JOHN R. BROWN, Chief Judge:
After more than a decade of operating under eight
collective bargaining agreements, each of which included a provision with almost identical wording requiring a Joint Apprenticeship and Training Trust Fund Agreement (Trust Fund Agreement)
conforming with § 302 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, 29 U.S.C. § 186 (LMRA), a smoldering dispute between Union Trustees
and Employer Trustees
over one provision, Section 10,
of the 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement (Trust Agreement) reached a non-judicial impasse.
The whole thing turns on § 10 which provides that “[mjatters pertaining to any employees of this Fund [Trust Fund] shall be the responsibility of Employers’ Trustees only”. Although the contents of § 10 may be admirably succinct, it has nonetheless created a protracted conflict. As a result of repeated failures
spanning almost a decade to have this section of the Trust
Agreement deleted, Union Trustees
sought a judicial determination under the Declaratory Judgment Act
that § 10 of the Trust Agreement
fails to meet the constraints of §§ 302(c)(5)(B) and 302(c)(6) of the LMRA.
In response, Employer
Trustees argue that a § 302 trust does not exist and therefore equal representation in the administration of the Trust Fund is not required. Compliance with the §§ 302(c)(5)(B) and (c)(6) requirements avoids the § 302 prohibition of payments by an employer to his employees, his employees’ representatives, their labor organizations, or officers or employees of such a labor organization.
After a full trial without a jury, the District Court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law on March 31, 1975. Included among these determinations is the District Court’s decision that no written Trust Fund Agreement had been executed or existed for the years 1964, 1966, 1967, 1972, 1973 and 1974.
Coupled with this finding is one that the trust fund in existence — known as the Gold Coast Electrical Joint Apprenticeship and Training Trust Fund (Trust Fund) — has been wholly funded by the employer and consequently the Trust Fund is “ . . . not controlled by Section 302 of the Taft-Hartley Act so that the employer must give the union an equal voice in the operation of the Fund.”
When the chaff of the arguments and issues presented is winnowed from the seed of this dispute, only a narrow issue remains. Has the executed 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement been ratified so all § 302 requirements must be followed?
On the basis of the uncontroverted facts in this record that a written trust agreement was executed by authorized representatives of both Union and Employers and that a Trust Fund has been created and operated in accordance with the Trust Agreement’s terms from 1962 to today, we hold that the Trust Agreement has been ratified and that the Trust Fund is a valid trust within the perimeters of § 302(c)(5)(B)’s and § 302(c)(6)’s application. In view of this, § 10 of the Trust Agreement is illegal, must be eliminated from the Trust Agreement, and equal representation must exist in the administration of the Gold Coast Electrical Joint Apprenticeship and Training Trust Fund.
Actions,
Words, Or History
In pre-1962 negotiations between Union and Employer Association encompassing a period from the early 1950’s,
the respective collective bargaining agreements have provided for a Local Joint Apprenticeship and Training Committee composed of equal numbers of management and labor representatives and requiring payments by each contractor to the Apprenticeship Program of $2.00 per month per indentured apprentice.
The Union was required to match the contractors’ payments.
During its negotiations which culminated in the collective bargaining agreement ef
fective on September 1, 1962, Union and Employer Association agreed to create an Apprenticeship and Training Trust Fund (Trust Fund) financed wholly by members of Employer Association. Included in the 1962 collective bargaining agreement was the provision of Article V, § 7 which states:
“The parties to this agreement shall have a joint apprenticeship and training trust fund agreement which shall conform to Section 302 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 as amended.”
Each successive collective bargaining agreement has contained the same requirement. On August 27, 1962, five days prior to the actual signing of the September 1, 1962 collective bargaining agreement, the Trust Agreement was executed by Marshall Williams
in his representative capacity for Union and Karl Behnke as agent for Employer Association.
From September 1962 forward the requisite payments have been made by Employers into the Trust Fund, succeeding collective bargaining agreements have contained the identical provision calling for a Trust Fund Agreement, and, most importantly, the conduct of the parties has demonstrated that each believed the 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement was the one referred to in each of the collective bargaining agreements from 1962 through 1974.
Indeed, were it not for one provision of the 1962 Trust Agreement, § 10, this dispute would not be before this Court today.
In 1967, Union’s displeasure with § 10 was piqued when its business manager, Marshall Williams, resigned and became both Chapter Manager of NECA and Executive Director of Trust Fund. In his new dual capacity, Williams’ salary began at $669.23 per week with a ten percent increase each January 1 during the life of the contract. By the fifth and last year of the contract, Williams’ salary would be approximately $50,000. Among the other perquisities provided was reimbursement for business connected automobile expenses at the rate of twenty cents per mile. Since 1967, Union Trustees have repeatedly and unsuccessfully attempted to have § 10 of the Trust Agreement eliminated. Finally, because of the inability to dislodge absolute control by Employer Trustees over hiring, firing, and compensation of Fund employees,
Union Trustees seek our resolution of this provision’s legality.
In resolving this dispute, this Court addresses whether a written Trust Fund Agreement exists,
whether the 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement has been ratified, whether a trust fund agreement in this Union Trustee-Employer Trustee dispute must conform to the dictates of § 302(c)(5)(B) and (c)(6) of the LMRA, and whether § 10 of the Trust Agreement violates these LMRA provisions.
Misuse, Influence Peddling, Bribery
Based on these actions, on the wording of these particular writings, and the historical development of the trust fund references which exist in the collective bargaining agreements, the drama between the two groups has unfolded. In simplest terms, this case is another of the perennial replays of labor-management disputes. Although the geographical setting of this disagreement is different from other, similar ones, it is staged with the back drop of concerns which gave rise to § 302.
Because of the abuses that have occurred in the cauldron of labor-management interplay which include misuse of labor organization funds, extortion by labor personnel, and attempts by business personnel to influence or exert pressure on union “personnel” —particularly in a financial form, restrictions on conduct between these two bodies and certain of their representatives have been imposed by Congress.
One is the § 302(c) prohibition of payments by an employer to labor organizations or to their representatives.
However, in certain explicitly, statutorily defined instances exceptions to this general prohibition exist. One permits payments to a trust fund for training and apprenticeship programs.
For such a trust fund to come within this exception, the statutory criteria set forth in § 302(c)(5) and (c)(6) must be met.
As any “curative” form of legislation designed to eliminate past abuses and prevent future ones, § 302’s prohibition combines an elimination of the then exist
ing abuses with its future-looking “prophylactic” purpose. See
Local No. 2 of Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Association v. Paramount Plastering, Inc.,
9 Cir., 1962, 310 F.2d 179, 186;
Employing Plasterers’ Association of Chicago
V.
Journeyman Plasterers’ Protective & Benevolent Society of Chicago,
7 Cir., 1960, 279 F.2d 92, 97. To retain this preventive effect against the onslaught of creative devices to avoid § 302’s application, this Court has recognized that strict compliance with the rigid structure of § 302 is necessary. In determining whether a trust fund satisfied the § 302(c)(5)(B) requirements, we have stated
Judicial adherence to the intention of Congress in enacting Section 302 requires strict enforcement of the purposefully rigid structure provided in this section.
Stuart Plastering, supra
at 1026.
Likewise, if the Trust Fund under examination in this case comes within § 302’s scope, such a strict enforcement of § 302(c)(5)(B)’s requirements must be followed.
Anticipation Of Ratification
Recognizing that, with the exception of § 302(c)(5)(B)’s equality of administration provision, the other requisites are present in the existing documents, Employer Trustees direct their sole attack on appeal at whether the 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement
is
the agreement contemplated on or after September 1, 1962. In other words, they contend that although the 27 August Trust Agreement may meet § 302’s requirements, it is not
the
Trust Fund Agreement called for by the September 1, 1962 collective bargaining agreement.
An attempt to bolster this argument is made by invoking our prior decision in
Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers International Union of America, Local Union No. 15, et al. v. Stuart Plastering,
5 Cir., 1975, 512 F.2d 1017, on which Employer Trustees rely as supporting their argument that the collective bargaining agreements contemplated or anticipated “. . . a trust agreement in future.” Even assuming this foundation to be based on bedrock — not shifting sand — we need not and do not address this issue. For ratification purposes, whether the Trust Agreement was executed before or after the 1962 collective bargaining agreement is irrelevant.
A written Trust Agreement exists which virtually tracks § 302’s standards. Both Union and Employer representatives who are not challenged on this record as lacking authority executed the 27 August Trust Agreement which has been operated under and remains in effect without change. Thus, a writing within § 302’s meaning exists if the 27 August Trust Agreement has been ratified.
Additionally and despite Employer Trustees’ assertion, whether a written, executed trust agreement may be ratified by subsequent actions was not before the
Stuart
Plastering
Court. In briefest form,
Stuart Plastering
entailed consideration of whether a collective bargaining agreement containing a schedule of payments, by itself,
satisfies § 302(c)(5). No trust agreement had been executed by the defendant employers
in
Stuart Plastering.
512 F.2d at 1019-20.
Another singularly distinguishing factor is apparent from a close reading of
Stuart Plastering.
Whether a trust fund agreement could be ratified or similarly assented to was explicitly stated
not
to be before the Court.
“Moreover, the appellants do not now contend, nor did they offer to prove in the district court, that the defendants ratified or assented to this particular agreement by making any payments that were consistent with its terms after the apparent date on its face.”
Id.
at 1029. For these reasons,
Stuart Plastering
cannot be considered as expressing this Court’s view on the ability of a union to ratify or adopt the terms of a written, executed trust agreement.
Ratification, Adoption, Or The Childless Parent
Under the pervasive evidence in the record regarding their beliefs
and the consistent conduct of the parties, Union and Employer Trustees have continually indicated that the 27 August writing is the Trust Fund Agreement required by the collective bargaining agreements. Consequently, the dispositive question is whether Florida law would recognize the Trust Agreement drafted, executed, and operated under by the parties as the agreement contemplated by Union and Employer Trustees. In other words, under Florida law does the conduct of the parties constitute a ratification or adoption of the 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement?
In considering whether ratification is a viable theory under Florida law, an important factor is that Marshall Williams signed the 27 August Trust Agreement on behalf of Union and Karl Behkne signed it on behalf of Employers’ Association. (R. 37-38). No challenge has been made of the authority of these individuals to execute the 27 August Trust Agreement for their principals. Also, this Trust Agreement was drafted by representatives for Union and Employers Association and, thus, with the knowledge and consent of both sides to the agreement. These parties have consistently recognized and acted in a manner which demonstrates ratification. They have continually operated the Trust Fund from its inception to the present day in conformity with the 27 August Trust Agreement as authorized by Article V, § 7 of each collective bargaining agreement subsequent to 1962.
In G
& M Restaurants Corporation v. Tropical Music Service, Inc.,
2d Dist.Fla.App., 1964,161 So.2d 556, 557-58, the Florida District Court quotes from generally recognized agency authorities that
. . .
Ratification as it relates to the law of agency is the express or implied adoption and confirmation by one person of an act or contract performed or entered into in his behalf by another without authority . . . However, . it is ordinarily required that for a ratification of an unauthorized act or transaction of an agent to be valid and binding, the principal shall have full knowledge, at the time of the ratification, of all material facts and circumstances relating to the unauthorized act or transaction, . . . .’ In speaking of ratification, it is universally held that ‘[i]t is always necessary, in order to have an effective ratification, that there shall be
an
intention on the part of the purported principal to ratify the act in question.’ Moreover, the required intention must be manifested in some way.” (Citations omitted).
For Union, no question exists about its full knowledge and intent to ratify. Union manifested this ratification and has accepted the benefits of the Trust Fund. Apprentices have entered this program, been trained, and become full-fledged, card carrying dues paying members of Local 728. For each of these Local 728 members, contributions have been made into the Trust Fund benefiting Union Trustees and those they represent. In such circumstances, a Florida Court would hold that Union has ratified the written, executed Trust Agreement. See
Branford State Bank v. Howell Company,
1924, 88 Fla. 493, 102 So. 649, 650;
Oxford Lake Line v. First National Bank of Pensacola,
1898, 40 Fla. 349, 24 So. 480, 482-84;
see also, Smith v. Loftis Plumbing and Heating Co., 1933, 112
Fla. 382,150 So. 645;
Bellaire Securities Corp.
v.
Brown,
1936,124 Fla. 47,168 So. 625;
Proodian v. Plymouth Citrus Growers
Association, 1943, 152 Fla. 684, 13 So.2d 15.
The only possible valid defense Employer Trustees offer against ratification is that the union members must vote their approval of the Trust Agreement. Nothing in the record indicates that the Trust Agreement had to ever be directly voted on by the union membership. Absent an explicit requirement for this “voting requirement”, we find this assertion to be without merit.
Probably the ultimate manifestation of ratification, and accordingly most telling blow to Employer Trustees’ no ratification argument, is Union Trustees continued attempts to have the disputed provision of the Trust Agreement altered or deleted. How can one contend that a provision of an
agreement is illegal or must be changed if one has not ratified, adopted or otherwise accepted that agreement? From their converse position, how can Employer Trustees contend that § 10 is proper if the 27 August Trust Agreement has not been ratified?
Following this Florida authority, the actions and conduct discussed above indicate that all parties intended, still intend, believed and still believe, the written executed 27 August 1962 Trust Agreement to be
the
agreement required by each of the collective bargaining agreements. By ratification, the 27 August Trust Agreement is the Trust Fund Agreement contemplated by Article V, § 7. We do not accept Employer Trustees’ contention that under the respective collective bargaining agreements — the Trust Fund’s parent documents — ratification is precluded. Consequently, the Trust Fund does not have a gap in its lineage for want of the necessary Trust Fund Agreement.
The District Court’s erroneous finding was caused by misplaced reliance on
Moglia v. Geoghegan,
2 Cir., 1968, 403 F.2d 110,
cert. denied,
394 U.S. 919, 89 S.Ct. 1193, 22 L.Ed.2d 453; and Local Union No. 529,
United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America v. Bracy Development Co., Inc.,
W.D.Ark., 1971, 321 F.Supp. 869.
Scrutiny of these cases reveals their inapplicability to this Union Trustee-Employer Trustee dispute.
Moglia
addresses whether payments could legally be made into a trust fund by an employer who was not a party to the signed trust agreement and had repeatedly refused to be a signatory of the collective bargaining agreements which required a trust agreement.
Why the
Moglia
Court found lack of mutuality of agreement and mutuality of obligation necessary for ratification is evident. The employer in
Moglia
had declined
to become a party to both the collective bargaining agreement and the trust agreement.
In a similar fashion,
Bracy Development Co., Inc., supra,
is not applicable. In this Western District of Arkansas case, Bracy was not a member of the Contractors Association which had negotiated the collective bargaining and trust agreements. Bracy never executed these agreements, nor did Local 529 present evidence showing that an agent of Bracy’s with sufficient express, implied, or inherent authority executed these documents for Bracy.
Unlike
Moglia
and
Bracy,
this case is an instance where Employer and Union representatives negotiated, drafted, and executed both a Trust Agreement and collective bargaining agreements, and subsequently conducted their affairs in accordance with the terms of each for over twelve years. Because of these differences,
Moglia
and
Bracy
do not sustain their usage by the District Court for the proposition that Union and Employer Association have never executed a written Trust Fund Agreement for the years in question. One was executed on 27 August 1962 and subsequently ratified.
As a second basis for its conclusion that Union Trustees are not entitled to a voice in the selection and direction of the employees of the Trust Fund, the District Court also predicated its opinion on the following, rather unilluminating recitation.
“In addition, the Apprenticeship Trust Fund which has been in operation is wholly funded by the employer. In such event it is not controlled by Section 302 of the Taft-Hartley Act so that the employer must give the union an equal voice in the operation of the Fund.
Independent Association of Mutual Employees of New York State v. New York [Racing Ass’n],
398 F.2d 587 (2d Cir., 1968).”
In
Independent Association of Mutual Employees,
payments were made by an employer to a trust fund benefiting his employees, an employee representative. See
Local No. 2 of Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons International Association
v.
Paramount Plastering, Inc.,
9 Cir., 1962, 310 F.2d 179, 182-83, 185-86,
cert. denied,
372 U.S. 944, 83 S.Ct. 935, 9 L.Ed.2d 969;
Mechanical Contractors Association of Philadelphia, Inc. v. Local Union 420,
3 Cir., 1959, 265 F.2d 607, 610-11;
Sheet Metal Workers Association of San Francisco v. Sheet Metal Workers International Association,
9 Cir., 1957, 248 F.2d 307, 315. Any such payments are illegal unless all the prerequisites of § 302 are met. The one absent in
Independent Association of Mutual Employees
and this case is equality of administration under § 302(c)(5)(B). We find it impossible to approve
Independent Association of Mutual Employees
the affect of which would be to encourage open, flagrant violation of the Act by the simple expediency of having all of the contributions from the employer.
Thus, it does not sustain the District Court’s determination that this Trust Fund is not governed by § 302 of the LMRA.
On the basis of our determination from the overwhelming evidence that a written Trust Agreement was executed and ratified and an improper legal standard was utilized, the trial court’s conclusion that as a matter of law a written trust agreement
“. . .
has not been executed by union and management” and its finding that no written trust agreement exists may not stand.
Equality Versus Inequality
The plain terms of § 302(a) indicate in subdivision (1) that before a § 302 trust exists requiring compliance with the provisions of § 302(c)(5)(B), a payment must be made from an employer to “. . . any representative of any of his employees who are employed in an industry affecting commerce”.
The payments by the contractor members of Employer Association represent payments by an employer to an employee “representative” within the meaning of and the prohibitions of § 302(a)(1).
See
Operative Plasterers and Cement Masons, supra
at 182-86;
Mechanical Contractors Association of Philadelphia, supra
at 610-11;
Sheet Metal Workers Association of San Francisco, supra
at 315. Thus, this Trust Fund must comply with § 302.
One of the mandates of § 302(c)(5)(B) is that there be equal representation by employers and employees in the administration of the trust fund. 29 U.S.C. § 186(c)(5)(B). Knowing that § 302 requires equal representation, remembering that the purpose of § 302 is, at the least partially, to prevent abuses — not requiring that one actually occur,
and being aware
of the infinite creativity of mankind to circumvent such statutory schemes, we conclude that § 10 of the 27 August Trust Agreement violates the provisions of § 302(c)(6) and (c)(5)(B) requiring equal representation. Although we wish to emphasize that none of the flagrant, impermissible abuses which gave birth to § 302 have occurred in this case,
our decision is based upon the recognition that § 302 would be eviscerated should the phrase “employees and employers are equally represented in the administration of such fund” connotate
only
the requirement that employees and employers have equal numbers of trustees, three each in this case, or representatives.
If one wishes to circumvent the purposes for which § 302 was adopted, it requires little ingenuity to foresee that control over the hiring, firing, and salary determinations of Trust Fund employees solely by Employer Trustees would enable the unscrupulous union representative to seek indirect payments of the form § 302 was designed to prevent by demanding employment of friends or relatives. At the opposite extreme, an employer bent on the disaffection of an employee representative may offer employment to such a person’s spouse, relative, or friend.
Of more immediate bearing to this case is the existence of a trust fund created for the benefit of employees which has an administration exclusively chosen and controlled by Employer Trustees. In 1967, the Director of the Trust Fund shifted from Union’s to Employers’ employment and signed a contract which provides for a salary of approximately $50,000 per year by 1972 plus reimbursement for business expenses including twenty cents per mile for automobile expenses. As an additional complication, the Executive Director also acts as NECA Chapter Manager, the Employer Association’s. It does not strain one’s imagination to think that any trust fund administrator — especially one for the benefit of employees — will listen closely to the words of his major master, Employer Trustees.
These are the subtle forces that have often tempted the most honorable among us. It is the preventive aspect of § 302 which recognizes the frailty inherent in mankind and seeks to avert these temptations by specifying a rigid structure before the Gold Coast Electrical Joint Apprenticeship and Training Trust Fund, or any trust fund, is exempted from its prohibitions. For these reasons, strict application of the mandates of § 302 is required by this Court to this Trust Agreement.
In summary, we find that (i) a written Trust Fund Agreement containing within its four corners all of the requirements of § 302 of the LMRA has existed, been ratified, and continues to be operated under, (ii) the Gold Coast Electrical Joint Apprenticeship and Training Trust Fund must comply with the provisions of § 302 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, and (iii) § 10 of the Trust Agreement violates § 302(c)(5)(B) requiring equal representation.
For these reasons, the ruling of the District Court is reversed.
REVERSED.