JOURNEYMEN BARBERS, ETC. v. Industrial Commission

260 P.2d 941, 128 Colo. 121
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedAugust 24, 1953
Docket16885
StatusPublished

This text of 260 P.2d 941 (JOURNEYMEN BARBERS, ETC. v. Industrial Commission) 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
JOURNEYMEN BARBERS, ETC. v. Industrial Commission, 260 P.2d 941, 128 Colo. 121 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

260 P.2d 941 (1953)

JOURNEYMEN BARBERS, HAIRDRESSERS, COSMETOLOGISTS & PROPRIETORS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF AMERICA, LOCAL UNION NO. 205,
v.
INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION.

No. 16885.

Supreme Court of Colorado, en Banc.

August 24, 1953.

*942 Philip Hornbein, Philip Hornbein, Jr., Denver, for plaintiff in error.

Duke W. Dunbar, Atty. Gen., H. Lawrence Hinkley, Deputy Atty. Gen., Peter L. Dye, Asst. Atty. Gen., for Industrial Commission of Colorado.

Donald H. Meyer, Denver, amicus curiae.

MOORE, Justice.

Plaintiff in error was defendant in the trial court and we will herein refer to it as the Union. Defendant in error was plaintiff below and we will hereinafter designate it as the Commission.

The action was brought here by writ of error to review the judgment of the district court of the City and County of Denver. That judgment validated the findings of fact and order of the Commission in a proceeding arising under the Labor Peace Act, S.L. '43, chapter 131, p. 392, and gave to such findings and order of the Commission the effect of a decree of the district court. The procedure before the Commission was under the provisions of S.L. '43, chapter 131, § 8(7), p. 406.

The pertinent facts presented by this record are as follows: One Glen E. Volzke filed a verified complaint before the Commission in which he alleged, in substance, that for nineteen years he was the owner and operator of a union barber shop in Denver, and that on or about May 1, 1951, the Union submitted to him a new contract requiring him, as well as his employees, to become a member of the union. He refused to sign the new contract so long as it contained this requirement, whereupon the union withdrew approval of his shop by ordering the union shop card withdrawn. Volzke further alleged that the withdrawal of the union shop card was in violation of the provisions of the Labor Peace Act and would result in irreparable damage, and that his employees, as members of the union, were obligated under the constitution of their organization to refuse to work if the union shop card was withdrawn. Upon an ex parte hearing June 21, 1951, the Commission restrained the Union from removing the card pending final determination of the matter before the Commission. July 2d, the Union filed its answer to the petition, and a hearing on the issues was held by the Commission July 10th.

The Union appeared by its attorney and the parties entered into a stipulation concerning the pertinent facts. The final findings *943 of fact and order of the Commission was as follows:

"On about May 1, 1951, respondent submitted to complainant, who has operated a barber shop employing Union help for some twenty years, a new contract containing the following paragraph:
"`8. Union Shop—All persons working in the shop (employer and employees) must secure and maintain membership in good standing in the Union. * * *'
"Upon complainant's refusal to sign said contract respondent caused to be removed from his place of business the Union Shop card, even though Article VII, Section 3 of respondent's Constitution provides that
"`When the Union Shop card is removed from any shop for violation of the laws, rules, regulations and agreements all members employed therein shall immediately leave the employment of said shop.'
"Complainant's employes have, for the most part, remained at work.
"The Referee is of the opinion, and so finds, that respondent is at liberty at any time to remove the Union Shop card from complainant's place of business if, by so doing, an illegal strike is not precipitated.
"The Referee is further of the opinion, and so finds, that Paragraph 8, above quoted, is an illegal requirement in that it is in violation of Section 6(1) (b) of the Labor Peace Act of 1943.
"Further, the Referee is of the opinion that to require the owner and operator of a business to become a limited or nonactive member of his employes' Union is discriminatory and in violation of the cardinal principle of collective bargaining.
"It is, therefore, ordered: That respondent forthwith delete from the contract proffered to complainant that part of Paragraph 8 thereof requiring the employer to secure and maintain membership in respondent Union by striking the words in parentheses and inserting in lieu thereof the words `except the employer', and, as amended, to resubmit the agreement."

Following the entry of the foregoing order the Union failed to comply therewith and this action was instituted by the Commission for the purpose of compelling compliance.

There was admitted by stipulation, at the hearing before the Commission, the agreement which was tendered to Volzke for signature. Paragraph 8 thereof contains, inter alia, the following: "All persons working in the shop (employer and employees) must secure and maintain membership in good standing in the Union." The union shop card, the withdrawal of which forms the basis of this controversy, contains on the reverse side the following statement:

"This Card is issued in accordance with the laws, rules and regulations specified under the heading `Rules Governing Union Shop Cards,' as appended hereto.
"The person or persons displaying this card do so in accordance with the rules stated below, and it is agreed, by the person or persons displaying this card, that for any violation of the rules below stated, he or they will give peaceable possession of the same to the local union under whose jurisdiction it is to be displayed, or a duly appointed or elected representative thereof; also, that the same will be given into the peaceable possession of the General President-Secretary-Treasurer of the Journeymen Barbers, Hairdressers and Cosmetologists' International Union of America, or a duly appointed representative, on demand."

Following the above is a statement of "Rules Governing Union Shop Cards," from which we quote the following pertinent provisions:

"The contract, or agreement, called for by these laws shall be so construed that the person or persons displaying the Shop Card shall specifically agree:

"(a) To abide by the laws of the J.B.H.C.I.U. of A. governing Shop *944 Cards and such laws as may be made in the future for the proper government of the same.

"(b) To abide by the laws of the local union, now and in the future, with reference to prices, hours, wages, etc.
"(c) To peaceably give up said Shop Card on demand of the local union or local executive board, through its duly appointed representative, for the violation of any local or International laws.
"(d) To peaceably give up said Shop Card to the General President-Secretary-Treasurer, or a duly appointed representative, in case of the suspension or disbandment of the local union which issued it, or for any cause, when called upon to do so."

The contract between the Union and Volzke, under which the Union Shop Card originally was placed in Volzke's place of business, contained substantially the above provisions.

The constitution of the Union, Article VII, section 3 is as follows:

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