The Atchison, Topeka And Santa Fe Railway Company v. Brotherhood Of Railroad Trainmen

324 F.2d 899
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 18, 1963
Docket14085_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 324 F.2d 899 (The Atchison, Topeka And Santa Fe Railway Company v. Brotherhood Of Railroad Trainmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Atchison, Topeka And Santa Fe Railway Company v. Brotherhood Of Railroad Trainmen, 324 F.2d 899 (7th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

324 F.2d 899

The ATCHISON, TOPEKA AND SANTA FE RAILWAY COMPANY, a Kansas
corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
BROTHERHOOD OF RAILROAD TRAINMEN, a voluntary association,
General Grievance Committee, Brotherhood of Railroad
Trainmen, The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company,
a voluntary association, B. W. Fern and S. Vander Hei,
Defendants-Appellees.

No. 14085.

United States Court of Appeals Seventh Circuit.

Nov. 14, 1963, Rehearing Denied Dec. 18, 1963.

C. George Niebank, Jr., Chicago, Ill., Starr Thomas, W. J. Swartz, Chicago, Ill., for appellant.

John J. Naughton, Chicago, Ill., for appellees.

Before SCHNACKENBERG, KNOCH and KILEY, Circuit Judges.

SCHNACKENBERG, Circuit Judge.

The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Company, a Kansas corporation, plaintiff, has appealed from a judgment of the district court entered on October 19, 1962, which disposed of plaintiff's complaint, filed September 26, 1962, by refusing to enjoin defendants from calling a strike, as prayed in counts I, II and IV thereof.

Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, defendant, a voluntary association, is a labor organization within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act and is the collective bargaining agent for all of plaintiff's employees who are classified as switchmen, road brakemen, switch tenders, car retarder operators and yardmasters. The other defendants named in the title hereof are respectively a department of the Brotherhood (its bargaining representative) and two of its vice presidents.

On September 28, 1956 the Grievance Committee served on Santa Fe a notice pursuant to section 6 of the Railway Labor Act, 45 U.S.C.A. 156, requesting a revision of and changes in the separate schedules of the road and yard employees on Santa Fe's Eastern and Western Lines. Subsequently, Santa Fe served certain counterproposals on said Committee. Conferences between the parties were held in October and December, 1956. They were discontinued from April 7, 1957 until October 31, 1959 because of a moratorium imposed on the parties by virtue of an agreement reached nationally between the Brotherhood and the railroads of the United States, including Santa Fe.

On November 2, 1959, substantially all of the nation's railroads including Santa Fe, served on the labor organizations representing their operating employees, hereinafter referred to as 'the operating brotherhoods,' including the Grievance Committee, certain notices under said section 6, seeking extensive changes in the work rules and pay structures of the operating employees. Thereupon negotiations with the operating brotherhoods on some of the individual properties of the railroads concerned were unsuccessful. On or about October 28, 1959, Santa Fe had authorized the Western Carriers' Conference Committee to represent it in either regional or national conferences.

From July 26, 1960 through August 12, 1960, conferences with the Grievance Committee were held on the property of Santa Fe regarding the notice of September 28, 1956 and the Santa fe's counterproposals.

In August, 1960, the Grievance Committee, in the dispute over its 1956 notice, invoked the jurisdiction of the National Mediation Board, which docketed the case as A-6318 on August 25, 1960.

On or about September 7, 1960, at the request of the operating brotherhoods, including defendant brotherhood, substantially all of the nation's railroads, including Santa Fe, agreed to waive local handling of the issues raised in the operating brotherhoods' notices of the same date, to permit joint handling of those issues on a national level with the issues being handled on a national level growing out of the carriers' notices of November 2, 1959.

On May 15, 1961, certain of the issues involved in the 1956 notice were compromised and settled and became part of the schedule of the road and yard employees of Santa Fe's Eastern and Western Lines.

A statement of the history of the issues in the national case appears in our opinion in Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Baltimore and Ohio R. Co., 7 Cir., 310 F.2d 503 (1962), affirmed 372 U.S. 284, 83 S.Ct. 691, 9 L.Ed.2d 759.

The proposed requests for a revision of the yard and road schedules of the employees represented by the Committee, from its 1856 notice to Santa Fe, which remain pending, relate to matters which are the subject of current custom and practice on Santa Fe, are the subject of awards of the First Division of the National Railroad Adjustment Board on Santa Fe, and are the subject of various agreements on Santa Fe. None of the pending 1956 demands is identical to the report of the Presidential Railroad Commission, the carriers' notice of November 2, 1959, or the brotherhoods' counterproposals of September 7, 1960, as supplemented. In the case at bar, the pending 1956 proposals of the Committee are, for the most part, similar in subject to those matters involved in the national case.

We take note of the fact that counsel are not in disagreement that, of 68 unsettled 1956 issues, 59 are within the scope of the issues on which bargaining is continuing in the national case.

Defendants contend that this appeal has been rendered moot by the passage by Congress of Public Law 88-108, 77 Stat. 132, which was approved August 28, 1963. This is a joint resolution whose express purpose is 'To provide for the settlement of the labor dispute between certain carriers by railroad and certain of their employees (the national case).'

Defendants have filed a formal motion to dismiss this appeal, as well as No. 14162, 7 Cir., 324 F.2d 902.1 They urge that Public Law 88-108 imposes a prohibition of any change, except by agreement or pursuant to an arbitration award as provided therein, in the rates of pay, rules or working conditions encompassed by the national railroad notice of November 2, 1959 or by the operating union national notice of September 7, 1960. Defendants further urge (1) that the major thrust of plaintiff's appeal is that it is unlawful for defendants to strike over matters 'within the scope of' national notices and (2) that any such principle of law, if established, would already be established by virtue of the provisions of the said Public Law.

Plaintiff replies to this argument based on Public Law 88-108, by emphasizing that a strike by defendants on the 59 unsettled 1956 issues (as to which the statute has, according to plaintiff, directed the parties to continue negotiations), is proscribed but only until on or about February 24, 1964. It insists that the present controversy over the disposition of the 59 issues remaining unsettled from 1956 'continue(s) very much alive albeit temporarily dormant'.

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