Kunz v. Colnon

54 F. Supp. 673, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2474
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedMarch 31, 1944
DocketCivil Actions Nos. 4379-4381
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 54 F. Supp. 673 (Kunz v. Colnon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kunz v. Colnon, 54 F. Supp. 673, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2474 (D. Kan. 1944).

Opinion

HELVERING, District Judge.

Plaintiffs filed their suits in the District Court of Leavenworth County, Kansas, on September 2, 1939. The actions were brought to recover damages for alleged breaches of employment contracts. On petition of defendants, the cases were removed to this court. Following the death in 1943 of the Honorable Richard J. Hopkins, then United States District Judge for the District of Kansas, the cases were, by agreement of the parties on January 20, 1944, consolidated and submitted to the present court for trial without jury on the record, affidavits, exhibits, testimony, and arguments of counsel.

After the filing of a petition by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company, under Section 77 of the Federal Bankruptcy Act, 11 U.S.C.A. § 205, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, on June 7, 1933, that court appointed trustees to take charge of, control and operate all of the properties of said company. The effective date of such appoint[674]*674ment was December 1, 1933, and the trustees and their successors have since been and are now in possession of and are operating the properties of the company and are the defendants in these cases.

A great amount of evidence has been introduced, largely by means of affidavits and exhibits. The issues have been reduced to two questions which have had the consideration of the court, one of which is decisive of the cases. A brief resume of the pertinent facts will suffice to indicate the reason for the judgments in these cases.

In 1892 the predecessors of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Company (hereafter referred to as the Burlington) and the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company (hereafter called the Rock Island) severally entered into a contract with the Leavenworth Terminal Railway and Bridge Company, the owner of a number of tracks comprising a switch-yard in the City of Leavenworth, Kansas, and also the owner of a bridge across the Missouri river, with certain tracks extending from the bridge a distance of approximately three miles to connections with the Burlington and Rock Island railroads. The Rock Island and Burlington companies operated the yards alternately by years until 1917, when, by mutual agreement, the Rock Island took over the operation of the yards, employing a joint agent and joint employees for the benefit of both railroads.

The plaintiffs Kunz and Perrin, for many years prior to January 14, 1933, had served as switchmen for the Rock Island in the Leavenworth yard. They, with another acting in the same capacity, and an engineer and a fireman, comprised a switch crew. In 1930, the plaintiff Campbell, who had been employed as a roundhouse laborer at Stillings, Missouri, became a switch-man and served as such for about a year and one-half. He had not worked regularly as a switchman for about a year prior to January 14, 1933.

Due to the increased use of automobiles, trucks and busses, the business on the Leavenworth branch line of the Rock Island had greatly diminished until it was handling in and out of Leavenworth an average of slightly less than five cars daily. Because of the location of the Burlington main line east of the Missouri river, that company maintained an engine and two crews operating in shifts of eight hours each daily from Leavenworth to the main line connection. The business of that line had also declined and its officers decided that it would handle its own switching by means of the two crews referred to and would avail itself of the cancellation provision of the 1917 agreement, if necessary, in order to do so. They advised the Rock Island of this intention and the Rock Island thereupon arranged with the Burlington for the latter to switch all Rock Island cars on the basis of fifty cents per car. The Rock Island was to discontinue the use of its switch engine and crew, and this plan was made effective at the close of business January 14, 1933. The plaintiffs, as members of the engine crew, were no longer needed and were not after that date used again at any time as switchmen in the Leavenworth yard.

The plaintiffs do not claim that when they entered the service of the Rock Island any contracts of employment other than oral or implied ones were executed, and the terms of those contracts are not in evidence. Both parties have pleaded, and there is in evidence, an agreement dated July 1, 1927, designated by title “Agreement Governing Hours of Service and Working Conditions” and “Rules and Rates of Pay”, between the railway company and the Switchmen’s Union of North, America. This agreement is precisely what its title imports. It sets out in detail the scope of the agreement, rates of pay, rules and working conditions, etc., for switch-men; but it does not contain any contract or agreement whereby any person binds himself to serve, or the railway company binds itself to employ any person or persons. Plaintiffs did not sign the agreement or expressly ratify it; but, for the purpose of this opinion, it may be assumed that the plaintiffs, by accepting membership in the switchmen’s union and remaining in the service of the railway company, accepted its terms.

As a result of the length of their service with the Rock Island, plaintiffs had earned a seniority right with the company which entitled them to preference in employment whenever the company called switchmen for work. Under the terms of their employment and the union agreement, however, the exercise of the right was restricted to the Leavenworth yard and was termed “point seniority” or “yard seniority”. The switchmen’s agreement provided that: “Switchmen and switch-[675]*675tenders will not be transferred from one yard to another to the detriment of the switchmen or switchtenders in the yard to which they are transferred.” If this seniority right created any obligation on the part of the Rock Island at all, it was merely obligated to call plaintiffs and others for switching in the order of seniority if and when switchmen were called for -that type of work in the yard in which their seniority had been earned.

There is in evidence no contract or agreement whereby the railway company obligated itself to afford either permanent employment or employment for a stated length of time to any of its employees or to these plaintiffs, nor is there in evidence any contract or agreement under which any employee agreed to remain in the service of the railway company. The union agreement does not bridge this hiatus; on the other hand, it does anticipate the dismissal of switchmen due to the necessity of reduction of forces and provides that in such cases they shall be laid off “in the order of their employment, beginning with the last switchman employed.” In the instant case all Rock Island switchmen in the Leavenworth yard were laid off on the same date. Unfortunately for these switchmen, this union agreement was formulated prior -to the development of the perfected collective bargaining contracts of the past few years. These plaintiffs were free to leave the service of the company whenever they desired. This fact brings the parties well within the rule stated in Edwards v. Kentucky Utilities Co., 286 Ky. 341, 150 S.W.2d 916, 135 A.L.R.

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Bluebook (online)
54 F. Supp. 673, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunz-v-colnon-ksd-1944.