CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE, ST. PAUL AND PACIFIC RAILROAD
CO.
Claimant T, M. Bankey, an unassigned furloughed employe, has established and retains a clerical seniority date of August 8, 1945 in Clerical Seniority District No. 44.
At Missoula, Montana there existed a need for vacation relief service to be performed on Cashier's Position 76880 whose regular assigned occupant was scheduled for ten (10) days vacation commencing on August 1, 1966 and terminating on August 12, 1966.
Claimant T. M. Bankey, an unassigned furloughed employee performed vacation relief service on the aforementioned position as follows:
Claimant T. M. Bankey was properly and fully paid for all service on and/or in connection with the vacation relief service he performed at Missoula, Montana.
OPINION OF BOARD: This docket, together with a companion docket numbered CL-17140, Award 17482, involves the same parties and the same dispute resolved by this Board in Award 16350 (McGovern).
In the instant case Carrier has introduced substantial evidence of custom and practice indicating that the parties did not intend the Rule to apply to unassigned, furloughed employes.
We are precluded from considering such evidence, however, because Award 16350 (McGovern) has conclusively held that the language of the subject rule is clear and unambiguous.
FINDINGS: The Third Division of the Adjustment Board, upon the whole record and all the evidence, finds and holds:
That the Carrier and the Employes involved in this dispute are respectively Carrier and Employes within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act, as approved June 21, 1934;
That this Division of the Adjustment Board has jurisdiction over the dispute involved herein; and
CARRIER MEMBERS' DISSENT TO AWARDS 17481, 17482,
DOCKETS CL-17138, CL-17140
For all practical purposes, the proceedings leading to Awards 17481 and 17482 are but the inevitable continuation of those leading to Award 16350 (McGovern). The claims in all three cases are the same, but in handling the two cases now before us Carrier has properly submitted the vital evidence which the Board found to be lacking in Award 16350.
The significant issue in each case is whether an unassigned, furloughed employe has a headquarters for purposes of applying that portion of Rule 37 (a) reading:
Carrier says that the unassigned, furloughed employe has no headquarters; the Employes say that his home is his headquarters, but no rule of the Agreement so provides.
The only rules in the Agreement that provide for a headquarters for any employe are the assignment rules, and they apply to employes regularly assigned pursuant thereto. Since no rule of the Agreement states whether an unassigned, furloughed employe does or does not have a headquarters, as the term "headquarters" is used in Rule 37 (a), whether he does or does not should be determined on the basis of the intention of the parties as manifested by the practices they have adopted in applying Rule 37 (a).
Carrier has gone directly to the crux of the case by dealing specifically with the past practice in applying Rule 37 (a). Carrier asserted past practice as a defense in handling the claim in Award 16350 and apparently the Employes did not deny Carrier's assertions regarding past practice during the handling of that claim on the property. In stating its position to the Board in that case, Carrier reviewed the long history of Rule 37 (a) and practices thereunder (as it has done in this case), but instead of submitting evidence there Carrier merely stated as a fact that:
The Employes did, however, deny the existence of the alleged practice in their rebuttal statement.
In view of the Employes' belated, unexpected and false assertions regarding the critical issue of past practice in Award 16350, Carrier had an indication of the need to submit concrete evidence of past practice in these cases and fully satisfied that need by adducing the best evidence obtainable.
Carrier's affidavits are not challenged by the Employes. These affidavits establish beyond any shadow of doubt that it was Carrier who told the truth in the proceedings leading to Award 16350.
In Award 16350, which sustained the claim on the theory that the alleged practice had not been proved, the Board recognized that the Agreement is silent on the subject of headquarters for unassigned employes, but proceeded (we believe erroneously) on the theory that "in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary" it should be considered that Rule 37 (a) was intended to apply to all employes. The majority in Award 16350 thus shifted the burden of going forward with the evidence on the past practice issue by adopting an unwarranted inference that the authors of. Rule 37 (a) intended every employe to have a headquarters. They did, however, recognize that this inference would not stand up in the fact of "substantial evidence to the contrary". The award went further and told Carrier precisely the type of evidence that should be submitted in order to prevail.
On the basis of the portion of Award 16350 which we have underlined Carrier has conclusively proved in the record before us that the alleged practice exists and Rule 37 (a) has no application whatever to an unassigned, furloughed employe because he has no headquarters. Thus, if the Referee had followed the principles laid down in Award 16350, be would have denied these claims.
The fact that the parties have been in agreement for forty odd years on the point that unassigned, furloughed employes do not have a headquarters and therefore are not entitled to any payment under Rule 37 (a) is conclusively established in this record with thirty-three unchallenged affidavits of