Saginaw Pattern Makers' Ass'n v. Saginaw Pattern & Manufacturing Co.

233 N.W.2d 537, 62 Mich. App. 332, 90 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3048, 1975 Mich. App. LEXIS 1062
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1975
DocketDocket No. 21023
StatusPublished

This text of 233 N.W.2d 537 (Saginaw Pattern Makers' Ass'n v. Saginaw Pattern & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saginaw Pattern Makers' Ass'n v. Saginaw Pattern & Manufacturing Co., 233 N.W.2d 537, 62 Mich. App. 332, 90 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3048, 1975 Mich. App. LEXIS 1062 (Mich. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

D. E. Holbrook, J.

We elect to quote the facts of this case, as taken from the detailed opinion of the learned trial court.

"Plaintiffs have instituted this action for an injunction and substantial damages which they claim they are entitled to receive because defendant has breached its contract of employment with plaintiff Union.
"The facts in the case are either undisputed or easily ascertainable from the evidence. During the period of its prior union contract with plaintiffs, defendant had performed work for the General Motors Corporation by responding to invitations to bid on certain specific jobs. In the event defendant’s bid was accepted, General Motors issued a purchase order to defendant covering the total amount involved. Defendant would then proceed to supply the finished product to General Motors in accordance with the provisions of the purchase order and General Motors would pay defendant the specific sum stated in the purchase order. In handling such business, defendant performed most of the work in its own pattern and manufacturing shop but often subcontracted portions of a job to the Brettrager Machine Company which would do whatever defendant ordered done and return that part of the General Motors job to defendant which would deliver the finished product to General Motors pursuant to the provisions of the agree[334]*334ment contained in the purchase order General Motors had issued to defendant. Defendant would then pay Brettrager for the work it had done for defendant and collect from General Motors the full amount bid on the total job as indicated by the terms of the purchase order General Motors issued to plaintiff [defendant].
"Since Brettrager was not a union pattern shop, however, plaintiffs changed the previous practice outlined above by expressly including in the present contract with defendant a Memorandum of Understanding which provided in pertinent part as follows:
" 'ITEM 3: The employers agree that at the end of this 18-month period any work subcontracted because of his lack of adequate necessary equipment or manpower shall be subcontracted only to pattern shops in which the employees enjoy virtually the same wages, hours, and other conditions of employment equal to those conditions in this agreement.’
"The Memorandum of Understanding was made pursuant to Article 1 Section 3 of the Union Contract between the parties which insofar as that is material at this time read as follows:
" 'SEC. 3: The laying out of patterns and related pattern equipment; the making, maintaining and repairing of pattern and related pattern equipment: the making, maintaining and repair of wood models, hammer forms, fixtures, plastics, plasters, permanent molds, dies cast, and other processes, techniques and methods or other materials, and related equipment as they pertain to patternmaking and model making performed by the Company shall be done exclusively by employees covered by this Agreement, except as provided for in Memorandum of Understanding.’
. "In this suit plaintiffs have charged that defendant specifically breached the terms of the contract by its action in connection with a V-6 and a V-8 diesel engine block job and also a disc brake rotor job ordered by General Motors, resulting in substantial damages which plaintiffs claim they are entitled to obtain, along with a permanent injunction prohibiting defendant from any similar conduct in the future. Plaintiffs insist that defendant has deliberately violated the obvious purpose [335]*335and intent of the mentioned Memorandum of Understanding by refusing to hire extra or overtime pattern makers or to subcontract portions of the jobs to other pattern shops in order to increase pattern makers employment as agreed. Plaintiffs charge that defendant has continued to channel its work to Brettrager, the same non-patternmaking machine shop as before the present contract which expressly prohibits the practice.
"Defendant, of course, denies any violation of the contract, claiming that it has not subcontracted any part of its jobs to Brettrager but instead has contracted only with General Motors for all of the work specified in its purchase orders, which it did in its own shop with qualified pattern makers employed by defendant and that any work Brettrager did was under an entirely separate contrae! Brettrager had made directly with General Motors which was free to do business with any firm it chose on the basis of individual bids from various bidders. Defendant insists that it did not have either the physical or financial resources necessary to do these entire jobs for General Motors and could not have bid on them at all as a complete package designed by General Motors. Defendant admits, however, that in order to get some business for its firm and to keep its own pattern makers employed as it did do, defendant indicated to General Motors what portions of the jobs it could and would bid on and what portions it believed Brettrager could do. General Motors then was free to issue purchase orders to defendant and to Brettrager under separate contracts with each, or to accept, bids from other firms on any portions of the jobs or to contract with any of defendant’s competitors for the total work desired.”

Thereafter, the trial court found:

"Although plaintiffs’ counsel inveighs against the alleged 'subterfuge’ and 'deception’ of defendant in violating the 'spirit and intent’ of the contract with a defense of 'transparent nonsense’, the contract speaks for itself in clear and unmistakable language. It provides that 'any work subcontracted * * * shall be sub[336]*336contracted only to pattern shops in which the employees enjoy virtually the same wages, hours and other conditions of employment equal to those conditions in this Agreement’.
"Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary defines a subcontract as: 'a contract under, or subordinate to a previous contract’. The verb 'subcontract’ is defined as follows: 'To contract under, or for the performance of part or all of, another contract’. The legal definition of the term subcontracted is well stated in People v Morrison, 228 Mich 216, 221; 199 NW 689, 691 (1924): 'A subcontractor is one who entered into a contract, express or implied, for the performance of an act with a person who has already contracted for its performance’. See also People v Fidelity & Deposit Co, 232 Mich 238 Hd 5; 205 NW 157 (1925), People v US Fidelity & Guaranty Co, 263 Mich 638 Hd 3; 249 NW 20 (1933).
"The evidence shows that defendant did not enter into a contract with Brettrager, nor subcontract any work to Brettrager, did not supervise or pay Brettrager, or receive any profit on Brettrager’s separate. contract with General Motors for certain specified work and the extras which Brettrager furnished to General Motors in accordance with its own purchase order issued directly to it by General Motors for the work Brettrager did for that company. Although defendant had previously subcontracted work to Brettrager, none of defendant’s work was 'subcontracted’ after the present contract between the parties hereto went into effect. As a matter of fact and law, defendant then made its own separate, individual contracts with General Motors and so did Brettrager.

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Bluebook (online)
233 N.W.2d 537, 62 Mich. App. 332, 90 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3048, 1975 Mich. App. LEXIS 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saginaw-pattern-makers-assn-v-saginaw-pattern-manufacturing-co-michctapp-1975.