Suffridge v. O'Grady

22 Misc. 2d 453, 84 N.Y.S.2d 211, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2016
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 22 Misc. 2d 453 (Suffridge v. O'Grady) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Suffridge v. O'Grady, 22 Misc. 2d 453, 84 N.Y.S.2d 211, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2016 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1948).

Opinion

Carroll G. Walter, J.

Plaintiff Suffridge is treasurer of Retail Clerks International Association, a labor union which consists of local unions chartered by it, the members of which are employees of retail stores. It is hereinafter referred to as [454]*454BCIA. As such, treasurer he brings this action for an accounting with respect to funds of Retail Wine & Liquor Clerks Union, Local 906A (hereinafter referred to as Local 906A), an injunction against interference with contracts with certain employers of members of Local 906A, a declaration of rights, the appointment of a trustee of an insurance fund, and other incidental relief.

Local 906A is one of the local unions chartered by ROIA, and the action is occasioned by what defendants claim was a lawful secession of said Local from RCIA and the organization of its members into Wine & Liquor Store Employees Union Local 122 under a charter from Distillery, Rectifying & Wine Workers International Union of America. The questions presented are with respect to the legality of the secession and new organization and affiliation and the effect thereof upon the rights of RCIA.

In July, 1948 when the secession took place, there was in existence a collective bargaining agreement made January 1, 1947, between RCIA, acting through Local 906A as its agent, and Metropolitan Package Store Association, Inc., an association of owners of retail liquor stores. That agreement, in addition to specifying wages, hours and other conditions of work of employees in such stores, bound the employers to employ union members only and to pay monthly to designated trustees a sum equal to 3% of the weekly wages of their employees, to be held in trust and used to provide life, accident and health insurance and medical care and hospitalization for the union member employees. Three trustees were provided for, one named by the union, one by the employer association and the third by these two. The union named defendant John M. O’Grady, president and business manager of Local 906A; the employer’s association named Julius Weis stein, and the third was and is defendant Samuel Albert, who is designated as impartial chairman. The agreement by its terms was to continue until December 31,1948, and the term thereof was duly extended in March, 1948 to December 31, 1949.

So far as appears in the evidence, there was no dispute or controversy with respect to either the collective bargaining agreement or the agreement and declaration of trust under which the insurance fund was being administered. All parties apparently were complying with both agreements to the entire satisfaction’of the other parties. But late in June or early in July, 1948 Local 1 of the Distillery, Rectifying & Wine Workers International Union began a campaign the object of which, as I understand it, was to get the clerks in retail wine and liquor stores out of RCIA into Distillery, Rectifying & Wine Workers [455]*455International Union. In a word, there ensued a jurisdictional dispute between an industrial union, DR & WWIU, and a craft union, ROIA, and conditions were of course unsettled for everyone, employers and employees, union members and union leaders, alike. There undoubtedly was some feeling, too, on the part of at least some officers and members of Local 906A, that ROIA was not as interested, energetic and effective as it should have been in advancing the interests of 906A and its members. With that, however, I have nothing to do. The question for me is, not whether clerks in retail liquor stores should affiliate with a union of retail clerks or a union of workers in the wine and liquor industry, or whether Local 906A should or should not have seceded or did or did not have good reasons for seceding. The question for me is whether it had a legal right to secede and, if so, whether it exercised its right in a legal manner, and what effect the secession has on its property and on the rights of ROIA.

About five or seven days before July 28, 1948 there was mailed to the members of Local 906A a card which announced a special membership meeting at 12 o’clock midnight of July 28, 1948, at Hotel Diplomat, 108 West 43rd Street, New York City. The card stated:

A complete report on the recent dispute with local #1 will be made. It is imperative that every member be in attendance. Surprise guests will speak at the meeting. Your employment in a liquor store may be endangered by your absence.
1 ‘ Attend!
John M. O’Grady.”

The meeting was attended by 349 members of Local 906A out of a total membership of between 1,100 and 1,200, and after a couple of hours of talk about the ‘ dispute ’ ’ with Local 1, those 349 members adopted a resolution stating that they terminated their affiliation with Local 906A and withdrew from ROIA, and accepted membership in Local 122, Wine & Liquor Store Employees Union, DR&WWIU — a charter for which, a preamble to the resolution stated, already had been issued. The resolution also purports to assign to Local 122 all rights, privileges and property of Local 906A.

Defendant O’Grady, who presided at the meeting, thereupon declared that Local 906A had withdrawn from ROIA and was no longer in existence, and that a meeting of Local 122 was then in session; and those present thereupon assumed to make those who had been officers of Local 906A officers of Local 122.

All members of Local 906A later signed applications for membership in Local 122, the office of Local 906A was made the [456]*456office of Local 122, the furniture and equipment in that office was thereafter used by Local 122, and Local 122 took over the bank balance of Local 906A ($203.91) and two automobiles of Local 906A. Dues subsequent to July 29,1948 were also paid to or ultimately received by Local 122.

There also was executed, on August 3, 4 or 5, 1948, an agreement between Local 122 and Metropolitan Package Store Association, Inc., which recites the existence of the collective bargaining agreement of January 1, 1947, between said association and RCIA, the withdrawal of Local 906A, and the formation of Local 122, and then provides that said association and Local 122 reiterate and adopt and agree to be bound by said agreement of January 1,1947, as extended in March, 1948.

Plaintiff Suffridge, as secretary-treasurer of RCIA, thereupon, in the language of section 6(c) of RCIA’s constitution, placed Local 906A under International jurisdiction. That is, he appointed a vice-president of RCIA his deputy to take possession of all books, records, papers and funds of the Local, and authorized him to declare vacant the office of any officer of the Local; and that deputy demanded possession of such books, funds, etc., and suspended O’Grady as a member of RCIA and as an officer of the Local and removed him as trustee of the insurance fund. 0 ’Grady ignored the demand for possession, and asserted, in a bulletin to the members of the Metropolitan Package Store Association and to those who had been members of Local 906A that there was no Local 906A and that its withdrawal and the organization of Local 122 and its affiliation with DR&WWIU were legal and proper; and Albert and Weisstein refused to recognize the claim of Suffridge’s deputy that he had been designated as a trustee of the insurance fund in place of 0’Grady.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Misc. 2d 453, 84 N.Y.S.2d 211, 1948 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suffridge-v-ogrady-nysupct-1948.