Mead Products v. Industrial Commission

656 S.W.2d 805, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 3473
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 16, 1983
DocketNo. WD 34151
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 656 S.W.2d 805 (Mead Products v. Industrial Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mead Products v. Industrial Commission, 656 S.W.2d 805, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 3473 (Mo. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

PRITCHARD, Judge.

Claimants, 563 in number, were employees at appellant’s St. Joseph, Missouri, plant and members of the Graphic Arts Union, Local 529. Claimants each filed requests for unemployment compensation benefits for the period from December 17,1979 until January 7, 1980, contending that they were laid off from work. Appellant contends that claimants’ unemployment was due to a lockout resulting from a labor dispute which caused a work stoppage and, therefore, claimants are barred from receiving unemployment compensation for a work stoppage under the express provisions of Section 288.040.5(1) RSMo. 1978.

An appeals referee found, as did deputies of the Division of Employment Security, that claimants were unemployed from December 17, 1979 until January 7, 1980, because of a stoppage of work which existed because of a labor dispute, and the claims were denied. The Industrial Commission reversed the Appeals Tribunal and found that claimants were entitled to employment security benefits during the weeks claimed. The circuit court affirmed the Commission.

It was stipulated before the Appeals Tribunal: Appellant and the Union had entered into a collective bargaining agree[807]*807ment with an effective date of November 1, 1976, and a termination date of October 31, 1979; prior to the expiration date, the Union notified appellant of its desire to negotiate new terms and conditions; the contract expired without settlement of the contract negotiations, which commenced on October 1, 1979; thereafter, employees continued working without a contract and negotiations continued; and on November 8, 1979, appellant made its “final offer” to the Union Bargaining Committee, which was rejected. Thereafter, certain notices were sent by appellant to employees and the Union, and its Senior Executive spoke to its members at a meeting, which matters are hereinafter mentioned. From December 17, 1979, to January 7, 1980, appellant’s employees who were members of other Unions continued working without interruption.

Quite apparently shouldering their laboring oar, claimants presented this evidence, which is .included in the transcript of the record considered by the Industrial Commission: Larry L. Huston testified that he had been employed by appellant for 15 years, and was the Union’s business representative for 6 years. The plant was first unionized in 1941, and since that time there has been only one strike, which occurred in 1974. After the expiration of the contract, claimants continued to work without a contract, and during negotiations for a new contract, the union team never refused to meet with the company management personnel team, and never directly threatened any type of strike action. On November 19, 1979, appellant posted a notice that there would be work for only three days a week because of production problems caused by uncertainty of contract negotiations, economic conditions, high inventory levels and customer requirements.

On December 16, 1979, Huston was present for the normal starting time of the third shift, at about 10:15 or 10:30 p.m., at the employees’ entrance. The door was locked and upon Huston’s knock, Paul Mon-tegna, appellant’s then production manager, talked to him. Huston told him his people were ready to come to work and report in. Montegna answered that there was no work available and that “your people are laid off — or something similar to that.” Huston told the people to go home. He was at the plant the next morning at the starting time of that shift, and told him that his people were ready and willing to report for work, and Montegna repeated [twice] that there was no work available, and “your people are laid off.” Huston testified that the slack season at the plant, as a general rule, is from September to February or March — it varies. Around the Christmas holidays, it was traditional for the employees of his bargaining unit to request vacations. Ray Allen was present with Huston when Mon-tegna told him that there was no work available, that they were laid off, on both December 16th and 17th. Allen was present alone at the 3:00-3:30 shift on the latter date, and told Montegna they were ready to go to work. “Q And what did Paul say at — well, what was his response at the time, at 3:30? A Paul threw me a curve. I thought we had it down pat because this was the third time around and the reply wasn’t the same, it was, you’re— are locked out. So, took me for a second and I said, wait a minute Paul, I said, ‘locked out’ or ‘laid off’, what is it? And he said, locked out or laid off, it’s the same difference, it’s the same difference, there’s no difference he said, there’s no work available.”

Paul Montegna testified that on the three occasions when claimants reported for work he told Huston twice that there was no work available for their union and that they were laid off. He used the term “lockout” once the next morning (December 17th) to Huston, and told Allen that afternoon that they were “locked out, there’s no work available.” “I told them they were locked out or laid off, it didn’t make any difference how I put it.” The reason for the company’s position at the time reflected in the statement Montegna gave to the employees — the reason they were locked out was the labor dispute, which was when the final contract offer was rejected. The meanings of the terms “lockout” and “laid [808]*808off” were the same to Montegna, and he was so told by their attorney. As to the seasonal nature of the work, Montegna testified that under normal conditions, it would start building up around the middle of December, “and it’s just gradual build up until we eventually get up in February, we’re almost at full employment and we peak out around July.” This differed from the testimony of Huston that the slack season is, as a general rule, from September to February or March. “It varies.”

George Carolus was appellant’s operations manager at the times here in question, and was head of its bargaining committee. The Union rejected appellant’s final offer of a new contract of November 8,1979, by a vote of a large majority of its members on November 17, 1979. Appellant’s decision was to institute a three-day work week, followed by a decision to have a short lockout. [The posted notice to Union members, dated November 19,1979, recited: “Because of production problems caused by uncertainty of contract negotiations, economic conditions, our high inventory levels, and customer requirements, we will need to start working only three days per week until further notice, * * *.”] A newspaper article reporting the failure of contract negotiations and a complaint filed with the NLRB, was a factor in appellant’s decisions. It was its understanding that in a lockout situation employees would not draw unemployment compensation.

As to the seasonal nature of appellant’s work in December 1979, Carolus had this to say: There was then sufficient work for all claimants to remain employed; they were all employed prior to the three-day work week cutback. There was no difference in the economic conditions of the company during that few work week period. Orders were not any less, and demands on the system were just as great; and there was no reduction in availability of supplies and raw material. The only reason for making a decision to cease operations was lack of progress in contract negotiations. A part of the plant operations was transferred to other locations, and a part was just left undone. As to the seasonal nature of the work, Carolus testified that a build-up is started about the middle of December primarily to supply other divisions. The buildup continues and peaks out in July.

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Bluebook (online)
656 S.W.2d 805, 1983 Mo. App. LEXIS 3473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mead-products-v-industrial-commission-moctapp-1983.