Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative Ass'n v. Utah Labor Relations Board

149 P.2d 643, 106 Utah 394, 1944 Utah LEXIS 36, 14 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 797
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1944
DocketNo. 6659.
StatusPublished

This text of 149 P.2d 643 (Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative Ass'n v. Utah Labor Relations Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative Ass'n v. Utah Labor Relations Board, 149 P.2d 643, 106 Utah 394, 1944 Utah LEXIS 36, 14 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 797 (Utah 1944).

Opinion

McDonough, justice.

By writ of review, petitioner seeks to vacate and set aside the order of the Utah Labor Relations Board dated September 8, 1943. A petition of the Labor Board for an order of enforcement is also before us. The Board found that petitioner Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative Association, hereinafter referred to as the Association, was guilty of an unfair labor practice by discharging from its employment the complainant Willis L. Jacobson. It concluded that his dismissal was due to his activity in behalf of the Independent Union of Poultry Employees; that the Association was guilty of interfering with and restraining employees in the exercise of their rights, and of dominating and interfering with the administration of said Independent Union. The order sought by petitioner to be annulled and by the Board to be enforced, required reinstatement of Jacobson as an employee, and ordered back pay for loss sustained by reason of unemployment from the date of his discharge. It also required petitioner Association and the Independent Union to show cause why the Independent Union of Poultry Employees should not be disorganized or reorganized by reason of alleged domination by the management of the Association.

Petitioner attacks the failure of the Board to make findings which fairly reflect the evidence and alleges that the findings fail to support the charge of domination of the Independent Union by the Association’s management. It likewise contends that there is no substantial evidence to support any of the following specific findings or conclusions: (1) That the Association dominated or controlled the activities of the Independent Union since January 1943, or at any other time, or that it interfered with the activities *396 of such union. (2) That petitioner’s management discharged Jacobson, the complainant, “for union activity in which he sought to enlist the services of the National Labor Relations Board for investigation of respondent’s labor practices and other conduct incident to functioning of the Independent Union of Poultry Employees.”

Sometime in 1938, A. F. of L. Local No. 311, Union of Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of North America (consisting among others of poultry workers, egg candlers, feed millmen), notified the Association that it had obtained a majority of the employees at the 1800 South West Temple Street plant in Salt Lake City and that it claimed to be the sole bargaining agent for said workers. The Association granted recognition upon such demand, and negotiations were initiated between the Association’s management and the officers of said A. F. of L. local. A Closed shop agreement resulted. Some disagreements arose within the union during the latter part of that year, in part over collection of certain dues which some members claimed to be excessive and not used for the benefit of the members. This group then voted a Christmas present of $7.50 to each member out of the local treasury. When the international officers were informed of this novel manifestation of Christmastide giving, they declared Local 311 in a state of mutiny and tied up the funds at the bank. The plant employees then called a meeting some time in January 1939, at which all except 13 voted to secede from the A. F. of L. union and to form the Independent Union of Poultry Employees. They employed an attorney to aid them in effecting an organization. The Association management refused to recognize this union until there was an election in accordance with National Labor Board regulations. The election was held and the Independent Union was certified as the bargaining agent. This union then negotiated with the Association for a new contract. The complainant, Jacobson, as first president of this new union, was very active in these negotiations.

*397 During 1942 and 1943, Jacobson and one Quist had urged the union to request the National Labor Relations Board to investigate the labor practices of the Association. Favorable action on the matter was taken by the council in 1942, but the matter was not submitted to the membership for approval. When the subject was again called up by Jacobson in January 1943, some disagreement occurred between him and Breeze, president of the union, as to the advisability of making such a request. At that time, their application for a wage increase which had been approved by the management, was still pending before the War Labor Board. Apparently some of the union membership was opposed to any proceeding which might create some difficulty on the wage question. Jacobson, Breeze and another council member then consulted the union’s legal counsel, who stated that from the facts related and the remoteness of events, he seriously doubted if there was any real case which could be considered by the National Labor Relations Board. The remoteness of events evidently referred to activities some four years prior in connection with the organization of the Independent Union.

At the next general meeting of the union when the proposition of requesting investigation by the N. L. R. B. was put to a vote, only Jacobson and Quist voted in favor of the resolution, and the balance of the membership present voted in the negative. Jacobson continued to discuss the matter personally with other employees.

Some time in 1943, there appeared in a local publication called the “Searchlight” an article purporting to give the history of the formation of the Independent Union. The purport of the article was that the union was formed at the behest and under the guidance of Mr. Clyde Edmonds, manager of the Association; and that it was company dominated. It contained a cartoon of Edmonds. Mr. Jacobson, it appears, furnished to the paper the information upon which the article was based. A copy of this issue of the “Searchlight” was by someone pasted on the bulletin board at the plant. Another was mailed to Edmonds by a friend. *398 A package containing a framed copy of the cartoon was placed on Edmond’s desk, and inscribed thereon was “compliments of Jake and Bill.” Edmonds assumed that “Jake and Bill” meant Jacobson and Quist.

At about the same time, Jacobson wrote and he and Quist signed a letter to one Butler, who someone told them was an investigator for the N. L. R. B., stating that if the Board undertook an investigation of labor relations at the plant they would give their cooperation. This letter in some manner found its way to the desk of Edmonds.

After receipt of the copy of the “Searchlight”, Edmonds called a meeting of the employees. He read the article to them; stated that the ones who were responsible for furnishing the writer with the material therefor were present at the meeting. He then read a provision of the contract between the Union and the Association which provided that if a member of the union were disloyal to the management, he should be expelled from the union. Explusion from the union would terminate employment by the Association.

A witness testified that in 1938 when the A. F. of L. was organizing another plant of the Association, Edmonds asked the witness, one Jancke, a supervising employee and not a member of the Union and who was then president of the plant’s credit union, to see if he could not prevail upon the men to keep the bargaining agency as it was. He stated he did speak at a meeting to that effect — evidently without favorable results.

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149 P.2d 643, 106 Utah 394, 1944 Utah LEXIS 36, 14 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-poultry-producers-cooperative-assn-v-utah-labor-relations-board-utah-1944.