Fontaine v. Board of Review of Department of Employment Security

210 A.2d 867, 100 R.I. 37, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 350
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 17, 1965
DocketEq. Nos. 3213-3215
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 210 A.2d 867 (Fontaine v. Board of Review of Department of Employment Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fontaine v. Board of Review of Department of Employment Security, 210 A.2d 867, 100 R.I. 37, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 350 (R.I. 1965).

Opinion

*38 Paolino, J.

These three petitions were brought in accordance with the provisions of G. L. 1956, §28-44-52, to review the decision of the respondent board denying the claim of each petitioner for benefits under the employment security act, G. L. 1956, chaps. 42-44 of title 28. After a hearing before a justice of the superior court a decree was entered in each case reversing the decision of the board of •review. The cases are here under the provisions of §28-44-55 on the respondents’ appeal in each case from such decree.

Since all three appeals raise identical issues, the parties have briefed and argued them together, with the agreement that our decisions in these cases shall apply to the applications of nine co-employees who have similar claims. The *39 appellants are the .board of review of the department of employment security, the director of employment security, and Supreme Dyeing & Finishing Corporation. For convenience we shall sometimes hereinafter refer to them as the board, the director and the employer respectively.

The following sections of the act are pertinent here:

“28-44-16. Labor disputes. — An individual shall not be entitled to benefits except for unemployment which continues subsequent to six (6) weeks in addition to his waiting period, if he became unemployed because of a strike or other industrial controversy in the establishment in which he was employed; provided, that this section shall not- apply if it is shown to the satisfaction of the director that the -claimant -is not a member of the organization, or group responsible for the stoppage of work, and is not participating in or financing or in any way directly interested in the labor dispute which caused the stoppage of work.”
“28-44-17. Voluntary leaving without good cause.— On and after November 16. 1958, an individual who leaves work voluntarily without good cause shall be ineligible for waiting period credit or benefits until he establishes to the satisfaction of the director that he has subsequent to such leaving had at least four (4) weeks of work and in each of said four (4) weeks has had earnings of twenty dollars ($20.00) or more * * *.”
“28-44-54. -Scope of judicial review — Additional evidence — Precedence of proceedings. — The jurisdiction of the reviewing court shall be confined to questions of law, and, in the absence of fraud, the findings of fact by the board o-f review, if supported by substantial evidence regardless of statutory or common law rules, shall be conclusive. * * *”

The twelve claimants involved in these cases were employed by the Supreme Dyeing & Finishing Corporation at its plant in West Warwick. As a result of an incident which occurred on July 15, 1963, claimants applied for unemployment benefits under the act. Their claims were denied by the director on the ground that they had left work volun *40 tarily without good cause and were therefore subject to the penalty provisions prescribed in §28-44-17. The claimants thereupon filed appeals with the board. The employer, by counsel, entered an appearance with the board.

At the hearing before the board, claimants contended that the facts established a strike or other labor controversy within the meaning of §28-44-16 and that therefore they were subject to the penalty period therein prescribed. After hearing the appeals, the board, by majority vote, sustained the action of the director. Their decision contains certain findings of fact in each case, a copy of Which we have appended to this opinion for a clearer understanding of the issues in these actions.

On the basis of such findings the board, with one member dissenting, held that there was no strike or industrial controversy involved and that in their opinion claimants left work voluntarily without good cause and were subject to the penalty provided by §28-44-17.

The claimants thereupon filed the instant petitions for judicial review in accordance with the provisions of §28-44-52. At the hearing in the superior court the parties stated that they accepted the board’s findings of fact, with one exception. Counsel for claimants in substance stated that he challenged the board’s statement that “each of these claimants individually decided to quit work and to withhold their services as a means of bringing pressure on the employer to recognize their complaints” if the board meant “that the employee’s act and intent did not encompass group rather than individual action * *

In considering these petitions the trial justice, as required by §28-44-54, accepted the board’s findings of fact as conclusive and confined his consideration to' the questions of law flowing therefrom. He thereafter entered a decision and a decree based thereon holding that the action of the claimants in law constituted group’ action and established *41 a “strike” and an “industrial controversy” within the meaning of §28-44-16. . .

• The first question to be decided is whether such holding is correct in law.

The word “strike” has been defined in many cases and by many authorities. In employer-employee relationships the word in general connotes a controversy of some degree where there is a cessation of work by employees in an effort to get compliance with demands made on their employer. See the following cases for definitions of the word strike.

In Magner v. Kinney, 141 Neb. 122, 127, strike is defined as follows: “ ‘A strike is cessation of work by employees in an effort to get for the employees more desirable terms. *• * *’ Iron Molders’ Union v. Allis-Chalmers Co., 166 Fed. 45, 20 L.R.A. n.s. 315.”

In Walgreen Co. v. Murphy, 386 Ill. 32, 36, strike is defined as follows: “A strike in the labor sense is generally defined as a stoppage of work by common agreement of a body of workingmen for the purpose of obtaining or resisting a change in the conditions of employment.”

In Deshler Broom Factory v. Kinney, 140 Neb. 889, 892, strike is defined as follows: “A strike, in the common acceptance of the term, is the act of quitting work by a group of workmen for the purpose of coercing their employer to accede to some demand they have made upon him, and which he has refused.”

See also 83 C.J.S. Strike, p. 523.

We hold that the facts found by the board established in law an “industrial controversy” between claimants and their employer, and their action in staying away from their work during the period in question constituted a “strike” within the meaning of §28-44-16.

This conclusion is supported by the board’s findings that claimants had made known to their employer certain complaints related to their employment; that the employer *42 had done nothing about the same; and that they stayed away from work as a means of putting pressure on their employer at a time they thought such action might compel compliance with their demands.

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Bluebook (online)
210 A.2d 867, 100 R.I. 37, 1965 R.I. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fontaine-v-board-of-review-of-department-of-employment-security-ri-1965.