In Re Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen

150 N.E.2d 163, 13 Ill. 2d 391, 1958 Ill. LEXIS 278
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1958
DocketNonrecord 751
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 150 N.E.2d 163 (In Re Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, 150 N.E.2d 163, 13 Ill. 2d 391, 1958 Ill. LEXIS 278 (Ill. 1958).

Opinion

Per Curiam

: A motion was made on behalf of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen for leave to file in this court an original petition for a declaratory judgment. The motion and petition described certain conduct of the Brotherhood and the lawyers who serve as regional counsel for its legal aid department and requested a ruling that the conduct described was neither illegal nor unprofessional. The motion disclosed that disciplinary proceedings were pending against Edward B. Henslee, general counsel for the Brotherhood, and a regional counsel for its legal aid department, and three of his associates, Edward B. Henslee, Jr., Walter N. Murray and Frank H. Monek.

The questions raised by the petition had not heretofore been considered by the court. And because this court both formulates and enforces the standards governing the practice of law (In re Application of Day, 181 Ill. 73,) we were of the opinion that before a ruling of any kind should be made, an investigation into the practices in question should be conducted. The motion for leave to file was therefore denied, but at the same time the court, on its own motion, appointed the Honorable Charles H. Thompson, a former justice of this court, as special commissioner, “with power to inquire into and take proof of all relevant factual matters and to report the testimony, together with the applicable principles of law, to the Chief Justice.”

Thereafter hearings were conducted by the special commissioner. The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, the Illinois State and Chicago Bar associations, and a group of twenty-seven railroad companies participated in the hearings by their counsel. At the conclusion of the hearings briefs were filed on behalf of these parties and also on behalf of the American Bar Association. The special commissioner’s report and the briefs are now before the court.

There is no serious dispute as to the basic facts. In 1930 the Brotherhood established its “Legal Aid Department.” It took this step because it felt that under pressure from railroad claim agents, the claims of its members resulting from injuries they suffered in their work were being settled for unfair amounts. Some of the railroads forced settlements by the threat of loss of employment. At the same time, the members were being solicited by lawyers of varying degrees of competence who sought to, and did, handle the claims of members for contingent fees that sometimes ran as high as fifty per cent of the amount recovered.'

As it presently operates, the legal aid department of the Brotherhood maintains a central office in Cleveland, Ohio, at the national headquarters of the Brotherhood. In that office it has a staff consisting of a chief clerk, a research analyst, three stenographers and a file clerk. It also has a number of regional investigators. The Cleveland office serves as a clearing house which receives reports from all Brotherhood Lodges of instances in which members have been injured or killed in railroad accidents. It notifies the appropriate regional investigator and regional counsel of all accidents.

Operating in conjunction with the legal aid department are sixteen lawyers, each designated by the Brotherhood as a regional counsel for the legal aid department. The regions tend to follow railroad system lines, rather than geographical lines. For example, Edward B. Henslee, the regional counsel with offices in Chicago, is assigned a region that includes all members employed by railroads in Ohio, and the members employed by certain railroads in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Indiana and Illinois. The dominant considerations in the selection of regional counsel are the Brotherhood’s confidence in the ability of the attorney, plus the prospect of high jury verdicts in the city where his office is located.

By agreement with the Brotherhood the attorneys who are designated as regional counsel charge a fee of twenty-five per cent of the amount recovered in each case, whether recovery is by settlement or by judgment. Regional counsel have also agreed to and do pay all court costs, investigation costs, costs of doctors’ examinations, expert witness fees, transcript costs and the cost of printing briefs on appeal. They also pay the total cost of operating the legal aid department of the union. All expenses of the legal aid department are apportioned among the sixteen regional counsel in the ratio that their respective gross fees bear to the total gross recoveries throughout the country. Periodically throughout the year the legal aid department assesses each regional counsel for his proportionate share of the total cost, and at the end of each year each regional counsel is billed for the balance of his assessment. The Brotherhood maintains a practice of apportioning the very high expenses of its conventions among its various “departments” on the basis of the amount of time spent in discussing, on the floor of the convention, the affairs of that department. The legal aid department’s share of this cost is assessed against and paid by the regional counsel.

The Brotherhood constitution requires that each local lodge appoint someone whose duty it is to fill out an accident report whenever a member is injured, and also to make contact with the injured man, or the relatives of a man who is killed, and make it known that legal advice will be given free of charge by the regional counsel. He also makes known the availability of regional counsel to handle the claim and any ensuing litigation for a total charge of twenty-five per cent of the amount recovered by settlement or by litigation. The twenty-five per cent includes all expenses of investigation and litigation.

The lodge member who investigates the occurrence and makes contact with the injured man recommends and urges that regional counsel be consulted and employed. These men carry blank copies of contracts employing the regional counsel’s firm as attorneys. The regional investigators employed by the legal aid department also carry these contracts. If a signed contract is not obtained by an investigator in the field, an investigator often brings the interested parties to the office of the regional counsel in Chicago. The injured man may be accompanied by his wife, and if the interested party is a widow, the wife of the investigator also makes the trip. The expenses of these trips are paid immediately by regional counsel. The lodge member who investigates and urges the employment of regional counsel is also compensated by regional counsel at his regular hourly wage rate for time spent in investigating the case and in making the trip to Chicago. These amounts are paid whether or not the regional counsel is retained, and regardless of the ultimate outcome. In addition, Mr. Henslee testified, “There are many times when one of the boys will bring in a case, and taking care of the investigation, etc., they are given a gratuity of $100 or $150.”

The Brotherhood defends its practices on legal grounds, and also argues that they are justified by policy considerations. As a matter of law it argues that its method of handling the personal injury and death claims of its members is permissible because under the Railway Labor Act the Brotherhood is authorized to represent its members, before the National Railroad Adjustment Board or other appropriate tribunals, in the processing of disputes growing out of grievances. (45 U.S.C. 152

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E.2d 163, 13 Ill. 2d 391, 1958 Ill. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-brotherhood-of-railroad-trainmen-ill-1958.