Stephenson v. New Orleans & N. E. R.

177 So. 509, 180 Miss. 147, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 123
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1937
DocketNo. 32877.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 177 So. 509 (Stephenson v. New Orleans & N. E. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephenson v. New Orleans & N. E. R., 177 So. 509, 180 Miss. 147, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 123 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellants, W. A. Stephenson and others, who for the past several years have been and are now employed as train dispatchers of the appellee, New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company, and located and working at Hattiesburg, Miss., dispatching said company’s trains *158 between Meridian, Miss., and New Orleans, La., brought this suit in the chancery court of Forrest county, Miss., seeking to enjoin the appellee railroad company from violating the seniority rights of said employees under a contract of September 1, 1929, executed by and between H. W. Miller, vice president of the several railroad companies comprising what is known as the Southern Railway System, and F. W. Stange, as general chairman of the American Train Dispatchers’ Association, for and on behalf of each of the separate railroad companies and the respective train dispatching employees thereof. There was an original, amended, and amended and supplemental bill of complaint filed, and demurrers were sustained to the original and amended bills. The case was finally heard and determined upon the amended and supplemental bill of complaint, and upon the separate answers of the appellees, New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company and F. "W. Stange, in each of which there was embodied a demurrer, and also upon oral and documentary evidence. The decree of the court below dismissed the appellants’ bill on the merits on final hearing and dissolved the interlocutory injunction previously granted, but superseded the effect of the decree dissolving the injunction pending this appeal here.

At the time of the execution of the contract sought to be enforced by the appellants in this suit, the appellee F. W. Stange, who was made a party to the suit and personally served with process upon the insistence by the appellee railroad company that he and others were necessary and indispensable parties thereto, was employed as a train dispatcher on the Alabama Great Southern Railroad, and has since continued as such employee. The controversy in this case was inspired, and has been kept alive, by the appellee F. W. Stange, by reason of his insistence on a certain interpretation and application being given to two certain paragraphs of the contract. These pertinent paragraphs are headed “Seniority,” and are as follows:

*159 “Article 4.
“. . . (b) Train dispatchers’seniority shall be limited to one superintendent’s jurisdiction. . . .
“ (m) When, for any reason, two or more dispatchers’ offices are consolidated, seniority of such offices shall be pooled. Train dispatchers affected shall have prior rights to corresponding- positions in these consolidated offices, carrying their seniority with them. After such rights have been exercised, seniority rules will govern. If consolidation results in force reduction, if qualified, oldest men shall have prior rights to positions remaining.”

In view of the conclusion that we have, reached and the decision that we are rendering in this case, we feel that the scope of the litigation, and the issue involved, as to whether an award of the National Railroad Adjustment Board should be disregarded as a nullity for want of jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the dispute in question, make it both necessary and proper that the various steps taken during- the pendency and progress of the controversy which finally culminated in the award being* made by such National Railroad Adjustment Board, which was organized under the act of Congress known as Railway Labor Act 1934, 48 Stat. 1185, 45 U. S. C., sections 151-164 (45 U. S. C. A., sections 151-164), amending Railway Labor Act 1926, 44 Stat. 577, to settle disputes between a carrier and its employees, should be set forth in this opinion with sufficient clarity and detail to make clear our views on the issue involved.

It must be kept in mind that the Southern Railway System is a name used merely for convenience in the operation of the affiliated railroad corporations comprising the System; that the Southern Railway System is not itself a corporation or legal entity; that it is not a signatory contract sued on; that the railroad corporations comprising the System are the Southern' Railway Company, the Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway Company, the Alabama Great Southern Railroad *160 Company, New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company, Georgia Southern & Florida Railway Company, Harriman & Northeastern Railroad Company, and Northern Alabama Railway Company, all of which were separate and distinct carriers, separate and distinct corporations, with separate and distinct boards of directors and officers, conducting separate and distinct businesses. And referring, for the purposes of this decision, to two of these companies, it is to be noted that the appellee New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company is a corporation owning and operating, in interstate commerce, an interstate line of railroad extending from Meridian, Miss., through Hattiesburg, Miss., to New Orleans, La., and the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company is a corporation owning and operating, in interstate and intrastate commerce, an interstate line of railroad extending from Chattanooga, Tenn., through parts of Tennessee, Georgia, and Alabama (passing through Birmingham and York) to Meridian, Miss., where it connects with the northern end of the line of the New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company.

Pursuant to the terms of the contract, which became effective as aforesaid on September 1, 1929, a seniority list of all train dispatchers on each of these two railroad companies (and we assume that this was true as to the other affiliated railroad corporations comprising the Southern Railway System) was compiled and kept available for inspection by the train dispatchers in their respective offices. These seniority lists were to be revised in January of each year, and the record shows that as of January 1, 1932, the seniority lists of the New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company carried the names of these appellants and others, and that the seniority lists of the Alabama Great Southern Railway Company as of that date carried the name of the appellee F. W. Stange, and others, giving the date of employment of each dispatcher, and hence his seniority.

Prior to October, 1931, and at the time of the execu *161 tion of the contract in question, the line of the New Orleans & Northeastern Railroad Company was operated as one operating division of the Southern Railway System, with a division superintendent and his office force located at Hattiesburg, and having operating jurisdiction only over the New Orleans & Northeastern line. Prior to that date the line of the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company was operated as another operating division of the Southern Railway System, with a division superintendent and his office force located at Birmingham, and having jurisdiction only over the lines of the Alabama Great Southern Railroad Company.

In October, 1931, Mr. J. G.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 509, 180 Miss. 147, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-new-orleans-n-e-r-miss-1937.