Guy Rose v. Great Northern Railway Company, and International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers, Helpers, Roundhouse and Railway Shop Laborers

268 F.2d 674, 44 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2578, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4774
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1959
Docket16087
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 268 F.2d 674 (Guy Rose v. Great Northern Railway Company, and International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers, Helpers, Roundhouse and Railway Shop Laborers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guy Rose v. Great Northern Railway Company, and International Brotherhood of Firemen and Oilers, Helpers, Roundhouse and Railway Shop Laborers, 268 F.2d 674, 44 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2578, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4774 (8th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

There was diversity of citizenship between the parties in this case and more than three thousand dollars exclusive of interest and costs in controversy.

The plaintiff alleged in his amended complaint that he

“entered the employ of the defendant on or about the 10th day of *676 September, 1928, and thereafter worked in various capacities until March 3, 1954, at which time [he] was laid off by defendant in the reduction of forces. That thereafter [he] sought to continue his employment with the defendant railway company and to exercise his seniority rights accorded him by virtue of collective bargaining agreements in force at that time and accrued under prior agreements [but] the plaintiff has been denied and refused his rights to employment and [he] has been wrongfully discharged.”

He claimed under these allegations that although he was at the time of his lay off and had been for many prior years working as a “boilermaker helper” following his promotion from his job as “laborer” and had been carried as boilermaker helper on all rosters, he still had seniority rights as “laborer” which entitled him to have the railroad “bump” a laborer with less seniority and let plaintiff take over that laborer’s work. By the allegation that he had been wrongfully discharged plaintiff did not mean to assert that while he was working as a laborer the company fired him from that job, but that the company’s denial of his claim to have seniority right as a “laborer” and its refusal to bump some employed laborer, constituted an actionable “discharge” of him from a laborer’s job. So far from claiming that he had been discharged in 1954 in the sense of a severance at that time of the existing master and servant relation between the railroad and himself, it was not until February 12, 1958, four years after the alleged discharge date that he wrote the company in order to obtain his retirement annuity: “Please accept my resignation from the services of the Great Northern Railway Company, effective Nov. 5, 1957.”

He specified in the complaint particulars of damages resulting to him from the alleged discharge as laborer in the sum of thirty thousand dollars and prayed judgment against the railroad for that amount together with interest and costs.

Issues were joined by the railroad. It admitted the existence of collective bargaining agreements governing plaintiff’s employment but denied that they accorded plaintiff any seniority right in the class of “laborer” at the time of the lay off in 1954 or thereafter. It alleged that proper interpretation and application of the agreements precluded such claim on his part. It also pleaded that as plaintiff’s cause of action was based on interpretation or application of the collective bargaining agreements as averred in the complaint, the sole jurisdiction to determine and apply these agreements was vested in the National Railroad Adjustment Board. That said Board by an award and order duly issued on May 8, 1958, in Docket No. 2952-1, 2-GN-l-’58, designated as Award No. 2839, duly determined that plaintiff did not possess any of the “seniority rights in the laborers’ classification” which he attempted to exercise as alleged in his complaint herein and sustained the action of defendant in denying plaintiff the exercise “of seniority as a roundhouse laborer on March 3, 1954, on the grounds that he did not have seniority as a roundhouse laborer”. That said award is binding and conclusive against plaintiff’s claim and the District Court was without jurisdiction over the subject matter of this suit.

The labor union intervenor also joined issue on the allegations of the complaint. It is the same labor union which became on November 15, 1938, and has ever since been the collective bargaining representative under the Railway Labor Act of all employees of defendant railroad in the laborers’ craft or class. It alleged that plaintiff has never possessed or been recognized by the Brotherhood or the railroad as possessing any seniority rights as a laborer since the union became collective bargaining representative for that class. That such seniority rights have at all times been established and administered by the use of rosters published and posted at each point of *677 employment. That on June 4,1934, plaintiff was promoted from “laborer” to “boilermaker helper” and so remained holding seniority rights of that class subject to terms and conditions of employment prescribed by collective bargaining agreements separate and distinct from those applicable to laborers’ craft negotiated by a different organization and conferring rights not within the laborers’ craft. That plaintiff’s name has never been included in the roster of laborers since 1937 and he has never complied with the prescribed requirements to cause inclusion of his name thereon although fully informed of its exclusion. That any recognition of plaintiff’s claimed right of seniority as laborer by the railroad or by the union would necessarily inure to the detriment of employees who are and for years have been working as laborers and relying upon the inclusion of their names in the annually published and posted seniority rosters of laborers.

The union also pleaded that the plaintiff “in failing, for a period of approximately fifteen years, to protest his known omission from such laborers’ rosters, and, had such protest been ineffective, to submit his dispute to the National Railroad Adjustment Board, a tribunal available to him during such period and having full power to order his name to be listed on the laborers’ roster had it found him entitled to such listing, plaintiff has been guilty of such inexcusable delay as to bar him, by waiver, laches, and limitations, from maintaining this action.”

There was a jury trial of the case and at the conclusion of all the evidence the plaintiff moved the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict in his favor against defendant. The court overruled the motion. Then the defendant and the intervenor each moved the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict of dismissal against the plaintiff. Thereupon the court sustained that motion and instructed the jury that the motion of the railway company, joined in by the intervenor, should be and was granted and that the jury should return a verdict of dismissal of the action. In accord with the verdict so returned, judgment of dismissal of the action with costs was entered and plaintiff appeals.

The facts are established by answers to interrogatories, oral testimony of the plaintiff, of the branch manager for the Railroad Retirement Board, of one Donald James who was a “boilermaker helper” in defendant’s employ, a “local [labor] union chairman” whose function had been to sign seniority lists prepared by defendant for 1937 and 1933, and of one David H. Jones who testified as to life expectancy of plaintiff. Numerous excerpts from the contracts resulting from collective bargaining between the railway company and the labor unions were also received in evidence. Duly certified copy of the proceedings before the National Railroad Adjustment Board and the duly certified copy of the award of the Board above referred to were offered in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
268 F.2d 674, 44 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2578, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guy-rose-v-great-northern-railway-company-and-international-brotherhood-ca8-1959.