Local No. 1644 v. Oakwood Hospital Corp.

116 N.W.2d 314, 367 Mich. 79
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1962
DocketDocket 20, Calendar 49,283
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 116 N.W.2d 314 (Local No. 1644 v. Oakwood Hospital Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Local No. 1644 v. Oakwood Hospital Corp., 116 N.W.2d 314, 367 Mich. 79 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

Kavanagh, J.

This is an action in chancery by plaintiffs, Local No. 1644, American Federation of' State, County and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO, Public Employees Council No. 77, AFSC&ME, AFL-CIO, and Juliann Havrilak, an employee of defendant, to compel defendant hospital to engage in collective bargaining with plaintiffs, as provided under the Michigan labor mediation act, aa *81 amended. * Defendant Oakwood Hospital Corporation is a Michigan nonprofit corporation located in the city of Dearborn.

In February, 1959, plaintiff Local No. 1644 initiated requests for collective bargaining, and defendant hospital refused. Plaintiff subsequently, in April, 1959, requested the Michigan labor mediation board to intervene under the provisions of the act. Both parties were represented at a meeting with Mr. Quillieo, the board’s mediator, on May 20, 1959. At that time, according to the testimony, the union submitted employee authorization cards to the mediator. The mediator cross-checked these against the hospital’s records, making a determination that the union had cards for 37 out of the 45 employees in the housekeeping department of the hospital.

Thereafter, the union filed additional authorization cards for nurses aides, orderlies, and employees in the dietary department of the hospital, and a subsequent procedure before the same mediator produced a determination that the union had authorization cards for 78 out of the 144 employees in these departments.

The union representatives also indicated they secured additional authorization cards from employees in the laundry, maintenance, and miscellaneous categories which had not yet been formally presented to the mediation board.

The union’s position is, that while they commenced organization with the housekeeping employees of the hospital, and have since proceeded to organize some other departments of the hospital, it is their intention to organize as a single collective bargaining unit all of the unskilled, nonclerical employees of the Oakwood Hospital.

*82 The hospital’s position is. that there is.no legal duty or obligation on its part to recognize or talk to or bargain with the union. The extension of the-hospital’s position is that so long'as it refuses to-recognize the union, it has no duty to bargain collectively with regard to wages, fringe payments, seniority rights, or union recognition, which have-been made issues in this labor dispute.

The issues between the parties could not be settled by the board’s mediator, and on June 2, 1959, the-dispute was certified to the governor, who appointed a special commission in accordance with sections 13a and 13b of the act, to conduct hearings and issue findings and recommendations.

Subsequently, a similar dispute between the same parties, existing in other departments of the hospital, was referred by the governor on July 29,1959, to the same special commission.

The special commission made the following recommendations :

“1. That this matter be referred back to the labor mediation board, and that that board determine that the appropriate bargaining unit for the Oak-wood hospital consist of all employees except managerial, office, supervisory, executive, professional, and skilled trades employees, as more fully described above.
“2. That the labor mediation board conduct an appropriate election within the bargaining unit as so determined.
“3. That the hospital be advised of its obligation under the act to bargain collectively at all times with the union representing its employees under section 13a, subd (3) (a), and of the injunctive relief provisions of section 22 of the act,† which the legis *83 lature provided to insure fulfillment of this obligation.
“4. That the parties hereto he reminded that the legislature has declared as the public policy of this State, ‘that the best interests of the people of the State are served by the prevention or the prompt settlement of labor disputes.’ ”

The following additional recommendations were made:

“A. That the election to be conducted within the bargaining unit above described he held solely on the question of representation of the Oakwood hospital employees by this union.
“B. That if a majority of the employees in the unit described vote for representation by this union, and the hospital has not commenced collective bargaining with it within 10 days following the election, the hoard initiate action before the appropriate circuit court in equity to enforce the provisions of section 13a, subd (3) (a) of the act as provided for in section 22 of the act.”

Attempts to further mediate this dispute between the parties were unsuccessful. The board, upon petition by the plaintiffs for an election on the question of representation, held hearings, and on October 12, 1959, issued an order directing a statutory strike election in a designated unit found by the hoard to he appropriate on the following question:

“Do you wish to go on strike because of the refusal of the Oakwood Hospital to recognize Local No. 1644 of the American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO as your bargaining representative in matters of wages, hours and working conditions?”

The election was held on October 21, 1959, and of the approximately 206 eligible voters, 135 voted “yes”; 51 voted “no”; 4 were challenged; 14 did not vote; and there were 2 spoiled ballots.

*84 The board found the election results entitled the employees in the bargaining unit to take strike action under the provisions of the labor mediation act.

The union again made efforts to engage in collective bargaining negotiations with the hospital, and defendant again refused.

Thereafter, plaintiffs instituted this action, on January 20, 1960, to compel defendant to bargain collectively at all times in good faith with Local No. 1644. Plaintiffs sought a temporary mandatory injunction at a hearing on February 5, 1960. Defendant objected, contending such injunction should not issue unless a situation existed where great harm would result to plaintiffs and no injury to defendant. At the hearing plaintiffs offered, and defendant refused, to submit to a representation election to be conducted either by the labor mediation board or the court.

The circuit court held plaintiffs were entitled to a temporary injunction restraining defendant hospital from refusing to bargain in good faith with Local No. 1644 pending the hearing on the merits.

Defendant filed application for leave to appeal from the entry of the order. Leave was denied on March 29, 1960.

The cause came on for trial on the merits on December 6, 1960. Defendant once again refused to consent to a representation election among the employees of the bargaining unit.

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Bluebook (online)
116 N.W.2d 314, 367 Mich. 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/local-no-1644-v-oakwood-hospital-corp-mich-1962.