Industrial Commission v. People Ex Rel. Metz

281 P. 742, 86 Colo. 377
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 21, 1929
DocketNo. 12,245.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 281 P. 742 (Industrial Commission v. People Ex Rel. Metz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Commission v. People Ex Rel. Metz, 281 P. 742, 86 Colo. 377 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

During the latter part of the year 1927 controversies arose between coal mine workers and coal mine operators of Colorado over wages and working conditions. In conference between them the workers were represented ■ by their state executive committee of striking miners, of which Charles Metz is a member; the operators had their' own representatives. These respective *379 representatives were not able to reach a satisfactory settlement or agreement of the controversy. Whereupon Charles Metz, in behalf of the workers, filed a petition with the Industrial Commission of Colorado, which by statute has the power to investigate and pass upon such matters, asking it to assume jurisdiction and investigate and determine them. The Industrial Commission acted upon this request, assumed jurisdiction of the dispute, and entered upon a hearing and investigation of the same under the authority conferred upon it by our General Assembly. The hearing progressed for about sixty days. The miners were represented by their executive committee and their attorney. The mine operators appeared by their managers and attorney. The evidence was transcribed for the use of the commission soon after the hearing was closed about the middle of February, 1928.

The principal grievances of the miners their counsel group under two heads: (1) Working conditions; (2) wages. As to the working conditions the commission finished its investigation on March 20, 1928, and then announced its conclusion thereon, and that phase of the controversy is eliminated. At the same time the commission announced that its findings on the wage question would be reported later. Thereafter, as the commission had not proceeded, as the representatives of the miners alleged, with reasonable diligence to conclude its investigation and render a final award as to wages, there was filed in the Denver district court a petition or complaint by the people, on the relation of Charles Metz, secretary of the miners’ committees, against the Industrial Commission of Colorado, as defendant, in which was asked an order for an alternative writ of mandamus, upon final hearing to be made peremptory, requiring the commission to promulgate and announce its final award and decision in the matter of its investigation as to the question of wages in the coal mines of this state.

The foregoing statement is, in substance, what the petition for the writ contains. To this petition and writ *380 the defendant, by the Attorney General, filed a general demurrer and also an answer or return in which it is alleged that in December, 1927, and for sixty days prior thereto, a strike was in progress among the coal miners in many of the principal coal mining camps and districts of the state. The defendant commission admits that there was filed with it in December a so-called schedule of grievances and demands of certain coal miners, and that other petitions purporting to be signed by ether coal miners of the state were also presented about that time, and that on December 19, 1927, it entered upon a general investigation of the working conditions of the coal mines of Colorado, but denies the averment of the complaint that this investigation was entered upon or conducted pursuant to section 27 of the Industrial Commission Act of 1915 (§4351, C. L. 1921), but, on the contrary, that the investigation under which it proceeded, wás pursuant to section 26 of the statute (§4350, C. L. 1921). The answer further alleges that soon after September 6, 1927, the defendant commission received a letter purporting to be signed by the secretary of the so-called strike committee of the Aguilar conference of the Walsenburg branch of the “I. W. W., ” enclosing a demand for increased wages and changes in working conditions in all of the coal mines of the state, in which letter it was also stated that if the demands were not met by the coal operators a strike would be called to take effect October 1, 1927, and thereafter under date of September 17, 1927, the defendant commission received a letter purporting to be signed by the same person notifying the commission that the date of the strike had been extended to October 18.

Section 29 of the statute provides that employees shall give to the defendant commission and to their employers at least 30 days’ prior written notice of an intended change affecting conditions of employment, or with re- . spect to wages or hours, and thát such notice by the employees shall be signed by them or members of a com *381 mittee authorized to do so. It was upon receipt of this letter of September 6, that the defendant commission entered upon a preliminary inquiry to ascertain whether the same was signed by employees of any coal mining operator in the state, or by any members of an authorized committee, and as a result of this investigation the commission found, and so determined, that the latter had not been so signed, and therefore the commission con-eluded that the letter did not constitute a legal notice of any intended change affecting conditions of employment, or with respect to wages or hours, and that any strike thereafter called, or put into effect, pursuant to such letter or notice would be unlawful and contrary to the provisions of the statutes of the state, and therefore, that the defendant commission should not enter upon an investigation of any dispute or controversy, resulting in the unlawful strike, with the view of making any findings or award pursuant to sections 27 or 29 or 30 or 31 of the Industrial Commission Law which are applicable to disputes, in the circumstances therein stated.

What the commission meant was that as a result of its investigation it did not deem it to be its duty or province to'attempt to mediate and, by the rendition of findings or award, to settle a strike that was unlawful and contrary to' the statutes of the state in its very inception, because such a course of action upon its part would be to condone a strike entered upon and continued in defiance of the statutes of this state, and for such reasons the commission at all times refrained from acting under the powers conferred upon it under the last designated sections of the statute. The defendant also sought for and obtained the advice of the Attorney General of the state as to the legality of this strike, and was advised by him that it was unlawful, and contrary to the statutes of the state, bécause of the failure of the employees of the respective coal mining operators to give to this defendant commission the written notice as provided for by section 29 of the act. That, although having reached the *382 conclusion as to tlie illegality of the strike, and notwithstanding the fact that no lawful notice had ever been given, many of the coal miners of the state went on strike on or about October 18, 1927, and after this strike had continued for a considerable time and shortly prior to December 19, 1927, the defendant commission concluded, of its own volition, and upon its own initiative, to take action pursuant to the broad powers conferred upon it by section 26 of the Industrial Commission Act (§4350, C. L.

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281 P. 742, 86 Colo. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-commission-v-people-ex-rel-metz-colo-1929.