Harrison v. Arrow Metal Products Corp.

174 N.W.2d 875, 20 Mich. App. 590
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1970
DocketDocket 3,894
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 174 N.W.2d 875 (Harrison v. Arrow Metal Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Arrow Metal Products Corp., 174 N.W.2d 875, 20 Mich. App. 590 (Mich. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinions

J. J. Kelley, J.

In His complaint, dismissed by an order granting defendants’ motions for accelerated judgment, plaintiff alleged substantially as follows:

— On November 1, 1963, plaintiff, who bad been employed over nine years by defendant company, filed a workmen’s compensation claim for injury and disability. The claim was settled by redemption agreement on July 29, 1964, the scheduled date of hearing.

— For several years plaintiff had been a member in good standing of defendant union.

— Company and union had an agreement or understanding whereby the company gave the union barrels, each containing over 500 pairs of white cloth gloves which the union sold to company employees for five cents per pair. On August 13, 1964, after finding in plaintiff’s automobile several pairs of gloves which plaintiff had purchased from the union, company officials falsely accused plaintiff of stealing gloves, and wrongfully discharged him.

[598]*598— After defendant company refused to permit plaintiff to return to work, lie sought employment elsewhere. When in response to their inquiries, plaintiff told prospective employers that he had worked for defendant company, the latter’informed, such prospective employers that he had worked for defendant company, and that he had been discharged by defendant for theft of company property. On August 13, 1964, and numerous times within one year before commencement of this action on May 13, 1966, defendant company libeled and slandered plaintiff, including the writing of. a letter to a prospective employer on April 20,1966, which stated that plaintiff “was discharged on August 13, 1964, for theft of company property.”

— Because plaintiff filed the workmen’s compensation claim, company agents, officers and officials conspired to discharge him and to ruin his reputation, and prevented him from obtaining other employment by falsely and maliciously accusing plaintiff of theft when prospective employers sought employment references.

— At the time of plaintiff’s discharge there existed between the company and union a contract and working agreement for the benefit of members of the union.

— Defendant company’s acts and omissions were part of a wrongful conspiracy wherein company and/or union conspired to harm plaintiff and to deceive plaintiff’s prospective future employers into-believing he was not honest, thus' tortiously interfering with his future employment.

— Defendant company wrongfully discharged plaintiff, libeled, slandered and blacklisted him, and' tortiously interfered with his employment by deceiving his prospective employers into believing he had stolen company property. Defendant company [599]*599“and/or” defendant union conspired to harm plaintiff, and each of their acts or omissions was part of a wrongful deliberate scheme.

■ .To. this complaint defendant company filed an answer denying it had published any such statements. By way of affirmative defenses it pleaded: I. Plaintiff failed to utilize or exhaust remedies available to him under defendant union’s constitution and bylaws; II. Plaintiff’s complaint alleges conduct within the exclusive primary jurisdiction of the NLRB under the NLRA; III. Statute of limitations; IV. Privilege; V. Truth.

Defendant union did not file an answer, but did file a motion to require plaintiff to furnish a more definite statement of his claims against it. This ■motion was not decided.

' Plaintiff demanded a trial by jury.

Each defendant filed a motion for accelerated Judgment, urging as grounds the same matters set forth as company’s affirmative defenses I, II, III. The' court granted both motions on the grounds «alleged, and, as to defendant company, on the further basis that it enjoyed a qualified privilege in writing the letter to plaintiff’s prospective employer. Plaintiff appeals, presenting four issues.

I.

■■ Failure to Utilise or Exhaust Remedies Under . Defendant Union’s Constitution and Bylaws

Vaca v. Sipes (1967), 386 US 171 (87 S Ct 903, 17 L Ed 2d 842) was decided after argument on defendants’ motions in circuit court and very shortly before their determination. Apparently counsel failed to bring this case to the circuit court’s attention.

[600]*600Having reviewed several eases itere cited by defendants, tie Court in Vaca concluded,1 that action [601]*601lies against the employer if its conduct in contractual grievance procedures amounted to a repudiation of such procedures; and that in the face of a defense based upon failure to exhaust contractual remedies a wrongfully discharged employee may join both his employer and his union in one action in a state court, provided he can prove that the union, as bargaining agent, breached its duty of fair representation in its handling of his grievance. In the face of such a defense, an employee may show that it would have been futile to attempt to obtain relief through intraunion remedies. Knox v. Local 900, UAW-CIO (1960), 361 Mich 257, 259, 260.

Sufficiency of proof of futility or of union’s breach or of company’s repudiation depends substantially upon terminology of the union constitution and of the union-company contract. Cortez v. Ford Motor Company (1957), 349 Mich 108. Although defendants referred to defendant union’s bylaws, no copy of them appears in the record.

Defendant union’s constitution required it to carry out the provisions of its union-company contracts, and denied its officers, members, representatives or agents any power or authority to counsel, cause, initiate, participate in or ratify any action which constituted a breach of such contract.2

[602]*602Defendants’ contract provided not only general grievance procedure,3 but specific action in case's of unjust or discriminatory dismissals.4 By use of [603]*603language mandatory in form, it required the following actions, each being dependent upon those preceding :

A. Upon discharging an employee, company shall immediately notify the Executive Shop Committee shift steward.

B. Complaint regarding the dismissal shall be reduced to writing in triplicate by the steward,

C. and each copy shall be signed by the employee and the steward filing the grievance,

D. arid two copies shall be given to the foreman within 24 hours after notification of the steward by company,

E. and the company representative must render a decision in writing within 48 hours of its receipt.

Defendant’s contract further provided that any grievance or complaint not appealed following the company’s decision within five working days in any of the above steps shall be considered closed. However, the contract contained no further provision regarding appeal. Articles 31 and 32 of defendant union’s constitution provided for appeals, but only to challenge decisions of union bodies.

As to following the first five steps, there was no discretion in union representatives, as was present in Cortes v. Ford Motor Company, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
174 N.W.2d 875, 20 Mich. App. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-arrow-metal-products-corp-michctapp-1970.