In Re the Appeals by Employees of the Polson Lumber & Shingle Mills

143 P.2d 316, 19 Wash. 2d 467
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1943
DocketNos. 29060, 29061, 29062.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 143 P.2d 316 (In Re the Appeals by Employees of the Polson Lumber & Shingle Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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 the Appeals by Employees of the Polson Lumber & Shingle Mills, 143 P.2d 316, 19 Wash. 2d 467 (Wash. 1943).

Opinion

Jeffers, J.

We are here concerned with three appeals by the commissioner of unemployment and placement from three judgments entered by the supérior court for Grays Harbor county, which judgments in each case reversed the order made by the commissioner and allowed benefits to the claimants involved. The cases are entitled: “In the Matter of the Appeals by Employees of the Poison Lumber & Shingle Mills,” “In the Matter of the Appeals by the Employees of the Bay City Lumber Company,” and “In the *469 Matter of the Appeals by the Employees of the E. C. Miller Cedar Lumber Company.” The cases were heard and considered separately by the department and by the trial court, and a separate judgment was entered in each case. They will hereinafter be referred to as the “Poison Mill case,” the “Bay City case,” and the “Miller case.” By stipulation approved by this court, the three cases were consolidated on this appeal, for the purpose of briefs and argument. The stipulation provided that the consolidation should not prevent argument and consideration of each case on its own merits.

The commissioner has filed, and we have before us, his record in each case. The Poison Mill case was initiated by the filing of some fifty-seven claims by employees of that mill for unemployment benefits. By what is termed supplemental determination, all claimants were denied benefits, for the reason that it was decided that their unemployment was due to a labor dispute. On a hearing before the appeal examiner, the determination of disqualification was affirmed and, on a review by the commissioner, the decision of the appeal examiner was affirmed. Claimants then appealed to the superior court, where the order of the commissioner was reversed and benefits allowed. The commissioner has appealed to this court from the judgment entered.

The Bay City case was commenced by the filing of some forty-six claims for benefits by employees of that company. By the supplemental determination, claimants were denied benefits for the same reason as in the Poison Mill case. The appeal examiner thereafter reversed the supplemental determination and held claimants were entitled to benefits. The commissioner reviewed the decision of the appeal tribunal, and found that there was a labor dispute at the company’s establishment and that the unemployment of the claimants was due to a stoppage of work caused by such dispute; that the company’s employees, the benefit claimants, had given notice to the company, through the local union to which they belonged and which represented them in collective bargaining purposes, that the logs which were *470 in possession of the company were unfair and that the employees would not work thereon. Based upon these findings, the commissioner reversed the decision of the appeal tribunal and held claimants not entitled to benefits. On appeal by claimants from the order of the commissioner, the trial court reversed the order of the commissioner and allowed benefits to the claimants. This appeal by the commissioner followed.

The Miller case was instituted by the filing of twelve claims by employees of that company. Four of these claimants were employees of the shingle mill, the other eight employees of the sawmill and planing mill. By the supplemental determination, benefits under the act were denied all claimants. On a hearing before the appeal examiner, the determination of disqualification was reversed and all claimants were declared eligible for benefits. On a review of the decision of the appeal tribunal, the commissioner affirmed the decision of the appeal tribunal as to the four men employed in the shingle mill, but found that the eight men employed in the sawmill and planing mill were disqualified from receiving benefits, for the reason that their unemployment was due to a stoppage of work which existed because of a labor dispute at the premises at which claimants were employed, and that the claimants had failed to show to the satisfaction of the commissioner that they were not participating in, or directly interested in, the labor dispute which caused the stoppage of work. No appeal was taken from the order of the commissioner relative to the four men employed in the shingle mill. The eight men denied benefits appealed to the superior court, where the order of the commissioner was reversed and they were allowed benefits. The commissioner has appealed from the judgment entered as to the eight men mentioned.

The following facts are not disputed and, we think, are applicable to all three cases: The Poison Mill is* located at Hoquiam, on the Hoquiam river, and the Bay City and Miller mills are located at Aberdeen, on the Chehalis river. Each of these mills, on or about May 19, 1941, entered into *471 an agreement with Sawmill and Timber Workers Union, Local 3-2, I.W.A. — C.I.O. Under this agreement, the employers, among other things, agreed to recognize this union as the sole collective bargaining agency for all employees. The agreement also contained a “union shop” clause. The agreement in each case was signed by J. E. Fadling, president of Local 3-2,1.W.A., and Art Anderson, recording secretary. It was negotiated on the part of the mills through an employers’ negotiating committee.

On or about May 9, 1941, a series of strikes were called by the logger union to enforce certain demands against the logging industry. These strikes were settled about June 16, 1941. On May 22, 1941, each of the mills had a supply of logs in its mill pond adjacent to the mill, and also a considerable quantity of logs in storage in log booms tied up either on the Chehalis or Hoquiam river, not far from the mills. It is not disputed that the logs actually in the mill ponds, as well as those in storage, had been cut, rafted, and stored prior to the outbreak of the logging strike.

On May 22, 1941, Sawmill and Timber Workers Union, Local 3-2,1.W.A., which was the authorized and recognized exclusive bargaining agent for the sawmill employees in each of the mills, sent the following letter or notice to the management of each mill:

“This will officially inform you that the Sawmill and Timber Workers Union, Local 3-2 IWA has placed all outside rafts and incoming ocean rafts on the unfair list.
“And that any operation that proceeds to cut any unfair logs will be subject to having their entire operation placed on the unfair list.
“For any further clarification, contact the local union office. Yours truly,
“Art Anderson, Rec. Sec’y.”

After receipt of the above notice, each of the three mills continued to operate until all the logs in the mill ponds were used up, when they closed the sawmill operations and the claimants here involved became unemployed. There were some operations which continued for a time, but with them we are not concerned.

*472 Apparently in order to be sure that the stored logs which had been placed on the unfair list be not moved to the mills, pickets were placed on the log rafts. So far as this record shows, none of the pickets was a sawmill employee. Pickets were at first placed on the logs in the mill ponds, but they were removed by the union; however, the pickets remained on the outside or storage logs.

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Bluebook (online)
143 P.2d 316, 19 Wash. 2d 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-appeals-by-employees-of-the-polson-lumber-shingle-mills-wash-1943.