Leeder v. Cities Service Oil Co.

1948 OK 25, 189 P.2d 189, 199 Okla. 618, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 27, 1948
DocketNo. 32887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1948 OK 25 (Leeder v. Cities Service Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leeder v. Cities Service Oil Co., 1948 OK 25, 189 P.2d 189, 199 Okla. 618, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 283 (Okla. 1948).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

The parties to this appeal occupy the same relative positions as in the trial court and will be referred to as plaintiffs and defendants, respectively, except, when mentioned specifically, the Cities Service Oil Company will be designated as Cities Service, the Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Company as I. T. I. O., and Oil Workers International Union as Union.

On August 1, 1941, Cities Service acquired the properties of the I. T. I. O. Among them were three gasoline plants located in Oklahoma county and known, respectively, as Lemon Plant, Jones Plant, and Bodine Plant. The operations of the plants were continued with the service of I. T. I. O. employees, among whom were the plaintiffs. At that time the employees of Cities Service, engaged in the gasoline division, were operating under a contract executed May 9, 1941, between the Union as exclusive bargaining agent of the employees and the Cities Service under [619]*619which seniority rights were recognized, the substance of which so far as material is that where one was dislodged from his job his seniority entitled him to bid only into the job of the one with the least seniority in the same “letter bracket” of the employment. The employees at the named plants, under contract between said Union and the I. T. I. O., enjoyed seniority rights, the substance of which, so far as material, was that where one was dislodged he was entitled to bid into the job of any one of less seniority than he himself enjoyed. By reason of the termination of. the I. T. I. O. contract those employed at said plants on entering the employment of Cities Service were without seniority rights. In order to accord such rights and accommodate them to corresponding rights enjoyed by Cities Service employees in the gasoline division the Cities Service and the Union as bargaining agent of the employees in such division on October 13, 1941, amended the contract of May 9, 1941, so as to provide that the seniority rights of the former I. T. I. O. employees, as between themselves and as to employment in the I. T. I. O. plants so long as operated, should be as provided under the I. T. I. O. contract, and that as to new plants or idle plants resuming operations the jobs therein were to be awarded to former I. T. I. O. employees in the proportion their number bore to that of other Cities Service employees then engaged in the gasoline division, and that as between „ themselves the former I. T. I. O. employees would be entitled to take the jobs so awarded according to the I. T. I. O. seniority. These provisions and another to the effect that an employee in either group could bid on any posted job in the other group and that the seniority date therefor should be August 1, 1941, are reflected in the contract between the Cities Service and the Union bearing date of February 14, 1946. On August 2, 1946, by contract between Cities Service and the Union, the contract of February 14th was amended as follows:

“It is agreed that the following amendments shall be made to the labor agreement of February 14, 1946, between Cities Service Oil Company and Oil Workers International Union-Gasoline-Chemical Division:
“Article IV. There shall be added to Section 7(a) the following: With respect to bumping procedure, the Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Company seniority shall be disregarded until and unless an I. T. I. O. Co. former employee is not able to bump into any company wide job in his same letter bracket, using his Cities Service seniority, then he can use his I. T. I. O. seniority and bump into a former I. T. I. O. plant, still operating. If this does not get him a job in the same bracket, he will use his Cities Service seniority to bump into the next lower bracket same as any Cities Service employee.
“In other words, I. T. I. O. seniority will not be used except as to former I. T. I. O. operated plants then operating and. then only if an I. T. I. O. man’s. Cities Service seniority will not get him into a Cities Service plant in the same bracket.”

The Lemon Plant was discontinued in 1943. The Jones Plant was discontinued in September, 1946, and in contemplation of the dislodgement of the plaintiffs and others employed there they were notified by the Cities Service that they were privileged under seniority to “bump” into designated jobs at plants located at Odessa, Texas. Plaintiffs are and for years have been residents of Oklahoma City. If employed at the Bodine Plant they could continue such residence. Employment at Odessa would necessitate removal of such residence which would involve detriment. Feeling aggrieved, plaintiffs sought to obtain relief through Union activity to the extent of requesting the Grievance Committee to report same, which was denied because the majority thereof refused to make report. Thereafter plaintiffs filed this action seeking to enjoin the enforcement of said amendment, and it is from the denial thereof by the trial court that this appeal is prosecuted.

[620]*620Plaintiff’s argument for reversal of the judgment is prosecuted under the general proposition that the court erred in denying plaintiffs’ application for injunction under which there is sought to establish, in substance, the following points:

1. Under the contract, prior to the amendment, plaintiffs were entitled as a matter of right thereunder to “bump” into Bodine Plant upon being dislodged at Jones Plant.

2. That the enforcement of the amendment of August 2, 1946, would deprive them of a valuable right without authority in law therefor.

3. That the amendment was unauthorized.

4. That plaintiffs were without remedy except through resort to equity.

Defendants challenge each of the several grounds. Touching the first it is contended the contract is vague, the alleged right not clear, and hence affords no basis for equitable relief. Concerning the second ground, it is contended that the amendment does not alter or impair plaintiffs’ seniority rights existing under the contract and that the effect thereof pertains only to the method of their exercise which was contemplated by but not made clear in the contract. As to the third, it is contended the amendment was authorized and effective even though it be considered that the existing seniority rights were thereby qualified or altered. And, touching the fourth, that full resort to obtain Union consideration of the alleged grievance was not had.

That seniority rights arising under contract between the Union and the employer inure to the benefit of the employee and that he may invoke equity for their protection, where full resort to Union tribunals has proved unavailing without proper cause, is recognized by this court. Lockwood et al. v. Chit-wood, 185 Okla. 44, 89 P. 2d 951. The particular ground or grounds upon which relief was denied does not appear because the finding was general. It is obvious, however, that if the amendment of August 2, 1946, is valid, the judgment must be sustained.

It is urged that the amendment never became operative for two reasons: One, that by the terms of the contract it was not subject to amendment except as to wages prior to expiration of one year from the date thereof, which period had not expired. And, the other, that the seniority rights relied on by the plaintiffs were vested individual rights and therefore neither the Union nor a majority of the employees so engaged were authorized to and therefore could not contract such rights away without plaintiffs’ consent which was never given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1948 OK 25, 189 P.2d 189, 199 Okla. 618, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leeder-v-cities-service-oil-co-okla-1948.