NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD


              SECOND DIVISION


The Second Division consisted of the regular members and in

addition Referee John J. McGovern when award was rendered.


PARTIES TO DISPUTE

SYSTEM FEDERATION NO. 2, RAILWAY EMPLOYES'

DEPARTMENT, A. F. of L. - C. 1. O. (Carmen)


      MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY


    DISPUTE: CLAIM OF EMPLOYES:


    1. That the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company violated the Agreement of November 21, 1964, when they deprived Car Inspector T. E. Shaw, North Little Rock, Arkansas, the right to work his regular assignment on November 26, 1968.


    2. That accordingly, the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company be ordered to compensate Car Inspector Shaw in the amount of eight (8) hours at the punitive rate for November 26, 1968.


FINDINGS: The Second Division of the Adjustment Board, upon the whole record and all the evidence, finds that:


The carrier or carriers and the employe or employes involved in this dispute are respectively carrier and employe within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act as approved June 21, 1934.


This Division of the Adjustment Board has jurisdiction over the dispute involved herein.


    Parties to said dispute were given due notice of hearing thereon.


The facts, the issue, the rules to be interpreted and the parties are identical to those contained in Award No. 608'7. We held in that case that Award 5236 (Johnson) was controlling. We reafiix-m our position taken in that case and will sustain the claim.

                  AWARD

    Claim sustained.

              NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD

              By Order of SECOND DIVISION


              ATTEST: E. A. Killeen

              Executive Secretary


Dated at Chicago, Illinois, this 15th day of December 1970.

CARRIER MEMBER'S DISSENT

TO

AWARDS 6087, 6088, 6089 AND 6090


The Carrier refused to allow the claims in Awards 6087, 6088, 6089 and 6090 although fully aware of sustaining Awards 5236, 5523, 5975 and 5976. The Carrier requested a reconsideration of the issues in dispute on the premise that the earlier awards are based on allegations of facts advanced by the employes which are false.


The Birthday Holiday Rule became effective January 1, 1965, and the
first birthday holiday claims were filed in January of that same year when
the Carrier from the start gave shop craft employes their birthday holiday
off with pay. The employes cited Section (g) of Article II of the Agreement
of November 21, 1964 to the effect that existing rules and practices governing
whether an employe works on a holiday shall apply on his birthday. The rule
giving the employes the seven recognized holidays (New Year's Day, Wash
ington's Birthday, Decoration Day, Fourth of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving
Day and Christmas Day) had been in effect long before the adoption of a
40-hour week on September 1, 1949. The Note to Rule 5, upon which the em
ployes rely, became effective on Septembr 1, 1949. The whole argument in all
of the birthday holiday claims, beginning with the first claim filed in Jan
uary 1965, was based on allegations as to the "existing rules and practices
governing whether an employ e works on a holiday * * *" during the
sixteen years from September 1, 1949, when the Note to Rule 5 became effec
tive to January 1, 1965, when the Birthday Holiday Rule became effective.

In the earlier dockets, the Carrier did not anticipate that a dispute would arise as to the existing practices governing whether an employe worked on the even recognized holidays during the 16-year period from September 1, 1949 to January 1, 1965, and merely made the statement, which the Carrier felt should have been sufficient, that work on holidays was distributed on the basis of an overtime board. The employes, on the other hand, made the allegation that during this 16-year period that if a man's job worked, the man worked. These allegations of fact are in direct conflict one with another. Neither party introduced any proof to support their allegations of fact. The referees in the earlier awards chose to believe the employes' allegations of facts and reached sustaining awards.


In the dockets to which this dissent applies the Carrier had an opportunity to submit proof of its allegation of facts that holiday work on this Carrier is distributed from an overtime board, usually a rotating overtime board, although in one case from a seniority overtime board. The Carrier's Exhibits to its Submissions and Rebuttals in the four dockets to which this dissent applies contained proof of the Carrier's allegation of facts. The Carrier representative in the oral hearing before the referee specifically requested reconsideration of the issues for the reason that the earlier awards were based on the employes' allegation of facts, which were false, and that the Carrier in these dockets has offered proof as to the existing practices governing whether an employe worked on the seven recognized holidays and that the Carrier was entitled to a reconsideration of the issues where it is proven that earlier awards are based on incorrect facts.


Upon examination of the four awards to which we dissent, we find they make no reference whasoever to the Carrier's argument upon which the re quest for reconsideration was based. The basis for reconsideration is the


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practice governing whether an employe worked on any of the seven recognized holidays. The awards are devoid of any finding as to the "existing rules and practices thereunder governing whether an employe works on a holiday," that is, the seven holidays which have been recognized for many years and which is the only matter in dispute in these dockets. The referee chose to ignore the Carrier's sole argument in these dockets apparently for the reason he was not able to refute the proof offered by the Carrier in support of its allegation of fact but was unwilling to overturn the previous awards based on false allegations of facts. Awards which ignore the principal contention of either party have no precedent value and these awards fall in that category.

                    W. B. Jones


                    H. F. M. Braidwood


                    P. C. Carter


                    R. E. Black


                    E. T. Horsley


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