International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft & Agricultural Implement Workers, Local 180 v. Industrial Commission

21 N.W.2d 711, 248 Wis. 364, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 368
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 21 N.W.2d 711 (International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft & Agricultural Implement Workers, Local 180 v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft & Agricultural Implement Workers, Local 180 v. Industrial Commission, 21 N.W.2d 711, 248 Wis. 364, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 368 (Wis. 1946).

Opinion

Barlow, J.

The question presented for determination is whether the International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft & Agricultural Implement Workers of America, Local 180, C. I. O., a nonprofit labor organization, is an employer and its officers and members employees so as to make the union subject to the payment of contributions under ch. 108, Stats., commonly known as the “Unemployment Compensation Act.”

Appellant is a local chapter of a labor union, and has a membership of about forty-three hundred individuals, all of whom are employees of the J. I. Case Company. It has a collective-bargaining contract with the company and is the sole bargaining agent for all of the workers. It is organized primarily to improve working conditions and to establish a wage in accordance with the needs and desires of its membership. Its operations include the necessary organization ad--ministrative activities typical of labor unions, the handling of matters for the employees of the company, and it also conducts certain educational, social, and charitable activities which utilize a minor portion of its efforts and funds. Its major efforts and funds are expended in matters arising out of its contract with the company, improving working conditions, maintaining and increasing wages, and in general guarding and promoting the rights of labor.

The officers of the union are: President, vice-president, recording secretary, financial secretary, treasurer, three trustees, guide, and sergeant at arms. Committees and stewards are also provided for in the organization. Some committeemen and all stewards are elected by the employees of the de *367 partments. There are between one hundred sixty-five and one hundred seventy such committeemen and stewards. The stewards’ function is to see that the provisions of the labor contract with the union are carried out and take care of members’ grievances arising in the department. Each officer, receives a fixed sum monthly from the union, the lowest amount being $5 per month and the highest $35 per month. The officers are reimbursed for certain expenses, and the balance has to be absorbed from their income from the union. Stewards, bargaining-committee members, and officers frequently are required to perform services for the union during working hours, and the union compensates members performing such services by paying them approximately the amount they would have earned as employees of the company for the time devoted to union work. Such lost-time payments are made pursuant to a definite plan adopted by the union. The average weekly amount paid to two hundred five members of the union for the year 1941 varies from one cent per week to $10 per week, four persons collecting a weekly average of over $10 per week. The largest number of this group of members, one hundred sixty-eight, received from one cent to $1 average weekly pay. It was agreed that two individuals performing clerical work in plaintiff’s office were employees and worked at least eighteen weeks in 1941.

The union is a nonprofit voluntary association, not organized under any statutory provision, and it concedes, and the record clearly establishes, that it is not a partnership under the statutes. Its income consists of dues of $1 per month paid by each member.

The circuit court confirmed the decision of the Industrial Commission that the appellant is an employer within the meaning of sec. 108.02 (4), Stats.; that the individuals in question are its employees within the meaning of sec. 108.02 (3) ; that the remuneration received by such individuals as set out in the pay roll is “wages” within the meaning of sec. 108.02 (6),.and that the services of such individuals are *368 not in an excluded employment within the meaning of sec. 108.02 (5) (g) 7 nor sec. 108.02 (5) (g) 11.

Appellant contends the Industrial Commission exceeded its statutory authority in ordering payment of contributions on its defined pay roll, (a) because the local union is a voluntary association and not such an entity separate and distinct from its own members so as to stand in the relation of employer and employee between itself and its membership; (b) the union is an organization that falls within the provisions of sec. 108.02 (5) (g) 7, Stats., as one organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or educational purposes and is therefore exempt from making contributions or paying unemployment compensation taxes; (c) the union does not employ or pay wages to a sufficient number of employees to become subject to the act.

The Wisconsin Unemployment Compensation Act was first enacted in January, 1932 (ch. 20, Laws of Sp. Sess. 1931), and was designed to meet an emergency threatening public order and stability. As a necessary part of the exercise of police power the contributions here involved are required. Industrial Comm. v. Woodlawn Cemetery Asso. (1939) 232 Wis. 527, 287 N. W. 750. Many states have passed unemployment compensation laws, which are more or less uniform and conform to the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (formerly title IX of the Social Security Act). Thus this form of social legislation .is more or less uniform and general throughout the nation, and while it is helpful to society generally, it is especially beneficial to employees, and in construing the provisions of the act it is proper to consider the purpose and intention of the legislature in passing it. Moorman Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Comm. (1942) 241 Wis. 200, 5 N. W. (2d) 743.

Sec. 108.09 (7), Stats., provides that “any judicial review hereunder shall be confined to questions of law, and the other provisions of chapter 102 [Stats. 1935 . . . ] with respect to judicial review of orders and awards shall likewise apply to any decision of the commission reviewed under-this sec *369 tion.” In determining whether appellant is an employer and its members employees, and thus make appellant liable for contributions under the act, we must necessarily confine ourselves to the definitions contained in the act. . Where these definitions are fully set forth so as to create liability for contributions on the part of the employer we cannot apply general rules of law determiiling who are employers and who are employees.

The controlling statutory provisions are as follows:

Sec. 108.02 (3) (a) “ ‘Employee’ means any- individual who is or has been performing services for an employer, in an employment, whether or not he is paid directly by such employer. . . .”
Sec. 108.02 (4) (a) “‘Employer’ . . . means any person, partnership, association, corporation, whether domestic or foreign . . . who is subject to this chapter under the statutes of 1937, or who becomes subject hereto under the provisions of this section.”
Sec. 108.02 (4) (d) “Any other employer, who has employed as many as six individuals in ‘employment’ within each of eighteen or more weeks lying wholly within the year 1938 or any subsequent calendar year, shall become an ‘employer’ subject hereto as of the close of that calendar year in which such employment occurred. . . .”
Sec.

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21 N.W.2d 711, 248 Wis. 364, 1946 Wisc. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-union-united-automobile-aircraft-agricultural-implement-wis-1946.