Long v. Van Osdale

29 N.E.2d 953, 218 Ind. 483, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 236
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1940
DocketNo. 27,470.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 29 N.E.2d 953 (Long v. Van Osdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Long v. Van Osdale, 29 N.E.2d 953, 218 Ind. 483, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 236 (Ind. 1940).

Opinion

Fansler, J.

Appellees in their petition to transfer represent that in their judgment the opinion of the Appellate Court does not fairly and fully state the allegations of the complaint so as to make fully apparent the contentions of the appellees below and in the Appellate Court. The complaint, the appellees’ petition for rehearing, the appellees’ original brief, and brief on petition for rehearing in the Appellate Court are made a part of the petition to transfer. In order that the questions presented and passed upon by the Appellate Court might more clearly appear, the court has caused the entire record to be before it. Warren v. Indiana Telephone Co. (1940), 217 Ind. 93, 26 N. E. (2d) 399.

The appellants were plaintiffs below. They are 265 in number and are employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company as locomotive engineers. 268 of the appellees are employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company as locomotive engineers and are members of a labor organization known as the *485 Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. The remaining appellees are the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and certain officers of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. The controversy involves the respective seniority rights of the two groups of employees.

It is alleged in the complaint that all of the parties who are locomotive engineers are employed on that part of the Pennsylvania Railroad which extends from Clark, Indiana, to Crestline, Ohio, commonly known as the Fort Wayne Division, or within the yard district at and in the cities of Fort Wayne, Indiana, and Lima, Ohio, commonly known as the Fort Wayne and Lima Yard District; that in August, 1928, á certain agreement was made and entered into on behalf of the employees then employed or thereafter to be employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. This agreement was made by the Railroad Company and the officers of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, of which organization the plaintiffs were not then and are not now members. The agreement was known as the “Schedule,” and affected, among other things, the seniority rights of locomotive engineers. Under this agreement seniority rights are based upon length of service, and are effective only in the district in which the engineers are employed and in which they acquire their rights. Each of the territories above described constitutes a separate district. The contract or “Schedule” provides, among other things, that: “When two or more divisions are merged, or separated, the •seniority of engineers then in the service shall be confined to the original territory on which they shall have earned it. They shall also have seniority on the combined divisions over engineers promoted or hired after date of merger. Engineers promoted or hired after *486 date of merger will have seniority on combined divisions.” Regulations 7-A-l and 7-B-l provide that:

“7-A-l. An engineer who considers that an injustice has been done' him, and who has appealed his case in writing to his Superintendent within ten days, will be given a hearing at which he may be accompanied by an engineer from the division on which he is employed to assist him in presenting his case.”'

“7-B-l. The Engineers’ Committee will represent the engineers in all matters pertaining to rates, regulations, working conditions and general grievances.”

Regulation 9-A-l is as follows: “Should either the management or the engineers desire to change any or all of these regulations, the party desiring to make the change shall notify the other party in writing of the desired change; and no change will be made, except by mutual consent, until thirty days after such notice has been given.”

It is alleged that, while the agreement above referred to was in force, the Engineers’ Committee, acting through its chairman, and without authority of the plaintiffs, entered into an agreement with the Railroad Company consolidating the engineer Seniority Rosters for the Fort Wayne Main Line Road and the Fort Wayne and Lima Yards, by ranking all engineers in the order of their employment; in other words, by dovetailing; that this agreement injuriously affects the seniority rights of the plaintiffs.; that the Railroad Company and the General Chairman of the General Committee of Adjustment of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers threaten and intend to put the new schedule agreed upon in effect. The complaint prays that this latter agreement be declared, void, and that an injunction be issued to restrain its being put into effect. Demurrers to the *487 complaint were sustained, and, the plaintiffs having refused to plead further, there was judgment for the defendants.

The ruling on the demurrers is assigned as error.

If the facts alleged entitle the plaintiffs to equitable relief, the judgment should be reversed, otherwise it must be affirmed.

It is the appellants’ theory that the agreement between the Railroad Company and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, known as the “Schedule,” is a third party beneficiary contract for the benefit of all engineer employees and confers individual rights as well as collective rights, which may be enforced by each employee. It seems clear, however, that the appellant locomotive engineers, who were not members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, acquired no greater rights under the “Schedule” agreement than those locomotive engineers who were members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. If rights were acquired by the individual engineers under the contract, they were acquired subject to the conditions imposed and provided for in the contract. This seems to be conceded by the appellants, but they contend that the contract and agreement, having been accepted and acted upon by them as beneficiaries, can be changed or amended by the Railroad Company and the Brotherhood only in the manner and to the extent provided for in the contract, and that the agreement consolidating the districts is not a change or amendment of the original contract, but merely an attempt to waive the rights of the employee beneficiaries under the agreement. There is no'substance in this contention. Any change that affects the status .of the employees may be said to be a waiver of the conditions of the contract before the *488 change and the acceptance of the changed conditions. The new agreement had the effect of changing the provision, that when two or more divisions are merged the seniority of engineers then in service shall be confined to the original territory upon which they have earned it, in so far as this provision affected the districts here involved. There is nothing in the contract which precludes such a change, or the making of an exception to the general rule in the case of these two divisions, or that requires that seniority rights shall be affected in the same manner in all cases of consolidation of districts. The contract provides that the management and the engineers may, by mutual consent, change the terms of the agreement; and it clearly appears that the engineers, acting through their committee, agreed with the management upon the consolidation of the divisions and the relative seniority rights of the engineers affected.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 953, 218 Ind. 483, 1940 Ind. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/long-v-van-osdale-ind-1940.