Trimm v. Illinois Central Railroad

134 So. 2d 446, 242 Miss. 177, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 544, 49 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2250
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1961
DocketNo. 41963
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 So. 2d 446 (Trimm v. Illinois Central Railroad) 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
Trimm v. Illinois Central Railroad, 134 So. 2d 446, 242 Miss. 177, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 544, 49 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2250 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

This-case is before us on appeal by H. B. Trimm, Complainant in the court below, from a final decree of the 'Chancery Court of Harrison County, dismissing for lack of jurisdiction his bill of complaint and writs of attachment against the Illinois Central Railroad Company and others, seeking to recover from the defendant Railroad [179]*179Company severance pay in the snm of $9,909.76 alleged to he dne and owing* to the complainant by virtue of what is known as the “Washington Job Agreement” of May 21, 1936, and by virtue of an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission, entered in I.C.C. Finance Docket No. 15920 on January 16, 1952, providing for the rights of employees adversely affected by the creation of the New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal and the coordination of traffic facilities incident thereto.

The complainant filed his bill of complaint in the Chancery Court of Harrison County on June 10, 1960. In his bill the complainant alleged that he was employed by the defendant Railroad Company thereafter in various capacities, accumulating both company and job seniority, until April 16, 1954, when he transferred to the employ of the New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal, hereinafter referred to as the NOUPT; that he accepted a job with the NOUPT as an upgraded electrician, terminating all previous seniority with the Illinois Central Railroad, except those rights preserved to him by the Washington Job Agreement of May 21, 1936, and an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission entered on January 16, 1952, in Interstate Commerce Commission Docket No. 15,920, and the agreement assuring such rights between the NOUPT and the System Federation No. 99, Realroad Employees’ Department, American Federation of Labor. The complainant further alleged that he continued to work in said position as an upgraded electrician for the NOUPT until on or about June 16, 1954, at which time he received notice from the NOUPT that his services as an upgraded electrician were terminated, and that he was being reduced and demoted to the position of electrician’s helper; that, from that date, he performed the services of electrician’s helper at the NOUPT until October 17, 1954, at which time the complainant’s services as electrician’s helper were terminated, the work load and job content which [180]*180the complainant had theretofore performed being transferred and assigned to other employees classified as first class electricians.

The complainant further alleged that the reallocation, transfer and assignment of the work load and job content of electricians’ helpers to first class electricians adversely affected the complainant in that it deprived him of wages and a job, and that the failure on the part of the defendant Railroad Company to pay the complainant coordination or displacement pay, was a breach of paragraph 1(c) and (d) and paragraphs 2 and 6 of the Labor Contract between the NOUPT and thé System Federation No. 99, Railroad Employees’ Department, American Federation of Labor, to which the defendant Railroad Company was a party, and Section 1 and Sections 5 and 6 (a), (b) and (c) of the Washington Job Agreement, and the order of the' Interstate Commerce Commission entered in Docket No. 15920; and that the breach of the aforesaid agreements by the defendant Railroad Company gave rise to complainant’s cause of action for which he prayed for relief.

The complainant further alleged that he had made a formal application for a coordination allowance at the time his services as an electrician’s helper were terminated by NOUPT on October 17, 1954, and that said application was denied; that, after October 17, 1954, complainant was placed on a seniority list at the NOUPT as an electrician’s helper; and that since that time he had worked approximately four months at the Terminal, the last period of employment having ended on or about September 16, 1958. The complainant alleged that the coordination of said terminal facilities, and the transfer and assignment of the work load and job content normally performed by electricians’ helpers to employees classified as first class electricians, had deprived him of employment continuously since October 17,1954, and as a result thereof complainant was entitled [181]*181to 48 months pay at the rate of 60 per cent of his average earnings at the time of his discharge by the defendant. The complainant therefore asked that a decree be entered ordering the defendant Bailroad Company to pay to him the snm of $9,906.76, being the amount due and owing to him because of the defendant Bailroad Company’s breach of its contract.

In their answer the defendants denied that the complainant was entitled to any benefits from the defendant Bailroad Company by virtue of either the Washington Job Agreement or the order of the Interstate Commerce Division or by virtue of any other agreement. In their answer the defendants averred that the complainant, on April 16, 1954, voluntarily transferred himself from the employment of the defendant Bailroad Company to the employment of the New Orleans Union Passenger Terminal; that he was placed on furlough in October 1954 because of the cessation of the need for his services due to the termination of the air conditioning requirements of NOUPT, and not because of the coordination of activities into NOUPT; and that in October 1955, after a period of work in that year, he was again furloughed by NOUPT for the same reason. The defendants further stated in their answer that, after the complainant started working for NOUPT he was, at the insistence of the complainant’s union, the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, reclassified as an electrician’s helper; that this reclassification was effected for the reason that NOUPT was not a party to the upgrading agreement between the Bailroad Company and the complainant’s union. The defendant Bailroad Company denied that the complainant had been adversely affected by the coordination of activities into the NOUPT, and denied that it was indebted to the complainant in any sums whatsoever.

As affirmative defenses the defendant Bailroad Company asserted: (1) That the complainant was precluded [182]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 So. 2d 446, 242 Miss. 177, 1961 Miss. LEXIS 544, 49 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trimm-v-illinois-central-railroad-miss-1961.