Roddy v. United Mine Workers of America

1914 OK 43, 139 P. 126, 41 Okla. 621, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 19, 1914
Docket3221
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1914 OK 43 (Roddy v. United Mine Workers of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roddy v. United Mine Workers of America, 1914 OK 43, 139 P. 126, 41 Okla. 621, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 196 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

The court sustained a demurrer to the petition, which is lengthy, but which we think is fairly summarized as follows:

The plaintiff alleges:

That the defendant United Mine Workers of America is a voluntary association composed of men engaged in coal mining, in the United States, Mexico, and Canada. That defendant United Mine Workers of America, District No. 21, is a part and *623 subdivision of the United Mine Workers of America. That defendant Local Union No. 1811 is also a local subdivision of the association. That the 500 or 600 individuals sued are members of the general and district organizations, through their membership in the said local union. That all of the defendants are bound together in one organized body “for the purpose and with the object of uniting all employees who produce- or handle coal or coke in or around mines, into one body, and to ameliorate their conditions by conciliation, arbitration or strike.”

That the local union secures members for the organization; transacts business of a local nature relating to the organization and its departments; elects local officers and representatives to the national organization; elects or appoints agents, representatives, and committees; and vests them with power and authority to represent the local union in its dealings with the mine operators, etc.

That all the individual defendants were members of the union and were in the emplo}' of the Western Coal & Mining Company, and that as such members of such organization defendants declared who should be employed by such coal company. That there was a parol agreement between the coal company and the defendants in their organized capacity that no one objectionable to organized labor would be employed in its coal mines.

That on the 1st of May, 1909, and for a long time prior thereto, plaintiff had been in the employ of the coal company as an entryman, and was receiving $125- per month for his work. That his relations with the coal company were amicable, and its agents had informed him that he would be retained in its employment so long as his work was satisfactory.

(3) That the defendants conspired “willfully, knowingly, maliciously, and unlawfully” to procure plaintiff’s discharge, to destroy his reputation and credit, and to harass and annoy him, to prevent his securing employment, and to publish him as a nonunion man, etc.

(4.) The fourth paragraph is lengthy, and complains of the union “blacklisting the defendant on the books of the union” *624 as a nonunion man, etc. (It is not clear what this paragraph intends to charge, unless it be relative to some trial or expulsion of plaintiff from the union; at any rate the language is so indefinite that it is unimportant in this summary.)

The petition then sets out the specific things the defendants are charged with doing at great length, and we think with much superfluity of words, and which, summarized, alleges:

That about May 1, 1909, a committee of the local union (naming the individuals) called on the mine foreman, William Veatch, and informed him “that the plaintiff, J. H. Roddy, was a nonunion man and .a man objectionable to the United Mine Workers of America and the membership thereof, defendants herein, had been so recorded on. the books of the defendants herein; that he, the said J. H. Roddy, plaintiff, was a man unfit to work with union men, and that they, etc., demanded * * * that said William Veatch * * * discharge the plaintiff,’" etc.

It is then charged that this committee made the same statements and demands of John S. Cameron, the mine superintendent. It is then charged that James Mullen, a representative of the United Mine Workers of America, and Mose Clevenger, a representative of district No. 31, of the organization, appeared before John S. Cameron, superintendent, and made the same statements and demands made by the local committee as above stated, with the additional statement that if plaintiff was retained in the employ of the company the defendants would strike and quit their employment with it.

The petition then charges that plaintiff was discharged by the coal company on account of the actions of the defendants, saying that they would strike, and because of the agreement between the company and the union that no nonunion man would be retained in its employment, and that he would not have been discharged but for the actions of the defendants as alleged.

The petition then proceeds with several pages of matter dealing with the results to him of his discharge from his employment, and the recordation of the fact that he was a nonunion man, and the various ways in which he has suffered and been injured thereby, and of the various elements entering into his *625 claim of an aggregate of $100,000 damages from the defendants, but we think the gravamen of the charge claimed to be actionable has been made to fully appear in the above synopsis of the petition.

When the petition in this case is studied and analyzed, it clearly appears that the thing complained of — the acts forming the sole basis upon which the suit is founded, and for which relief in the way of damages is sought — is that these union men protested to their employer, the coal company, against plaintiff’s retention as a workman at the mine, and followed this with the statement that if he was so retained the union men would quit work; the reason given being that plaintiff was a nonunion man. If this action was lawful, it follows that damages cannot be predicated upon it. So our inquiry is ended when we determine whether the defendants, in what they did, were within their legal rights.

Since many individual laborers, in the various trades, have brought themselves together into large and well-organized bodies, with the power, necessarily, and we think rightly, of affecting wages, hours of employment, and other physical as well as moral conditions in all the wide fields of industry, the rights and duties of such organizations and the members thereof, with regard to their employers, as well as to society as a whole, has been a fruitful field of litigation, and practically every court in this' country has had occasion to consider some of the many phases of the question: This has brought about much conflict of opinion, but, as we view it, our duty is best performed by confining our remarks here closely to the sole question involved; for, as we perceive it, while the tangled web of judicial opinion affords opportunity for a delightful excursion far afield, yet, one who essays to ramble there must be a very wise man if he does not say concerning it either too much or too little.

We take it as fundamental that any man, in the absence of a contract to work a definite time, has a right to quit whenever he chooses, for any reason satisfactory to him, or without any reason. If his wages are not satisfactory, his hours too long, his work too hard, his employer or employment uncongenial, or *626 his colaborers objectionable, his right to quit is absolute. We think, under the better authority, that what an individual may do, a number of his colaborers may join him in doing, provided the thing to be done is lawful.

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 43, 139 P. 126, 41 Okla. 621, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roddy-v-united-mine-workers-of-america-okla-1914.