Hotel Olds v. State Labor Mediation Board

53 N.W.2d 302, 333 Mich. 382
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1952
DocketDocket 85, Calendar 45,285
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 302 (Hotel Olds v. State Labor Mediation Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hotel Olds v. State Labor Mediation Board, 53 N.W.2d 302, 333 Mich. 382 (Mich. 1952).

Opinion

Reid, J.

Plaintiff, on leave granted, appeals from an order of defendant board determining that Local 634 of Hotel & Restaurant Employees’ & Bartenders’ International Union, A. F. of L. (hereinafter spoken of as the union) is the appropriate bargaining unit for employees of plaintiff, and ordering a strike vote among said employees on the issue of representation.

The Hotel Olds is a metropolitan type hotel with several dining rooms on 3 floors, a bar, its own furniture repair and upholstery department, its own laundry, its own barbershop and its own print shop. *384 The total number of nonsupervisory employees is between 210 and 220, of whom about 200 are nonclerical. The union is an international union which includes hotel employees in its membership and which charters a large number of different types of local unions. There have been 2. successive local charters issued by the union, local 448 and local 634. The constitution shows that there is no local autonomy.

Early in 1950, the union requested recognition of local 448 as the bargaining representative for the employees of the Hotel Olds, and on May 8th, notified the defendant board of a dispute. Pursuant thereto, election proceedings on the question of representation were instituted by means of an agreement between plaintiff and local 448 for a consent election, which agreement contained the following:

“The following constitutes the unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining: The name of the unit is as follows: All regularly employed employees excepting those in management, supervisory, executive, front office, telephone operators and auditing department.”

181 employees were agreed upon as eligible to vote under the above-quoted descriptive words. On this basis the recognition election was held May 17, 1950, under the supervision of the defendant board. The recognition proposition carried. Thereafter and on the same basis for qualifying employees as voters, with a list of 188 employees agreed on as eligible to vote under the above quoted descriptive words, a requested strike election was called for and held under the supervision of defendant board, on August 17, 1950, at which the strike proposition was defeated. The union protested the election on the ground that the persons who voted differed from *385 the agreed list; but afterwards withdrew its protest and the board closed the case September 7, 1950.

A new local was formed some time before September 8,1950, on which date the union demanded recognition of the new local, 634, and on September 26, .1950, notified defendant board of a dispute and requested a strike election. The new local changed materially the bargaining unit to contain only a portion of the classifications .of employees , which were in the previously agreed bargaining unit. The new local claimed representation as sole bargaining agent for the employees. The defendant has decided to use the reduced unit as the bargaining unit. Plaintiff protested as improper and illegal the change from the basis for membership as in the previously established bargaining unit, local 448, and further objected that a strike vote should not again be had within a year. On April 9,1951, the defendant closed the case without action.

On July 30, 1951, local 634 renewed its claim for representation as a bargaining unit though consisting of a portion only of the .employees previously agreed to by plaintiff. The union notified the defendant board of a dispute.

A hearing was held September 13, 1951, and the defendant board on September 21, 1951, ordered the conducting of a.strike election vote in the new bargaining unit, local 634, requested by the union, from which decision the instant appeal was taken.

Important and practically controlling are questions of construction to be given to section 9e of PA 1939, No 176, as added, being CL 1948, § 423.9e (Stat Ann 1950 Bev § 17.454 [10.4]), which paragraph is as follows:

“The board, after consultation with the parties, shall determine such a bargaining unit as will best secure to the employees their right of collective bargaining. The unit shall be either the employees of 1 *386 employer employed in 1 plant or business enterprise within this State, not holding executive or supervisory positions, or a craft unit, or a plant unit, or a subdivision of any of the foregoing units: Provided, however, That if the group of employees involved in the dispute has been recognized by the employer or identified by certification, contract or past practice, as a unit for collective bargaining, the board shall adopt such unit.”

Plaintiff claims that, within the meaning of the proviso of the statute, the holding of 2 elections under the agreed on designation of classes of employees as eligible to vote, constituted “past practice,” recognizing as proper the membership basis in local 448, and that the employer “recognized” the unit within the meaning of the proviso by certifying in writing, “The following constitutes the unit appropriate for the purpose of collective bargaining,” the same being part of the agreement for recognition election of local 448. Plaintiff further claims that defendant board by its certificate of the results of the recognition election of May 17, 1950, identified (within the meaning of the proviso) local 448 as “Hotel Employees Union, Local448, AFL;” and that defendant similarly identified local 448, in its certification of the results of the strike election of August 17,1950; and that the agreement of May, 1950, approved by the defendant board, is a “contract” identifying local 448 as the bargaining unit.

Each of the above-specified claims of the plaintiff as to construction to be given the proviso of the statute in question, is denied by the defendant in its opinion and contended against in its brief.

The testimony of the president and manager of plaintiff company clearly showed that the employees included in local 448 but excluded in local 634, are intimately related to and interested in the general *387 operation and any possible threatened cessation of operations of the hotel.

We note the decision of the Massachusetts Labor Relations Commission, In re Salem Hotel Corporation d/b/a the Hawthorne Hotel and the Hotel and Restaurant Workers, Local 290, A F L, 19 LRRM 1245, decided November 20, 1946:

“In designating bargaining units as appropriate, a primary objective of the commission is to constitute the largest unit which, in the circumstances of the particular case is most compatible with the effectuation of the purposes of the law and to include in a single unit all common interests.”

The quoted statement in the Hawthorne Case is, so far as applicable to the instant case, in keeping with the directions of the cited proviso of the statute.

The defendant seems to disregard the general principle set forth in the Hawthorne Case, as hereinbefore cited, which general principle subject to the provisions of the statute, should. be observed by defendant board.

Defendant accentuates the case of Hotel Utah Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 302, 333 Mich. 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hotel-olds-v-state-labor-mediation-board-mich-1952.