Tipper v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.

62 F. Supp. 853, 17 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 526, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1879
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedAugust 20, 1945
DocketNo. 1283
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 62 F. Supp. 853 (Tipper v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tipper v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 62 F. Supp. 853, 17 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 526, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1879 (W.D. Wash. 1945).

Opinion

LEAVY, District Judge.

I appreciate the arguments that have been made by counsel representing the parties here, and likewise the argument of Mr. Flood, appearing amicus curiae, and I appreciate also the importance of this case, not alone to the plaintiff, but to perhaps hundreds and thousands of men who have been or who are now in the service and will be discharged. I am conscious also of the fact that this case will be one of first impression, and is therefore of great importance.

I want to say further, at the outset, that there certainly can be no charge of a lack of that high degree of patriotism, that perhaps right now, due to the ending of the Japanese war, is more in evidence than during ordinary periods. No one can challenge the defendant corporation Northern Pacific Railway Company- for taking the position they have in contesting this issue, nor can anyone challenge the various employees of the union, taking the position that they have, because the matter does not turn upon a question of who is the more patriotic. It must be determined purely from an objective basis, and for the purpose of giving a construction such as the framers of this Act intended should be given to it, so that its objectives and purposes might be accomplished.

I do not intend to review in detail the facts in this case, because there is scarcely any disagreement concerning them. The question is more one of an interpretation of the statute and the regulations that have been promulgated, based upon that statute. We must review, to a degree at least, the Selective Training and Service law, and just what Congress had in mind in the matter of insuring to those people who fell within the provisions of the Act and were called to the Colors, even before we had gone into the war. As I have already indicated, the Act and the regulations made thereunder, must be liberally construed, but such liberal construction, of course, should not be carried to the point where it does violence to the Act itself.

When the Selective Training and Service Act was first passed by Congress, it fixed a minimum age of 21 years, as I recall, arid it seems to me, though I may be in error,, that the maximum age was 45 for service. It might have been less than that. We were at peace, and the discussions in the Congress were extensive. The proponents advocated reasons for the necessity of a peacetime draft from almost every conceivable' angle, and the opponents with an equal degree of vigor, eloquence and logic, opposed a peacetime draft. At any rate, this issue as to whether the man who came under the provisions of the Act and who was taken into the service, should or should not lose anything in the way of a job that he had, was discussed at great length. I feel that I ame safe in saying that if anyone would care to review the debates, and the reports of the committees of both houses of Congress, that the stun and substance of that feature of the Act was that the man who was called to service shoud not be prejudiced in any way when he came out of the service, in the matter of his occupation. Later, the Act was amended just a few months before we got into the war, and instead of a 12 months’ service and a long period of reservability, the 12 months’ provision was virtually taken out of the Act, because it perhaps was more or less imminent to those in authority that the world was moving at such. a rapid pace toward war, that we were apt to become involved, or at least the threat was so serious that changes in the Act were demanded, and then the Act was again changed to include 18-year olds — dropped from 21. Because of the tremendous field of human activity and citizenship responsibility that was covered by this exceptional and unusual legislation, great powers were conferred upon those who it provided should execute the law, and the regulations promulgated became law themselves.

In construing the Act as it now exists and applies to this particular case, this Court does give great weight and consideration to the regulations of the Director of Selective Service. While not being able to look to them as a precedent, nevertheless, if it can be read into them or out of them just exactly what the intent was when issued, why certainly that intent should be given expression not only with the many Selective Service and Training regulations put into effect, but the War and Navy Departments’ orders and other emergency agencies that came into this war picture, which promulgated directives and regulations and orders from time to time concerned either directly or indirectly with this identical question that we have here.

After we became engaged in the war, draft numbers or the calls to the service were increased tremendously — millions were [855]*855being called where it had only been expected that hundreds of thousands might be called in the first instance, and the country found itself confronted with tremendous economic problems. Its difficulties grew almost daily as to how it was going to meet the civilian responsibility of carrying on such a war. Then we find this regulation about men 38 years old and beyond that age — and it is not necessary in deciding this matter to cite the numerous regulations from the Man-power Commission and the War Labor Board and the other emergency agencies. Suffice it is to say, that under the regulation that permitted a man past the age of 38 to relieve himself from responsibilities that were incident to active military service at the time, he had to do certain, things. I want to briefly refer to some of the exhibits here, because it seems to me they throw considerable light on this situation.

It might be argued that the plaintiff should have discussed more fully with the executive officials of his union and his employer, his plan to re-enter the service. Be that as it may, he did go into the service; he was accepted, and after taking the oath of a soldier and commencing his training, he received this communication, which is in evidence here as Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, and I shall only read the one paragraph of it:

“This letter will grant to you an indefinite leave of absence for that purpose, with the requirement that you will return to the service of the Northern Pacific Railway Company within 40 days after your honorable discharge from military service. Leave of absence effective November 19, 1942”.

When the new regulations were issued by the War Department that recognized the possibility of a discharge, or of a release from active service for men over 38, early in 1943, we have the next letter of the plaintiff to the defendant. He took the course as advised by some of his superiors in the Army. He applied to his employer for some sort of a written showing that his services were needed on the job that he had held before he went into the service with the railroad company, and he received in reply Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5, which is signed by the Roundhouse foreman, and which advises him, under date of April 29, 1943:

“Your letter was received. I am sorry to say at this time it will be impossibe to grant your request, as you went into the army at your own request, so do not feel justified in asking for your return.”

Because of the language of this particular letter that I have just read, I am sure that if the request had been made or brought to the attention of the executive officials of the defendant railway company or the executive officials of this plaintiff’s union, they would not have taken such an arbitrary attitude.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 F. Supp. 853, 17 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 526, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tipper-v-northern-pac-ry-co-wawd-1945.