United States Ex Rel. Russell K. Adams v. General Motors Corporation

525 F.2d 161, 90 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3132, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 12448
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 8, 1975
Docket75-1018
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 525 F.2d 161 (United States Ex Rel. Russell K. Adams v. General Motors Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. Russell K. Adams v. General Motors Corporation, 525 F.2d 161, 90 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3132, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 12448 (6th Cir. 1975).

Opinion

LIVELY, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from summary judgment for the defendant in consolidated actions brought by the United States on behalf of eight veterans who claim that upon their return from military service their employer denied them rights which are guaranteed by Section 9 of the Selective Service Act of 1967 as amended, (the Act), 50 U.S.C. App. § 459. The pertinent provisions of Section 9 appear as an appendix to this opinion.

, Each of the persons for whom relief was sought began his employment with General Motors (GM) as an unskilled worker. Pursuant to the terms of the collective bargaining agreement (the agreement) in effect between GM and the union representing its employees, GM was permitted to select unskilled *163 workers from time to time for participation in an eight-year program leading to journeyman status in various skilled trades classifications. This is designated in the agreement as the “Employe-in-Training” (E.I.T.) program. A pay raise accompanied the transfer to E.I.T. status, and the worker so transferred thereafter performed the work of the skilled trades classification to which he was assigned, along with journeymen in the same classification. The agreement further provided for a change in status to “Employe-in-Training-Seniority” (E.I. T.S.) after completion of at least four years “of work” as an E.I.T. The provisions appeared in Sections 155 and 156 of the collective bargaining agreement:

(155) An employe transferred to a skilled trades classification in which he does not hold journeymen status, or a non-journeyman new-hire assigned to a skilled trades classification, shall be identified in the skilled trades classification in which he is working as an employe-in-training (e. g., “Lathe Operator (E.I.T.)”, “Tool Maker (E.I.T.)”) until his status is changed to an employe-in-training-seniority (E.I.T.S.) or he is reclassified as a journeyman in such classification in accordance with provisions of Paragraph (166) or (167).
(156) An employe, whose period of training is for more than four years, who completes or has completed at least four years of work as an employe-in-training (E.I.T.) in any one skilled trades classification in the plant, shall be identified in such skilled trades classification as an “Employe-in-Training-Seniority” (e. g., “Lathe Operator (E.I.T.S.)”, “Tool Maker (E.I. T.S.)”), until classified as a journeyman in such classification in accordance with Paragraph (166) or (167), except as provided in Appendix C.

The change of an employee’s status or identification from E.I.T. to E.I.T.S. did not involve any change in duties or a wage increase. However, such an employee did acquire additional protection from layoff at the time of this change as shown by a comparison of Sections 175 and 176 of the agreement:

(175) An employe-in-training (E.I.T.) who has not qualified as a journeyman may be retained in his classification until displaced by:
(1) A fully qualified journeyman in the plant;
(2) A newly graduated apprentice;
(3) An employe-in-training-seniority (E.I.T.S.);
(4) A reduction in force.
(176) An employe-in-training-seniority (E.I.T.S.) may be retained in the skilled classification' in which he is classified as an employe-in-training-seniority (E.I.T.S.) until displaced by:
(1) An employe with more seniority in the classification;
(2) A reduction in force.

Each of the plaintiffs in this action had been assigned to a skilled trades classification and was working as an E.I.T. at the time he left the employment of GM for military service. Upon his return to work at GM each was returned to E.I.T. status. However, before any of the plaintiffs had completed four years of actual work at GM and attained E.I.T.S. status a reduction in force took place and all eight were displaced from their skilled trades classification jobs, with a consequent loss of wages and of time credited toward becoming journeymen. On the other hand, non-veterans who had entered the E.I.T. program at later dates than the plaintiffs were retained in their skilled trades classification jobs because they had achieved E.I. T.S. status.

GM argues that Appendix C of the agreement gave the plaintiffs the protection guaranteed by the Act in providing that—

An employe whose training in the skilled trades was interrupted by a leave of absence [for military service] and who thereafter qualifies for status as an employe-in-training-seniority (E.I.T.S.) or is reclassified as *164 a journeyman in the skilled trades, shall, at such time, be given the same E.I.T.S. date or journeyman seniority date as he would have received if he had not been on such leave.

It is maintained on behalf of the plaintiffs that the quoted provision did not adequately protect them. The dispute in this ease, they assert, concerns the date they qualify for E.I.T.S. status, not the seniority date which will be assigned “at such time” as the qualification occurs. They are not claiming that their time in military service should be counted toward the eight-year requirement for advancement to journeymen. They concede that they must perform eight years of actual work for GM in combined E.I.T. and E.I.T.S. status to receive this promotion. However, they argue that GM’s refusal to count their time in military service toward the achievement of E.I.T.S. status has deprived them of the opportunity to continue their progression toward journeyman rating solely because of their absence on military duty and has resulted in their being displaced by non-veteran employees who overtook them while they were performing military service. This is expressed in the prayer of the identical amended complaints—

(a) That defendant be ordered to grant plaintiff the priority status with regard to availability of work which he would have received had he remained continuously employed during the period of his military service

The district court, sitting without a jury, concluded from stipulated facts that “the right to E.I.T.S. status is derivative upon actual on-the-job training, and not upon the mere passage of time.” The stipulation of facts discloses that E.I.T. and E.I.T.S. employees in the same skilled trades classifications “perform essentially the same types of work” and that individual work assignments were based on ability to do a particular task without reference to the status of the employee. Furthermore, receipt of E.I.T.S. status was not contingent upon successful completion of a proficiency test (Stip. XV) and “[l]ess than one percent, if any, of the employees who have been in the E.I.T. program have been demoted from that program to their former unskilled classifications for lack of progress in the skilled classification in which they were employes-in-training.” (Stip. XVI). Finally, it was stipulated that if the plaintiffs had remained continuously employed by GM rather than entering military service they would have achieved E.I.T.S. status by August 1, 1971 (Stip. XVII), which was prior to their being removed from the E.I.T. program because of reduction in forces.

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525 F.2d 161, 90 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 3132, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 12448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-russell-k-adams-v-general-motors-corporation-ca6-1975.