Palmquist v. Buhl Sons Co.

179 F. Supp. 638, 45 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2987, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2431
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 5, 1959
DocketNos. 18311, 18312
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 F. Supp. 638 (Palmquist v. Buhl Sons Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmquist v. Buhl Sons Co., 179 F. Supp. 638, 45 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2987, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2431 (E.D. Mich. 1959).

Opinion

O’SULLIVAN, District Judge.

These cases were consolidated. The Court’s opinion, findings and conclusions will apply to both cases.

Preliminarily, the Court will review undisputed facts, and recital thereof will constitute findings of fact, in addition to the specific findings on matters that might be considered as being in dispute.

Plaintiffs, Gerald J. Palmquist, and Allen DeRose, were, and are, employees of defendant, Buhl Sons Company. While so employed, both entered the armed forces. These suits involve claimed breach by defendant of plaintiffs’ rights as veterans returning to employment.

Buhl Sons Company is primarily, but not exclusively, a wholesale hardware concern. It has two general departments, the warehouse department, where goods offered for sale are kept, sorted and made available for sale through the office department, and the office department where the general office administration, sales department, taking of orders, and like activities are carried on. These divisions have various classifications of activities. Employees in the warehouse are classified as order clerks, checkers, warehousemen, and others. Order clerks select goods from the warehouse required to fill orders. Checkers check the goods that are being made available to fill the orders. In the office department there is a classification known as order board. Employees on the order board take orders and direct the filling of them through the warehouse. Also, in the office department are sales promotion men, salesmen and others. Generally, wages in the office division are higher than those paid in the warehouse.

Employees in both departments are-represented by Local Union No. 772,. UAW-CIO. At all times involved here,, there existed a contract between defendant and the aforesaid local union.

Both plaintiffs became employees in-the warehouse department of defendant, in 1949. They both entered the army in 1952, both being then employed as-checkers. Both returned from service in 1954 and applied for re-employment by defendant. Their service experience, and time of applying for re-employment entitled them to all rights provided for-returning veterans by the Universal Military Training and Service Act, 65 Stat. 86 (1951, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 459, as amended). Plaintiff Palmquist was. re-employed as a general warehouseman, an equivalent position to his pre-service-job as checker. Plaintiff DeRose was reemployed in his pre-service job of checker.

While plaintiffs were in the service,, other employees in the warehouse, presumably in the classification of checkers,, whose plantwide seniority was less than plaintiffs (crediting plaintiffs with their-service time) were promoted to the order-board on the office side of defendant. Neither plaintiff objected to his re-employment as checker and general warehouseman, respectively.

Plaintiffs continued in said positions-, until both were promoted to the order-board in 1955. They continued in such positions until May 27, 1957. On that, date, because of the necessity for defendant to re-employ other returning-veterans who had left for service as employees of the order board, defendant was required to reduce the number of employees in the order board classification. Taking into account the time spent, in service by all of the then employees of the order board and the then returning veterans, the plaintiffs had the least seniority on the order board. There-were, however, at least two of these employees whose plantwide seniority was [640]*640less than the plaintiffs’. They had, however, gained greater seniority on the order board by having been promoted there while plaintiffs were in service. Plaintiffs claim that these two with less plantwide seniority than plaintiffs should have been the ones demoted, leaving plaintiffs on the order board.

Following their 1957 demotion to positions as checkers, plaintiffs continued in such classification until in 1958, when both were again promoted to the office department in positions which they concede are appropriate to their seniority status.

In this case, the plaintiffs seek to recover damages represented by the difference between the wages received by them from the time of their re-employment until the time of the respective promotions to the order board and the pay that would have been received by them had they been placed on the order board when re-employed upon their return from service. They also seek to recover the difference in pay between what they received as checkers from the time of the demotion on May 27, 1957, until they were later promoted and the pay they would have received during that period of time had they continued on the order board instead of being demoted.

Decision here depends upon whether, under the evidence, this Court should find that had the plaintiffs not been in the service they would, during that time, have been promoted to the order board. If so, they were entitled to be re-employed in that classification and, when demotions were necessary in 1957, their seniority on the order board would have prevented their being demoted.

The contract between defendant and the Union provides in Section 9, Article Y, under the catch line “New Classifications and Promotions” as follows:

“When new classifications are created or vacancies in established classifications occur, the oldest employee on the seniority list shall be given preference in filling such vacancy or new classification so far as practicable and consistent with proper ability to perform the services required. All vacancies or new classifications shall be posted by the company on all Bulletin Boards for three (3) working days before being filled.
“Employees promoted to higher paid classifications or a classification on which they have had no previous experience shall be given a three (3) day period to demonstrate their ability.
“No new employee shall be hired by the company in any classification until all employees on the seniority list have been given the opportunity to fill the position.”

In Section 5 of Article VI of the same contract, under the catch line “Military Service” the contract provides:

“An employee who either volunteers, is drafted, or is called to active service and who serves in the Armed Forces of the United States shall not lose his seniority status due to such service. Upon his return to the regular active employment of the company, he shall have reinstated his full accumulated seniority, including the period spent in such Armed Forces, and shall be put back into his original department provided (i) that he is honorably discharged and (ii) is physically capable of working and (iii) reports for work within ninety (90) days from the date of discharge. Cases of a special nature with respect to which these provisions cannot or should not be put into effect shall be decided upon in joint session between management and the Union Bargaining Committee.”

Under Section 7 of Article V of the contract, under the catch line “Plant-Wide Seniority” it was provided:

“In the event that an employee on the seniority list has been or is about to be laid off and a position should be available or should.be held by an employee with lesser senior[641]

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Bluebook (online)
179 F. Supp. 638, 45 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2987, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmquist-v-buhl-sons-co-mied-1959.