Texas Employment Commission v. Kraft

411 S.W.2d 624, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 27, 1966
DocketNo. 7667
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 411 S.W.2d 624 (Texas Employment Commission v. Kraft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Employment Commission v. Kraft, 411 S.W.2d 624, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2543 (Tex. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinions

NORTHCUTT, Justice.

This is an appeal by the Texas Employment Commission and the Shamrock Oil & Gas Corporation, defendants below, from a judgment of the District Court of Moore County, Texas, in a proceedings tried before the court without a jury. In the trial court the suit styled William E. Henry et al., No. 4484, in the court below in which Travis Truelock later intervened was consolidated with a suit in which William Kraft was plaintiff and which was numbered 4476 on the trial court docket. In each of these actions the Texas Employment Commission and Shamrock Oil & Gas Corporation were the defendants.

In each of such actions so consolidated, the respective plaintiffs and intervenor appealed to the district court from decisions of the Texas Employment Commission holding that the respective plaintiffs and inter-venor were not entitled to unemployment compensation benefits under the Texas Unemployment Compensation Act. The judgment of the trial court reversed each of the decisions of the Texas Employment Commission and held that each of the plaintiffs and the intervenor are, contrary to the de-cisión of the Texas Employment Commission, entitled to receive unemployment compensation benefits.

The complainants, plaintiffs, in the trial court will hereafter be referred to as ap-pellees and Shamrock Oil & Gas Corporation and Texas Employment Commission, defendants, will be referred to as appellants.

This appeal involves the proper construction of the Texas Unemployment Compensation Act. We think the real issue here is whether the Commission erred when it determined the appellees were disqualified to receive benefits under Subsection (d), Article 5221b-3, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.St. That article provides that an individual shall (emphasis ours) be disqualified for any benefit period with respect to which the Commission finds that his total or partial unemployment is due to the claimant’s stoppage of work because of a labor dispute at the factory, establishment or other premises at which he is or was last employed. The Commission found that the appellees were disqualified to receive benefits under the act because their total and partial unemployment was due to the appellees’ stoppage of work because of a labor dispute at the place where they were last employed. Under the matter here involved, we think it is clear that the reference to the place they were last employed has reference to the work for Shamrock Oil & Gas Corporation. In other words, the suit in the district court was brought to test the validity of the Commission’s order and to see if there was substantial evidence to support the ruling of the Commission.

Appellees were members of the union here involved and Shamrock Oil & Gas Corporation recognized and dealt with the union. Prior to August 9,1964, negotiations were being carried on between Shamrock and the union involving wages and working conditions which negotiations ended in an impasse and the termination of all contracts between the union and Shamrock when a strike was commenced by the union on August 9, 1964. Picketing of Shamrock’s [626]*626facilities was commenced on August 9,1964. The signs carried by the pickets stated in substance that the union was on strike against Shamrock Oil & Gas Corporation.

Each employee in the bargaining units was advised by letter dated August 9, 1964, signed by the employer’s president, that the company had the right to continue the operation of its facilities and properties even during the progress of a strike and that the company would so continue the full operation of its plant and at 9:00 a.m. on Wednesday, August 12, 1964, would begin employment on a permanent basis new personnel to replace striking employees. Such letter further advised all employees that any employee then on strike who desired to return to work prior to his replacement was so privileged but under no compulsion from the company to do so. The strike so begun on August 9, 1964, was an economic strike involving wages and working conditions and not an unfair labor practice strike resulting from unlawful conduct of the employer.

Immediately after August 9, 1964, the employer continued to operate its plants and facilities through supervisors, non-bargaining unit personnel, and employees who did not strike and, after August 12, 1964, also by newly hired replacements for striking employees and striking employees who returned to work. In a negotiating session on September 30, 1964, the union submitted a written proposal for settling the strike which proposal involved the return to work of all striking employees. The union’s proposal was rejected by the company, which took the position that newly hired employees hired as permanent replacements, would not be laid off to make room for strikers to return to work. In rej ecting the union’s proposal, the company reported to the Union Negotiating Committee the company had hired a large number of replacements and did not have available jobs for all strikers without discharging permanent replacements, which the company was not willing to do since the replacements had been employed on a permanent basis and many had given up permanent jobs to go to work for Shamrock. Between August 9, 1964, and October 5, 1964, the employer hired approximately 212 new employees as permanent replacements in the bargaining units involved. Just before October 5, 1964, the number of employees who did not go on strike or who went on strike but returned to work before October 5, 1964, totaled approximately 83. The company kept the negotiating committee informed as to the number of replacements that were employed first reporting 60, next 105 and then over 200. On or about October 5, 1964, and a day or so thereafter, some 100 strikers and others thereafter before' October 19, 1964, personally appeared at or in one or the other of the employer facilities and offered to return to work. Between October 5, 1964, and October 19, 1964, Shamrock took back or reinstated approximately 105 to 110 strikers.

By October 19, 1964, every existing job in the units represented by the union had been filled except one job of a welder first-class because there was no applicant qualified to do the work of such qualifications. Each of the striking employees who appeared at one of the facilities of the employer and requested reinstatement crossed the picket lines around such facilities with the permission of the union. The picket lines around property of the employer were continuously maintained from the beginning of the strike on August 9, 1964, until the time of hearing in the district court in December 1965. Though the picket signs were changed on October 19, 1964, to claim that Shamrock employees were “locked out.”

At the hearing in December 1965 it was stipulated by the plaintiffs’ counsel that a labor dispute between the union and employer continued to exist to such date.

Shortly prior, to October 5, 1964, top-level meetings of high level union officials [627]*627were held in which it was concluded that the strikers could and would be told they could seek reinstatement that they could cross the picket line and a committee was appointed to notify the people to that effect. The striking employees were granted written permission by the union to cross the picket line which was being maintained at that time. Striking employees were instructed to return to the union hall after seeking reinstatement and report back what had happened. The majority of the striking employees offered themselves for re-employment individually but those who did not were covered by blanket letter written by Mr.

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Related

Kraft v. Texas Employment Commission
418 S.W.2d 482 (Texas Supreme Court, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
411 S.W.2d 624, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-employment-commission-v-kraft-texapp-1966.