Ingersoll v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers

192 F. Supp. 669, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3861
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMarch 13, 1961
DocketCiv. No. 35292
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 F. Supp. 669 (Ingersoll v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ingersoll v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, 192 F. Supp. 669, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3861 (N.D. Ohio 1961).

Opinion

CONNELL, Chief Judge.

This is an action for declaratory judgment, injunction and damages, arising under the Railway Labor Act, 48 Stat. 1185, 45 U.S.C. § 151, 45 U.S.C.A. § 151, instituted against the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company. The defendants have in turn impleaded the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, and have jointly moved this Court for a summary judgment. For purposes of this motion, all of the defendants will be designated simply as defendants. The plaintiffs assert that they are adult citizens of the United States employed in interstate commerce by the New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Company (hereinafter called the Nickel Plate) as engineers on the Sandusky Division of the Lake Erie and Western District of the Nickel Plate, and that they are members of the craft or class of engineers employed by the- Nickel Plate. Plaintiffs further assert that they are suing in their individual capacities for wrongs inflicted upon their individual rights, and as representatives of all the engineers employed on the Sandusky Division of the Nickel Plate, the engineers constituting a class too numerous to be brought individually before the Court. For purposes of this motion, we shall treat the action as a proper class action within the meaning of Fed.Rules Civ. Proc. Rules 23, 28 U.S.C.A., no objections having been raised by the defendants.

To fully understand the nature of the rights asserted by plaintiffs, it is necessary to review certain of the events that preceded the filing of this action. The Nickel Plate, as presently constituted, resulted from the consolidation and merger of several independently operated railroads. One of these railroads was the old Nickel Plate which obtained control of the Lake Erie and Western Railroad sometime after 1923. The track of the former Lake Erie and Western is now an operating district of the Nickel Plate, and is known as the Lake Erie and Western District. A third road was the Toledo St. Louis & Western Railroad, over which the Nickel Plate acquired control in 1923. This line is now an operating district of the Nickel Plate known as the Clover Leaf District, and is divided into two seniority districts, the Toledo Division and the St. Louis Division. By the same token, the Lake Erie and Western District is composed of four seniority districts, two of which (The Sandusky Division and the Peoria Division) are involved in the present dispute. As indicated earlier, the plaintiffs and the class of engineers they purport to represent in this action have employment rights on [671]*671the Sandusky Division of the Lake Erie and Western District.1

Early in 1933, the Nickel Plate made a significant operating change in an attempt to increase its operating efficiency. While the details of this change are not-important, suffice it to say that there resulted a diversion of work from the Clover Leaf District (Toledo Division) and Peoria Division to the Sandusky Division, with the corresponding loss and gain of employment caused by this diversion. In order to protect the engineers and firemen with employment rights in the diverted districts from bearing the full loss of employment, the three defendants entered into an agreement, on June 4, 1933, whereby the Clover Leaf District and the Peoria Division were allowed to hold a certain number of jobs in the re-defined Sandusky Division. The basic grievance, then, upon which this action is predicated, is the fact that a certain number of Clover Leaf District and Peoria Division engineers have been, and are now, permitted to hold jobs on the Sandusky Division of the Lake Erie and Western District. Plaintiffs lay claim to the exclusive seniority and promotion rights available to locomotive engineers in their division, and say that insofar as engineers from the other districts and divisions who were hired after June 3, 1933 are allowed to continue to hold jobs on the Sandusky Division, the plaintiffs are being discriminated against in the enforcement of their asserted exclusive seniority and promotional rights.

On June 22, 1955, the defendant Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers entered into an agreement, to be effective July 1, 1955, which would have removed all Clover Leaf and Peoria engineers operating in the Sandusky Division whose seniority rights were subsequent to June 3, 1933, and would have replaced them with engineers whose seniority rights were in the Sandusky Division. The plaintiffs claim that this agreement, if it had been enforced, would have eliminated the pre-existing discrimination against the plaintiffs, and would have allowed them to exercise their seniority in accordance with the uniform practices and policies applicable to all other members of the craft employed on the Nickel Plate. However, this 1955 agreement was never put into effect by the Nickel Plate or attempted to be enforced by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers.2 Instead, negotiations were entered into by the two crafts and the Nickel Plate, and the agreement of August 22, 1957 was settled upon, whereby it was determined that engineers whose seniority rights existed in seniority districts other than Sandusky, and who held seniority dates after November 1, 1955, would not be permitted to hold jobs on the Sandusky Division. This agreement, which will ultimately vest in the Sandusky engineers all of the jobs in the Sandusky Division, was apparently satisfactory to the Nickel Plate, both brotherhoods, and the majority of the members of both crafts as a fair and impartial resolution of the problems created by the 1933 operational changes on the Nickel Plate.

The defendants have moved for a summary judgment, basing their motion on three separate grounds: a) res judicata; b) lack of standing to sue on the [672]*672part of the plaintiffs, and; c) the statute of limitations. Defendants additionally have filed in support of their motion various affidavits, judicial opinions, and other extraneous matters. We consider these as a proper part of the matter to be considered in reaching a decision, for the very purpose of the summary judgment procedure is to pierce the fact allegations of the pleadings in an attempt to determine whether there exists a material issue of fact, or whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See 6 Moore’s Federal Practice (2d ed.) 2053; Cyclopedia of Federal Procedure (3d ed.) § 15.658.

As indicated in the résumé of facts leading up to this present action, plaintiffs have brought this action individually and on behalf of all other members of their craft who have seniority rights in the Sandusky Division, asserting that the class is too numerous to be brought individually before the Court, that common questions of law and fact are involved, and that the interests of the class are fairly and adequately represented by the named plaintiffs. For purposes of this motion, the action will be treated as a legitimate class action, the class consisting of all the Nickel Plate engineers whose seniority rights are found in the Sandusky Division.

This same class of plaintiffs instituted a suit in the Court of Common Pleas of Allen County, Ohio, in 1935 against certain named defendants, among whom were the three defendants involved here. The 1935 action, Stukey v. The New York, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad Co., resulted in the court making certain findings, some of which were favorable to defendants, but others of which were appealed by defendants to the Court of Appeals for Allen County.

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192 F. Supp. 669, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingersoll-v-brotherhood-of-locomotive-engineers-ohnd-1961.