Volkman v. United Transportation Union

770 F. Supp. 1455, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10852, 1991 WL 147127
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJuly 24, 1991
DocketCiv. A. 83-6025-T
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 770 F. Supp. 1455 (Volkman v. United Transportation Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volkman v. United Transportation Union, 770 F. Supp. 1455, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10852, 1991 WL 147127 (D. Kan. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

THEIS, District Judge.

A number of post-trial motions are pending in this case. The court held a status conference on May 2, 1991. Since that hearing, the court has received certain additional submissions from counsel. The court has examined the voluminous briefs filed over the course of the last year and a half and is prepared to rule.

The court notes that it has received a number of “letter briefs” from various counsel of record. Counsel should be aware that, although the court reads the letters it receives, such letters are not pleadings and are not filed in the case file. Any arguments made in such letters are not preserved for purposes of appeal. Any arguments parties wish to have preserved must be included in a pleading filed with the Clerk.

I. Introduction

Following a lengthy trial to the court in the fall of 1988, the court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Volkman v. United Transportation Union, 724 F.Supp. 1282 (D.Kan.1989). The plaintiffs are a class of all persons who worked for the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad Company (“Rock Island”) as brakemen or switchmen (also called yardmen), who were eligible for employment with the St. Louis Southwestern Railway Company (“SSW") on the Tucumcari Line within the meaning of the Labor Protective Agreement of March 4, 1980, including those who were employed by the SSW. Class Certification Order, Doc. 75. The defendants are Southern Pacific Company, Southern Pacific Transportation Company, SSW, and the United Transportation Union (“UTU”).

*1460 Following the bankruptcy of the Rock Island, SSW began to operate over and later purchased the Rock Island’s Tucumcari Line. The Tucumcari Line begins at a Southern Pacific Transportation line in Santa Rosa, New Mexico, and runs northeast through New Mexico to Dalhart, Texas, Pratt, Kansas, Herington, Kansas, Eldon, Missouri, and east to St. Louis. The Tucumcari Line and the SSW’s Corsicana Line began in roughly the same place and end in St. Louis, but the Tucumcari Line is 400 miles shorter than the Corsicana Line. After the purchase of the Tucumcari Line, SSW renamed the two lines. The Corsicana Line was renamed the Pine Bluff Division. The Tucumcari Line was renamed the Kansas City Division. Because the Kansas City to St. Louis segment of the Tucumcari Line was inoperable, the Interstate Commerce Commission granted SSW trackage rights over another railroad’s line. The trackage rights went through Jefferson City, Missouri.

The key document involved in this case is the March 4 agreement, Plaintiffs’ Exh. 5. This agreement was entered into by all railroads which purchased parts of the Rock Island or the Milwaukee (another bankrupt railroad) and the labor representatives from the crafts employed by the Rock Island and the Milwaukee. The SSW and UTU were parties to this agreement. In general terms, that agreement provided: All employees of the Rock Island who held seniority on the effective date of the agreement (March 4, 1980) in a craft represented by one of the signatory labor organizations were eligible for participation in the hiring procedures of the agreement. Plaintiffs’ Exh. 5, March 4 agreement, Art. II, sec. 1. If the SSW had employees on furlough, it could not recall them until after the Rock Island employees on appropriate seniority rosters had exhausted their opportunity to be hired. Id. Art. II, sec. 2. SSW was required to give the eligible Rock Island employees in seniority order the first right of hire. SSW was to first utilize existing seniority rosters applicable to the appropriate craft and seniority district for the line involved. Id. Art. II, sec. 3. Rock Island employees were to be hired in seniority order if the number of applicants exceeded the need for additional manpower. Id. Art. II, sec. 4. The hiring procedures were to remain in effect for not less than one year from the effective date from the commencement of operations, but in no event beyond April 1, 1984. Id. Art. II, sec. 5.

Art. Ill of the March 4 agreement provided a monthly compensation guarantee (or “protective pay”) to all Rock Island employees hired by the SSW and subsequently furloughed. The monthly compensation guarantee was equal to 80% of the Rock Island employee’s average monthly straight-time compensation earned during the period June 1, 1977 through May 1, 1979. Id. Art. Ill, sec. 3. Each employee was eligible to receive a monthly compensation guarantee payment for any month in which the employee’s monthly compensation guarantee exceeded the employee’s actual compensation for that month. Id. Art. III, sec. 4. The SSW had no protective pay obligation to Rock Island employees it did not hire. Id. Art. Ill, sec. 1.

Once the SSW selected a seniority system to govern the Rock Island Tucumcari Line, “agreements will be reached ... concerning the manner in which seniority will be allocated in filling additional job assignments, between [SSW’s] employees and [Rock Island] employees hired by [SSW].” Id. Art. II, sec. 9(a). These agreements are referred to as “implementing agreements.”

The UTU’s Rock Island labor representatives were excluded by the SSW and UTU from the negotiations of the implementing agreement. The February 23, 1982 implementing agreement reached by the SSW and UTU (without the participation of the Rock Island labor representatives) provided for a number of prior rights positions (an employee holding a prior rights position holds that position until death or dismissal for cause). The total number of prior rights positions were: 43 at Dalhart, 39 at Pratt, 22 at Herington, and 23 at Eldon. Plaintiffs’ Exh. 19, February 23 implementing agreement, sec. 2.

The former Rock Island employees hired before the date of the implementing agreement were given a system seniority date of *1461 March 24, 1980, with prior rights in their craft and district. Id. sec. 1(a). Rock Island employees hired after the prior rights positions were filled received a system seniority date of the date hired and were placed at the bottom of the SSW seniority roster. Id. sec. 4(a).

Under the implementing agreement, the Rock Island employees did not receive preferential hiring for additional positions. SSW would hire for non-prior rights vacancies based on SSW seniority. Furloughed Pine Bluff Division employees could bid for vacancies based on their SSW seniority dates. Former Rock Island employees who had not yet been hired had no SSW seniority and could not bid on vacancies. Furloughed Pine Bluff employees could fill the Tucumcari Line (Kansas City Division) brakemen vacancies as they opened. Thus, SSW would not hire any Rock Island brakemen until all furloughed SSW employees who wanted a position on the Tucumcari Line had taken one.

Only Rock Island yardmen were to be hired by SSW for yard jobs on the Tucumcari Line until April 1, 1984.

Labor representatives had agreed that the Eldon employees should work 23 jobs when the SSW connected from Kansas City to St. Louis. The SSW never intended to use the Tucumcari Line between Kansas City and St. Louis because of its poor condition.

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Bluebook (online)
770 F. Supp. 1455, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10852, 1991 WL 147127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/volkman-v-united-transportation-union-ksd-1991.