. The district court found that the notice could not be construed so broadly and that both the notice and the strike were, as a matter of fact, in furtherance of demands for improvements located on cabooses only. We find no error in that determination.

The district court found further, that by virtue of the change in operating rules brought about by the promulgation of the October 23, and 30, 1965 bulletins, the unions no longer had any valid interest in the conditions of cabooses and therefore that their strike was not in furtherance of a valid labor dispute. The unions submit that this factual finding is error and urge this Court to find that the unions did, in fact, have a valid interest in the condition of cabooses on the date of the strike.

While conceding that the demands in a part of paragraph 8, and all of paragraphs 6 and 14, became inapplicable (by the October 23, 1965, rule change) to the trainmen since they no longer ride in a caboose, appellants claim that, as a matter of fact, trainmen still use cabooses and therefore have a legitimate “working conditions” interest in cabooses. On this point appellants cite as error the district court’s finding that “a caboose is not now used for any purpose by trainmen here involved.”

The district court found the railroads entitled to an injunction on either of two grounds:

1. The facilities of a caboose did not (on the date of the strike) constitute a part of the working conditions of the appellant trainmen; and

2. Even if the trainmen did have sufficient interest in the caboose facilities to be considered “working conditions”, a new Section 6 notice was required because of the new conditions resulting from the changed operating rules.

We will consider both grounds separately.

PART ONE

The district court, having first found that the trainmen had no “working conditions” interest in the cabooses, next found that the trainmen’s demands relative to cabooses were unlawful and therefore in violation of the general policy of the Railway Labor Act as established by *306 Sections 151a, 2 152 First, 3 and Second, 4 justifying the issuance of the injunction on the showing of irreparable damage.

We believe the absolute finding of no interest by the trainmen in cabooses to be in error.

Mr. F. A. Hardin, a Southern Railway trainman and conductor since 1940, and an officer of the General Committee of the Brotherhood of the Southern (Lines East) testified that a caboose has always been used by members of a crew other than just those who rode in it; that crews in local freight service cook their meals in a caboose and use the refrigerators and running water; that the head-end brakeman on a local freight used a caboose locker to keep his rain gear, rubber boots, extra lantern, gloves and canned goods although he never rode on the caboose as part of his working assignment ; that even after the change in operating rules, trainmen in local freight service, mine run service, work train service, and road switcher service still use cabooses; that men assigned to a run starting at an away-from-home terminal are dead-headed there on the last available passenger train causing the men to arrive at outlying points two to five hours before going on duty during which time they have the right to utilize the caboose facilities. 5

Former head brakemen and flagmen (now in supervisory positions) testified for the railroads as to their not using cabooses and as to trainmen in through service not now having need for caboose facilities.

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