Producers Produce Co. v. Industrial Commission of Missouri, Division of Employment Security

281 S.W.2d 619, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 180
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 1955
Docket7292-7300
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 281 S.W.2d 619 (Producers Produce Co. v. Industrial Commission of Missouri, Division of Employment Security) 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
Producers Produce Co. v. Industrial Commission of Missouri, Division of Employment Security, 281 S.W.2d 619, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 180 (Mo. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

*622 McDOWELL, Presiding Judge.

The appeals herein are prosecuted by the Industrial Commission of Missouri, Division of Employment Security, from judgment of the Circuit Court of Greene County, Missouri, reversing final decision of the Commission in favor of Claimants for unemployment benefits against Producers Produce Company in consolidated cases Nos. 26085, 26518, 27699, 27683, 27659, 27673, 27663, 27657, and 27701.

We have here nine separate appeals involving issues of unemployment benefits claimed by employees of respondent under the Unemployment Compensation Law. The issues involved in each appeal are the same and have the same factual basis and by agreement are consolidated for opinion.

The essential facts common to all of the appeals are as follows: Respondent, employer, operates under the agricultural cooperative marketing act and is engaged primarily in the processing of poultry and eggs with minor operations in hides and wool. It secures its produce from various produce collecting stations over the outlying country side and processes same in Springfield.

Claimants are production employees of respondent. Prior to June 3, 1950, a labor dispute arose between respondent and its employees as to wage scales and other terms of employment; all of the employees were represented by Local No. 172 of the Amalgamated Meat Cutter and Butcher Workers of North America, an A. F. of L. affiliate. A strike was called June 3rd, and all of the employees, including claimants, joined in the strike and established picket lines at the plant. A complete stoppage of work resulted for the first three days; June 6th, respondent gave notice in the newspapers of Springfield that it would employ replacement help and, thereafter, did begin hiring replacement labor, including fifteen of the strikers, who abandoned the strike. June 7th, the egg drying department was reopened and, thereafter, respondent gradually resumed its other activities, ultimately receiving poultry and reopening its poultry processing department. The testimony shows that the company did not turn any of its business away after about the middle of July.

No actual production figures were offered in evidence but employer’s exhibit 5 offered in evidence contained data of the number of employees added to and separated from respondent’s payroll in weekly periods subsequent to the strike. This exhibit shows that on the week ending June 8th, 150 workers were hired and that respondent continued to hire workers in substantial numbers through the week ending July 6th, but the week ending July 13th, one worker was hired and 37 laid off and the following week 60 workers were laid off. The picket line was maintained continuously by the union until January 19th, 1951, when, by agreement, the strike was terminated. Throughout the labor dispute the striking workers, including claimants, devoted varying periods of their time to picket duty, being assigned to regular schedules involving their presence at the lot or plant from two to six hours daily. These persons were actually on the picket line a small portion of the time but remained at or near the plant between turns on the picket line. There was no rule of the union requiring picket duty and claimants were free to seek work at times when they were not actually doing picket duty.

The International Union distributed $10-00 a week strike benefits to the strikers at the lot to members who applied for same. Picket duty was not required for such payment.

The Appeals Referee considered, in addition to the evidence relating to the issues common to all of the claims, the testimony of each claimant bearing on his efforts to find work, denied benefits to claimants with respect to claims filed for weeks prior to July 9, 1950, as well as any subsequent week in which he found them not to have been available for work. He allowed benefits with respect to claims filed for weeks subsequent to July 8, 1950, in which he found the claimants to have been available for work.

*623 The Appeals Referee, in his findings on issues of fact common to all claimants, found in substance, as follows:

(a) that any unemployment of the claimants in the period from June 3, 1950, through July 8, 1950, was due to a stoppage of work which was in existence because of a labor dispute at the respondent’s establishment; that subsequent to July 8, 1950, the unemployment of the claimants was no longer due to a stoppage of work in existence because of a labor dispute at the respondent’s plant.

(b) that claimants, in withholding their services from respondent during the strike, did not intend to sever the employment relationship, and, therefore, did not leave their work voluntarily within the meaning of the Unemployment Compensation Law.

(c) that the $10.00 weekly strike benefit was a gratuity and not “wages” which would have to be taken into consideration-in determining the amount of benefits to which the claimants might otherwise be entitled; that the claimants were unemployed.

(d) that the picketing done by the claimants was not of such nature or extent as to render them unavailable for work within the meaning of the Act.

Respondent’s appeals to the Industrial Commission of Missouri from the Referee’s decisions were denied by the Commission, thereby making said Referee's decisions those of the Commission for the purpose of judicial review.

Appeals from the decision of the Industrial Commission in each of the cases herein involved were instituted February 6, 1952, in the Circuit Court of Greene County, Missouri, praying for an order of the court reversing the decisions of the Commission as to each of the defendant-claimants.

The petition for review, in part, stated that the Commission erred in finding that claimants’ unemployment after July 8th was not due to a stoppage of work existing at employer’s establishment due to a labor dispute, and, further, that any failure to produce at a normal rate after that time may well have been due to factors other than the labor dispute.' .

That the Referee erred in finding that claimants, in withholding services from the employer, did not intend to abandon work and that employer actually terminated claimants’ employment and that claimants did not leave work voluntarily.

That the Commission erred in not finding that under the law and evidence the stoppage of work of the claiming employees, resulting from a labor dispute in which the employees were and are now participating, made them ineligible for unemployment compensation benefits.

That the Referee erred in finding that claimants did not leave their employment voluntarily without good cause attributable to their employment.

That the Referee erred in holding that t.he payment of $10.00 weekly, made by. the Union, is a , gratuity dferived from union membership and not a payment for services, requiring deductions from benefit payments.

The causes were consolidated and tried by the Circuit Court resulting in the following judgment: “It is therefore considered, ordered and adjudged that the said Findings and Award made herein by the Industrial' Commission of Missouri, Division of Employment Security, be and the same is reversed as to each and every one of the Defendant-Claimants herein; * * *”

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Bluebook (online)
281 S.W.2d 619, 1955 Mo. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/producers-produce-co-v-industrial-commission-of-missouri-division-of-moctapp-1955.