Fernández v. Unión de Trabajadores de Muelles ILA 1740 (UTM)

100 P.R. 355
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 14, 1972
DocketNo. R-68-246
StatusPublished

This text of 100 P.R. 355 (Fernández v. Unión de Trabajadores de Muelles ILA 1740 (UTM)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fernández v. Unión de Trabajadores de Muelles ILA 1740 (UTM), 100 P.R. 355 (prsupreme 1972).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pérez Pimentel

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Juan Fernández, Jr., filed a complaint against the Unión de Trabajadores de Muelles, ILA 1740 (UTM) AFL-CIO, [356]*356claiming extra hours worked during the weekdays as well as during days of rest and holidays in the period comprised between June 29, 1963 and June 27, 1966. The claim is for 5,905 extra hours amounting to $8,634.38 plus an amount as penalty for a total of $17,268.76 plus costs and attorney’s fees.

The defendant alleged as affirmative defense that during the period specified in the complaint appellant worked for it in his capacity as executive, officer, and organizer of the defendant.

Relying on this defense, the trial court rendered judgment dismissing the complaint, after making the following findings of fact:

“1 — Complainant Juan Fernández, Jr., was elected First Member of the Board of Directors of the defendant, Unión de Trabajadores de Muelles, ILA 1740 (UTM) AFL-CIO, and held this position from June 29, 1963 to June 25, 1966, when he ceased as such.
“2 — The Constitution and Regulations of the defendant Union, regarding the duties of the plaintiff, provide, insofar as pertinent, that the Board of Directors shall consist of eleven officials, to wit, President, Vice-President, Financial Secretary, Recording Secretary, Treasurer, Guide, Marshal, and 4 Members.
“3 — Section 8 of Art. No. 7 of the Union’s Constitution provides, as to the duties of the members, the following:
“ ‘The Members shall be four and shall have the following duties: Shall perform all the functions vested in them, they shall see to it that all the administrative provisions and provisions of this Constitution be complied with, shall perform the agreements of the Board of Directors and of the membership, shall investigate quarterly, from the 20th to the 30th of each trimester, the Union’s finances and shall submit a report of their work to the membership.’
“4 — Among the duties to be performed by the plaintiff were the tasks of answering the telephone of the Union’s offices, prepare notices of the arrival of ships, write on the bulletin board the date and hour of arrivals of ships and the necessary [357]*357crew (‘gangs’), accompany the treasurer to the bank to take out the money for operations and change the payroll checks, look for the checks of the checkoff of the companies, receive the persons who visited the office, attend to the selection of the gangs at the docks, open and close the defendant’s offices, investigate the complaints of the workers belonging to the union and attend to funeral details of the deceased workers or of their relatives.
“5 — As member of the Board of Directors plaintiff received a salary of $20 and $30 as weekly allowance for expenses for his work from Monday to Friday. When he worked on Saturdays he was paid $10 more for expenses and when he worked on Sundays he was paid another $10 for the same item. The salaries of the officials were approved in the last instance by the Union’s Assembly that ratified the agreements of the Board of Directors concerning this matter. The plaintiff, who was First Member, as well as the other Union officers did not punch cards nor were subject to time clocks. Because of his vicinity to the Union, the plaintiff was more united than any other of the members of the Board to the Union’s office and carried out 85% of the work of that office.
“6 — Even though the working hours fixed were from eight to twelve in the morning and from one thirty to four in the afternoon, Monday through Friday, and from eight to twelve in the morning on Saturdays, in fact the plaintiff spent more time than required working in the office as well as out of it by virtue of the official tasks assigned to him as member of the Board of Directors of the Union. In this particular we give credit to the plaintiff’s evidence as to the extra hours he worked aside from the mentioned regular hours.
“7 — As of the period covered by the complaint the plaintiff was enjoying already the Social Security Benefits and the portion of allowances for expenses and salaries which he received responded to an agreement with the Union, in order that the income received by the plaintiff would not curtail his Social Security Pension in accordance with the earnings that this Social Security System permits the beneficiaries to earn.”

After having read the transcript of evidence we conclude that the foregoing findings are supported by the evidence and that they are not erroneous.

[358]*358On November 30, 1962, this Court rendered its judgment in the case of Medina v. Unión Obreros Cervecería Corona, 86 P.R.R. 609 (1962). Interpreting the provisions of Act No. 379 of May 15, 1948, as amended until then, and specifically those about the definition of “employee”, “occupation,” and places where the Act would govern, we held in said case that under certain circumstances, a labor union may be considered as an employer for the purposes of the application of the above-mentioned Act and that when the president of a labor union is assigned duties which properly belong to an ordinary employee, and in the performance thereof he works in excess of eight hours a day, the Union, as an employer, is bound to pay him therefor at double rate.

At that time, the officers of the labor unions were not excluded from the provisions of Act No. 379, as the term “employee” was defined therein. However, in order to counteract the adverse impact that this decision could have on the finances of the labor unions, the Legislature amended § 19 of Act No. 379, by Act No. 11 of April 26, 1963, providing that:

“The word ‘employee’ shall not include executives, managers, administrators, professionals, or labor union officials or organizers when they act as such.” (Italics ours.)

The legislative history of this Act indicates that the Legislature had the purpose of excluding from the provisions of Act No. 379 the officials and organizers of labor unions in the same manner that it had already excluded traveling salesmen, peddlers, executives, administrators, and professionals under the view of the difficulty of supervising the working day in such groups.

In the report of the Labor Commission of the House of Representatives of April 4, 1963, the following is set forth:

[359]*359“Purposes of the Bill
“Senate Bill No. 435 amends § 19 of Act No. 379 of May 15, 1948, in order to exempt from the definition of employee of said Act the labor union officials or organizers when they act as such. .Thus the functionaries of the labor unions will be in the same situation as the traveling salesmen and peddlers, executives, administrators, managers, and professionals who at the present time are exempted from the definition of employee as it appears in § 19 of Act No. 379 of May 1948, as amended.” “History.—
“In the case of Francisco Medina Vega v.

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100 P.R. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandez-v-union-de-trabajadores-de-muelles-ila-1740-utm-prsupreme-1972.