Donald Ryan v. New York Newspaper Printing Pressmen's Union No. 2

590 F.2d 451, 100 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2428, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 17775
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1979
Docket78-7176
StatusPublished

This text of 590 F.2d 451 (Donald Ryan v. New York Newspaper Printing Pressmen's Union No. 2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald Ryan v. New York Newspaper Printing Pressmen's Union No. 2, 590 F.2d 451, 100 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2428, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 17775 (2d Cir. 1979).

Opinion

590 F.2d 451

100 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2428, 85 Lab.Cas. P 11,021

Donald RYAN, Richard Dunn, John de Sarle, Bernard Monahan,
George Hubert, Cornelius Cronin, Francis Butler,
Richard Hayes, Gary J. Mazzie, John
Longmore, and Frederick
Choffe, Appellants,
v.
NEW YORK NEWSPAPER PRINTING PRESSMEN'S UNION NO. 2, The New
York Times Company and New York News, Inc., Appellees.

No. 58, Docket 78-7176.

United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.

Argued Nov. 13, 1978.
Decided Jan. 8, 1979.

Daniel S. Eisenberg, New York City, for appellants.

Jerome P. Coleman, Townley & Updike, New York City, for appellees The New York Times Company and New York News, Inc.

Michael M. Connery, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, New York City (John D. Feerick and Edward G. Imperatore, New York City, of counsel), for appellee New York Newspaper Printing Pressmen's Union No. 2.

Before OAKES and VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judges, and MISHLER, District Judge.*

OAKES, Circuit Judge:

Layoff problems caused by technological or economic contraction of work for a given trade union are some of the most difficult for employees, unions, employers, and courts alike. Those raised by the contraction/automation of the printing industry are no exception. Here, happily, New York metropolitan newspapers found positions for the employees of Alco-Gravure, Inc. (Alco), a Hoboken, New Jersey, plant that formerly printed the Sunday New York Times Magazine section. But, unhappily, there is a contest between some of Alco's laid-off employees on the one hand and other such employees and the Union on the other as to seniority (or "priority") in the new newspaper jobs. The contest, not resolved on the intra-union grievance level, takes the form of a suit against the Union for unfair representation and against it and the employers for breach of the collective bargaining agreement which, absent the Union's setting of the priorities here attacked, clearly would have given appellant employees priority "in the sequence of tenure of employment," that is, as first hired by the newspapers.1 The United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, William C. Conner, Judge, on a stipulation of facts found no breach of the duty of fair representation and dismissed the complaint.2 We affirm, although not without some question.

FACTS

The Union appellee is a labor organization, a local of the International Printing & Graphic Communications Union, AFL-CIO (International), formerly the International Printing Pressmen & Assistants' Union of North America. The Union is the exclusive bargaining representative of appellants who are employees of appellee newspapers and formerly of Alco. Prior to February 1, 1975, Alco employed approximately 142 journeymen pressmen, members of the Union, including appellants. Soon thereafter, however, a series of layoffs occurred. On May 8, 1975, Alco notified twelve journeymen pressmen not appellants that they were to be laid off effective May 19, 1975.3 Two days before the scheduled layoff, the president of the Union issued a "freeze order," the effect of which was to prohibit other Union members (including appellants) from seeking new jobs under the jurisdiction of the Union until each of the twelve employees to be laid off from Alco had obtained a new job and established seniority or priority in it. Between June 10 and 12, 1975, the Union permitted three journeymen pressmen again not appellants to resign from Alco and to obtain employment at the appellee newspapers and establish seniority and priority. And on June 15, 1975, Alco notified an additional twenty journeymen pressmen employees still not appellants that they were to be laid off effective June 23, 1975; the Union, through its president, responded by issuing a third similar freeze order.

With the employment situation deteriorating at Alco, on October 24, 1975, Alco issued a further notice to thirty-five journeymen pressmen employees, including all of the appellants herein. This notice was of a layoff effective November 3, 1975. Thus, under the terms of the contract, note 1 Supra, appellants automatically had lower priority in the New York newspaper shops than the previously laid-off Alco Union members who had already obtained New York newspaper employment. See note 3 Supra.

On October 28, 1975, the president of the Union issued another freeze order, a response to this last layoff notice. Unlike the previous freeze orders, however, which allowed the employees being laid off to establish a new priority at another shop without competition from other Union employees, including those remaining at Alco, the order allowed All employees, including those not yet laid off, to establish priority at another shop. Pursuant to this freeze order, all fifty-six journeymen pressmen remaining at Alco, although frozen in their shop affiliation unless Alco subsequently laid them off, would have priority over appellants at appellee newspapers if Alco later did lay off those remaining pressmen. In other words, having been prevented by the previous freeze orders from establishing New York newspaper priority superior to that of those with Lower Alco priority because the latter had been laid off from Alco and employed at the newspapers earlier than appellants, appellants were now to lose New York newspaper priority also to those with Higher Alco priority, even though the latter would necessarily be laid off later, or last, by Alco.

The remaining fifty-six journeymen pressmen did in fact remain employed at Alco after the appellants' layoff. Alco laid off seven of them on December 15, 1975. With the exception of five supervisory pressmen, Alco notified the remainder of a layoff effective December 22, 1975.4 On April 13, 1976, Alco finally announced the permanent suspension of all printing operations at its Hoboken plant and the official termination of all pressmen employees previously laid off.

Intra-union grievance procedures and appeals5 have failed to give appellants relief from the rather anomalous position in which they6 find themselves: caught in the layoff squeeze at Alco by virtue of the two different freeze orders, their priority at appellee New York newspapers is lower than that of All of the other former Alco employees. Although from some date between November 1 (See note 6 Supra ) and December 22, 1975, appellants have all been employed at the New York newspapers, their priority is lower than that of previously laid-off Alco employees, who had lower priority at Alco but who were allowed to establish priority at the New York newspapers earlier than appellants, as well as later laid-off Alco employees who, because of their higher priority at Alco, under the freeze order obtained higher priority at the New York newspapers. Priorities are important not just in terms of layoffs but also in terms of work shifts.7THE LEGAL STANDARD OF FAIR REPRESENTATION

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590 F.2d 451, 100 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2428, 1979 U.S. App. LEXIS 17775, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-ryan-v-new-york-newspaper-printing-pressmens-union-no-2-ca2-1979.