Malloy v. Carroll

172 N.E. 790, 272 Mass. 524, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1263
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 172 N.E. 790 (Malloy v. Carroll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malloy v. Carroll, 172 N.E. 790, 272 Mass. 524, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1263 (Mass. 1930).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is a bill in equity in which the plaintiffs, John Malloy and Martin D. Farrell, seek to establish their rights as members of the Boston Cement & Asphalt Finishers’ Union, Local 534, hereinafter called the union. The defendants John Carroll, Otto B. Nelson, John Erlandson, [528]*528Louis Pratt, and Michael O’Rourke, prior to April 30, 1928, were for some years members of the union. The defendant, the United. Building Trades Council of Boston and Vicinity, hereinafter called the council, is a voluntary association, composed of five or "more members appointed by various trade unions in the field of building construction in and around Boston. The defendant Operative Plasterers’ & Cement Finishers’ International Association of the United States and Canada, hereinafter called the international, is a voluntary association composed of five or more members who are representatives of the subordinate associations of plasterers’ and cement finishers’ unions throughout the United States and Canada. Its purpose is to secure unity of action among the trade unions in the plastering and cement finishing lines in building construction throughout the United States and Canada.

The international meets biennially on the second Monday of September. AH legislative powers are reserved to the international in convention and extend to every case of legislation not delegated or reserved to subordinate associations. Its judicial powers, when not in convention, are vested in the president and executive board only. The executive board consists of three members, namely, the general president, first vice-president, and secretary-treasurer. The executive board has control of all executive business, and has power to fill all vacancies, and to settle all disputes, grievances and lockouts between employers and members of the international and of subordinate associations. Its decision in these matters is final, subject to an appeal to the convention.

Since May 31, 1915, the union has existed, and is now existing, under and by virtue of a charter granted to it as a voluntary association from the international. This charter provides that the union is subordinate to the international; it stipulates that the union will initiate members according to the constitution adopted by the international and that it may enact by-laws for the government of itself, these by-laws always to conform to the constitution of the international; that in default the charter of the union may [529]*529be suspended or dissolved by decision of the international, and that if suspended or dissolved it shall revert to the international. In said charter the international agrees to support the union as a subordinate association.

Following the filing of answers by the defendants, the case was referred to a master who, after hearing the parties and their evidence, filed his report. Thereafter an interlocutory decree was entered restraining the defendants “from interfering with the” plaintiffs “in the performance of their usual trade and calling and from inducing, influencing and coercing persons likely to employ the” plaintiffs “not to employ them, until further order of the court.” From this decree the defendants appealed. An interlocutory decree was entered overruling the objections and confirming the master’s report, and an order was filed for the entry of a final decree ordering that the plaintiffs be restored as members in good standing of the union, and that the defendants be restrained from interfering with the plaintiffs in the enjoyment of their rights and privileges as members of said union. Thereupon the judge reported the case to this court in the terms which follow: “I report this case to the Supreme Judicial Court on the bill, the answer, master’s report, defendants’ objections to master’s report, decree overruling defendants’ objections and confirming master’s report and the order for a decree upon a stipulation that if I was warranted in ordering that a decree be entered as ordered then such decree is to be entered; otherwise a decree is to be entered dismissing the bill.”

The material facts, in addition to those above set forth, as drawn from the master’s report are as follows: In June, 1926, the defendant John Carroll was elected business agent of the union for the term of one year and has continued so to act without further election; as such he is a member of the council and by election or selection is the president thereof. On June 3, 1927, at a meeting called for the purr pose, the union duly elected its officers for the period of one year, including the plaintiff John Malloy as president; and John Malloy, as president, appointed eight persons, all members of the union, as the executive board thereof.

[530]*530Following the election of the officers of the union, in September, 1927, there arose within the union a dispute or controversy as to the meaning and application of the decision of certain arbitrators who had been appointed in the matter of a strike, which became effective on or about April 1, 1926, concerning the right of union members to work for $1.25 per hour, Carroll and his supporters contending that the decision meant that members of the union could not work for less than $1.37% per hour, while the plaintiff Malloy and his supporters contended that the $1.37% per hour applied to such members of the union who did waterproofing only and that all other members of the union could work for $1.25 per hour without being considered as working for less than the union scale. This dispute grew in its intensity, and as a result there came into existence in said union two distinct factions, one known as the Malloy faction and the other as the Carroll faction. On December 16, 1927, the union duly voted “That every member must receive $1.37% per hour and if found working for less charges will be preferred against them.” Notwithstanding this vote the Malloy faction continued its efforts “to bring about a situation whereby the members of the union could work for $1.25 per hour whenever they saw fit to do so without being considered as working for less than the union scale of wages.” The differences within the union, together with general business conditions, resulted in unemployment of many members and consequent dissension and dissatisfaction between members. Malloy became arbitrary in presiding at meetings of the union and often would put only such questions to a vote as he and the members of his faction favored; and in turn Carroll became arbitrary in many instances when he knew that members of his faction were in the majority at meetings of the union.

On March 24,1928, Carroll and the members of his faction sent to the international a written request that an international representative be sent to Boston for the purpose of removing from office the president of the union, John Malloy, and of debarring him and five other named members of the union “from attending meetings or any other action the International or its Representative deems necessary for the [531]*531welfare of” the union. In response to this request William Brennan, a vice-president of the international, came to Boston, “was allowed to preside at a meeting of the union held on April 3,1928,” pleaded for harmony in the union, and apparently succeeded in bringing it about for the time being. On April 22, 1928, another complaint by telegram was sent to the international by the individual defendants Nelson, Pratt and Carroll.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.E. 790, 272 Mass. 524, 1930 Mass. LEXIS 1263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malloy-v-carroll-mass-1930.