Jamison v. Consolidated Utilities, Inc.

576 P.2d 97, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 618, 85 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 55,175
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1978
Docket3211
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 576 P.2d 97 (Jamison v. Consolidated Utilities, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jamison v. Consolidated Utilities, Inc., 576 P.2d 97, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 618, 85 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 55,175 (Ala. 1978).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINO WITZ, Justice.

Appellants, ten former employees of ap-pfellee Consolidated Utilities, Ltd., filed a complaint in the superior court seeking past due wages based on an agreement allegedly entered into by their union, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 1547, and Consolidated Utilities. After discovering that the collective bargaining agreement had not been executed, appellants filed an amended complaint seeking retroactive pay based on the unexecuted agreement, the terms of which, they alleged, were “operative and dependent” on only one condition, that Consolidated receive a rate increase from the Alaska Public Utilities Commission. Appellants also sought relief in quantum meruit. 1 Consolidated answered, denying most of the allegations in the complaint and asserting several affirmative defenses. The matter ultimately came before the superior court for a non-jury trial. After the trial was completed, the superior court advised the parties of its decision, stating:

I started with the feeling at the end of the trial that, even if all of the legal issues could be resolved in favor of the plaintiffs, the evidence simply did not allow for recovery by them. After a thorough review of the testimony and the authorities cited, I must so find.

This appeal followed the entry of a formal order in favor of Consolidated Utilities.

The relevant facts are as follows: IBEW Local 1547 and Consolidated Utilities entered into a collective bargaining agreement on July 7, 1970, which by its terms was to continue in effect from April 1,1970, through March 31, 1971, and “from year to year thereafter unless written notice of termination or request for proposed amendments [was] served by either party not less than sixty (60) days prior to December 31 of any year.” The only evidence presented which tended to show that a notification had been sent to Consolidated by the union was a box checked on a. form “Request for Strike Sanction” sent by the Local to the International stating that the Local had sent the required notice to the employer. Isaac Waldrop, business manager of the Local, testified that the statements on the form were true. However, after searching the union’s files, he could not locate a copy of any written notice sent to Consolidated. The company’s bookkeeper, Donald Bailey, testified that he had checked the company’s files and could not find a notification. The superior court found that the required notice was not given.

Although the required notification was apparently never given, there were several intraunion meetings discussing a new contract with a wage increase. At this time Consolidated was in very bad financial condition; the employees knew of this condition. 2 At one intraunion meeting held to discuss what the union wanted to negotiate, Gerald Blevins, the power plant manager, told the employees that Consolidated would *99 be unable to pay them any more money. Nevertheless, at some point, a collective bargaining agreement was drawn up by the union and presented to the management of Consolidated. 3 The proposed agreement was a three-year contract to run from April 1, 1971, through March 31, 1974. The proposed wage scale for the first year presented approximately a dollar an hour increase for most employees. Roy Marquardt, Consolidated’s president, testified that when he met with Waldrop, the business manager of the union, he told Waldrop that a raise was out of the question. He testified:

I did meet with Ike Waldrop and told him that under the circumstances we absolutely could not give the boys a raise at that time. And I’m sure that at the same meeting I told him that we were hoping to put in an application for a rate increase to the PUC — which was delayed, unfortunately. The referee [in bankruptcy] didn’t think this was a suitable charge, so it was delayed. But anyhow, I told Ike that we would ask for an increase to cover an increase for the employees as well as an increase that would hopefully allow us to exist and, in fact, I asked him for any support that he could give us with the PUC when the time came.
There was never any intent on our part — and I’m sure that he understood at the time — to try to ask for a retroactive increase, which in fact I don’t think the PUC would have given under any circumstances. . . . And I know .
I told Mr. Waldrop . . . that an increase, if we got it, would be made effective as of the date we got it.

Consolidated requested a rate increase, in part, based on increased labor costs. Tom Hix, business representative of IBEW Local 1547, testified before the Alaska Public Utilities Commission in March of 1972 with respect to the proposed wage increase.

MR. LAZARUS [counsel for Consolidated]: [U]nder what contract or pay figures ... is CUL and the union working now?
MR. HIX: Right now they’re drawing pay at the rate on the contract that expired in April of 1971.
MR. LAZARUS: All right, and have you entered into negotiations with [Consolidated] insofar as the new rates are concerned?
MR. HIX: Yes, ... it began in April of ’71 and I believe it was either June or . the latter part of July, I believe it was, of ’71 that we had arrived at a new contract with new rates and stuff subject to the approval of the bargaining union employees, of course.
MR. LAZARUS: And has this agreement been tentatively approved?
MR. HIX: Tentatively approved and as I say subject to the approval of the bargaining union employees[.]

In June of 1972, the Commission denied Consolidated’s request for a flat rate of 22 mills per kilowatt hour, but granted a rate of 18 mills. The Commission specifically did not consider the proposed labor increases in granting the increase. The Commission found:

CUL estimates that its labor will increase by $26,100 in the test year (fiscal 1972 over fiscal 1971). However, as of the date of the hearing no wage increase had been granted, and Exhibit 4 between CUL and the union representing its employees was only a proposed contract containing tentative labor rates. It is commonly accepted in the utility regulatory field that when wage increases have not been implemented, they will not be recognized for the purpose of determining a utility’s revenue requirement in a rate proceeding. Furthermore, the tentative wage increases appear to be clearly in excess of the policies set by the United States Price Commission. The Commission also notes that CUL’s labor charges for the year ended June 30, 1970, were *100 only $59,869 compared to the $84,300 figure for the year ended June 30, 1971. The increase in that year was $24,431, an increase of approximately forty percent. A further proposed increase in the test year of almost thirty percent in labor costs can only be indicative of poor management procedures and inefficient use of help. Such increases cannot be considered reasonable by this Commission.

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Bluebook (online)
576 P.2d 97, 1978 Alas. LEXIS 618, 85 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 55,175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jamison-v-consolidated-utilities-inc-alaska-1978.