International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. International Union of United Brewery

106 F.2d 871
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1939
Docket9068
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 106 F.2d 871 (International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. International Union of United Brewery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. International Union of United Brewery, 106 F.2d 871 (9th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

DENMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court declaratively adjudging that a union, hereafter called Brewery Workers Union, is the sole bargaining agent for certain employees of certain breweries in California, Oregon and Washington and that the employing breweries shall deal solely with that union as the collective bargaining agent of their employees, and enjoining another union, hereafter called the Teamsters Union, claiming to have been designated and selected as the employees’ bargaining agent, from interfering by force and violence or otherwise with the employer-employee relationship of the breweries and brewery workers, or the breweries’ business. The parties, pertinent portions of the *873 pleadings, relief sought and facts found, so far as this opinion requires, are:

The individual plaintiffs, Henry Jennichen, Fred Heussler and Theodore Day, sue on their own behalf as employees of the defendant Breweries in California, Oregon and Washington and on behalf of some two thousand seven hundred employees similarly situated, and are hereafter called Employees.

The plaintiff International Union of United Brewery, Flour, Cereal and Soft Drink Workers of America sues in a claimed capacity as the designated and selected representative of the employees of the defendant Breweries employed in the Brewing, Bottling and Delivery departments and each and all of them of the defendant Breweries and in no other capacity and is hereafter called Brewery Workers Union.

The defendants, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Stablemen and Helpers and its local unions and subordinate bodies, are sued herein as unincorporated associations of individuals and they together with the individual defendants are hereafter called Teamsters’ Union.

The defendant California State Brewers Institute is sued herein as the representative of the defendant Breweries and is hereafter called Institute.

The defendant Brewing Companies and each of them is sued as a corporation engaged in the manufacture of products of the brewing industry, to-wit, malt beverages, and the employers of the plaintiff employees and are hereafter called Breweries. The Breweries’ beer in substantial quantities was sold and transported out of one state and into another and sometimes into a third state.

The American Federation of Labor, hereafter called the Federation, is not a party to this action.

The Brewery ' Workers Union is a so-called vertical or industrial union including three crafts, the brewers, bottlers and shipping and delivery men. The Teamsters’ Union is a union of employees engaged in. the craft of shipping and delivery of all kinds.

For more than twenty-five years last past all of the Employees in the brewing, bottling and shipping departments of the Breweries have been represented in collective bargaining with their employers, the Breweries, by the Brewery Workers Union.

After the passage of the National Labor Relations Act, Act of July 5, 1935, 49 Stats. 449, 29 U.S.C.A. §§ 151-166, all of the Employees employed in the brewing, bottling and delivery departments of the Breweries designated and selected in writing the Brewery Workers Union as their sole and exclusive representative for collective bargaining with respect to wages, rates of pay, hours of labor and other conditions of employment with their employers, the Breweries. These writings were delivered to the Breweries and the Institute in 1936 and again in 1937.

Prior to the passage of the National Labor Relations Act, supra, the Breweries and Institute signed a document wliich purported to bind the Breweries to employ only members of the Teamsters’ Union in their delivery department and which by its terms ended not later than May 6, 1937. The purpose of this arrangement was and the result would be to force all of the Employees in the delivery department either to surrender their jobs or to join the Teamsters’ Union. At no time had any of the Employees in the delivery department of the Breweries belonged to the Teamsters’ Union.

Having signed these documents the Breweries, after the effective date of the National Labor Relations Act, supra, were pressed by the Teamsters’ Union to employ only members of the Teamsters’ Union, which would have necessitated the discharge of their present Employees. Upon the refusal of the Breweries to discharge their employees, the Teamsters’ Union, whose trucks carried interstate and otherwise the Breweries’ beer, declined to carry it. The Teamsters’ Union also instituted and carried on, and was carrying on at the date of the trial, a boycott in the states of Washington and Oregon on California beer manufactured by the Breweries and since the commencement of the boycott in June of 1937, the products of the Breweries have not been handled in the states of Oregon and Washington except in a limited degree. The Teamsters’ Union also set in motion a reign of violence and intimidation directed at the Breweries and Employees.

The result of that boycott and these acts instituted and maintained by the Teamsters’ Union in the states of Oregon and Washington was and has been to reduce substantially the work of the Employees in the Breweries and the amount of interstate commerce in the malt beverages.

*874 Tlie Employees’ and Brewery Workers' .Union’s complaint stated the above facts and sought the declaratory relief and injunction granted by the trial court. The Teamsters answered and filed a cross-complaint alleging that the Brewery Workers Union and the Teamsters are affiliated members of the Federation; that by contractual relations between the two unions and their employee members and the Federation, the Employees bad given the Federation the power to declare the Brewery Workers Union-not the bargaining agent of the Employees engaged in transportation and delivering the Breweries’ malt beverages, and.to designate and select for the Employees their exclusive bargaining agent, and that.the Federation has exercised the power and designated and selected the T.eamsters’ Union as such an exclusive bargaining agent. The Teamsters’ Union has offered evidence,of the charters of the two unions, the constitution of the Federation in which they are áffiliated and-the action of the Federation, tending to establish such a designation and selection of that union as the Employees’ bargaining agent.

-.The complaint also-joined the Breweries and the Institute as defendants and, in cross-c.omplaints, the, two latter sought a declaration of the .rights of the parties with-reference to the Breweries’ and Institute’s obligation to the .Brewery Workers Union and the Teamsters’ Union, particularly with reference to .which union was the bargaining agent of the Employees. They also sought an injunction against the Teamsters’ Union.

(A) Jurisdiction for declaratory relief.

The National Labor Relations Act in Section 9(c), 49 Stats. 453, 29 U.S.C.A. § 159(c), provides: “(c) Whenever a question affecting commerce arises concerning the representation of employees, the Board may investigate such controversy and certify to the parties, in .writing, the name or names of the representatives that have been designated or selected. In any such investigation, the Board shall provide for an appropriate hearing upon due' notice,

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Bluebook (online)
106 F.2d 871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-brotherhood-of-teamsters-v-international-union-of-united-ca9-1939.