NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD
THIRD DIVISION Docket Number MW-21496
Robert J. Ables, Referee
(Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes
PARTIES TO DISPUTE:
(St. Johnsbury
6
Lamoille County Railroad, Inc.
(M.P.S. Associates, Inc.
(Vermont Public Service Board
(Lamoille Valley Railroad Company
(Wabash Valley Railroad Corporation
ON REMAND FROM UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF VERMONT: CIVIL ACTION NO. 79-142
STATEMENT OF CLAIM: Claim of the System Committee of the Brotherhood that:
(1) Trackman Roger Stone shall be reimbursed for all wages lost since
February 1, 1975 because he was deprived of the exercise of displacement rights.
(Carrier's "File - Union Maintenance of Way")
(2) Each employe (named below) shall be paid in full for all vacation
time due them in the calendar year 1974 (specified below) which each of diem
earned in the calendar year 1973.
VACATION VACATION
NAME PERIOD NAME PERIOD
William H. Arel 15 days Roy E. Lamphire 10 days
Norman J. Bergeron 15 Kenneth J. Mercier 10
Leonard Bray 15 Kirk J. Patch 10 "
Kenneth C. gill 15 Raymond Phillips 10
Richard G. Perkins 15
" H
ermie Raymond 10
Robert L. Smith 10
Jeffery Bryce 10 Archie A. Fournier 10
Fred Garrow 10 "
Albert N. Goodell 10 William D. Garrow 5 "
Raymond Jettie 10 Roger A. Stone 5 "
(Carrier's "File - Union Maintenance of Wayff)
Award Number 24631 Page 2
Locket Number MW-21496
OPINION OF BOARD:
I.
NATURE OF THE CASE
This action by the National Railroad Adjustment Board, Third Division,
is taken pursuant to an order of the United States District Court for the District
of Vermont, remanding this dispute between the parties to this Board for rehearing.
(Civil Action File No. 79-142 (1981).)
In its opinion and decision before remand, this Board decided that the
St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad had violated its collective bargaining
agreement with the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes concerning certain
vacation claims which had matured under the predecessor Carrier.
In remanding this dispute to this Board, the Court noted that the
"(olperation of the railroad has changed hands so many times since the vacation
pay was earned that the question of which organization (railroad) must compensate
the employees has no ready answer". The Court reviewed the Board's decision °for
compliance with the terms of the Railway Labor Act", but left open other stated
bases for review in the event the case was returned to the Court for enforcement
after rehearing. The Court was particularly concerned about due process and the
Board's conclusion that a successor carrier is bound as a matter of law to
compensate its employees for vacation benefits which accrued during the operation
of the railroad at an earlier date by another carrier.
On notice requirements before decision by this Board, the Court found
it to be "especially troubling· that the carrier against which the vacation credits
were earned, i.e., the predecessor carrier, St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County
Railroad, (also known as the Pinsley Interests, or, as named at the time of the
rehearing before this Board, M.P.S. Associates, Inc.) had not been given notice
by the Board to appear at the hearing before the Board, in May 1976, to consider
the basic claims of the employees for vacation pay. The Court declared it was
unwilling to enforce the Board's award until it was certain that each defendant
(before the Court) against whom enforcement may properly run, has had a fair
opportunity to present its case to the Board. The Court declined to enforce the
Board's award because, in its opinion, the proceedings were not conducted in
compliance with 45 U.S.C. 5153 First (j) of the Railway Labor Act requiring the
Board to give notice to all parties necessary to resolve the vacation pay dispute.
The Court decided that the proper disposition of the case on motions before the
Court was a remand to the Board for further proceedings on the basis that the
Court was ·uawilling to enforce an award which does not clearly name the parties
against whom it is enforceable and which results from proceedings before the
NRAB,
of which not all interested parties were given notice".
In sum, the Court remanded the case to the Board to permit the Board to
reexamine its earlier findings that successor carriers are bound, as a matter of
law, to pay for accrued vacation during the oration of the railroad before the
sale of the property and to give all the defendants (in the Court proceeding) an
opportunity to be heard concerning the merits of the original claim for vacation
pay, before the Court will make any judgment as to which party, if any, a new
award of the Board may be enforced.
Award Number 24631 Page 3
Locket Number MW-21496
II. BOARD ACTION ON REMAND
On September 4, 1981, by letter to each of the parties in the present
proceeding, the Board (acting without referee) gave notice of hearing "for the
purpose of orally reviewing and arguing the evidence already presented" and that
the Board "is not disposed to accept evidence not heretofore presented".
By further notice to the parties on September 25, 1981, the Board (still
acting without referee) set the date for the hearing on November 4, 1981 and
emphasized again that the Board acts in an appellate capacity on authority of
Section 3, First of the Railway Labor Act, as amended, and as an appellate board
"the National Railroad Adjustment Board does not conduct evidentiary hearings.
This Board's jurisdiction is limited to a review of the material and arguments as
developed by the parties to the dispute during their on-property handling thereof."
(Emphasis in the original.)
All designated parties appeared at the hearing through counsel. The
proceedings were not transcribed.
A. Positions Of The Parties Before The Board After Remand
The essential position of each party follows:
1. St. Johnsbury And Lamoille County Railroad, Inc.
The St. Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad, Inc. concluded
that the Pinsley Corporation (now M.P.S. Associates, Inc. ), the owner and operator
of the railroad at the time vacation pay accrued to the
employees, should
pay the
claims on
three grounds
. First, equitable estoppel should be invoked, requiring M.P.S
Associates, Inc. to pay the claim because it would be unfair to require the St.
Johnsbury and Lamoille County Railroad, Inc. to pay the claims as it was not the
wrongdoer and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes had slept on its
rights in proceedings before the Interstate Commerce Commission (permitting
abandonment and sale of the railroad to the State of Vermont), thus, misleading
the State as the purchaser
concerning outstanding
obligations. Second, there was
no substantial evidence that the claims by the employees were made in accordance
with the Railway Labor Act, particularly with respect to the failure of the
employees to make timely claims for vacation pay. Third, that the Board is not
empowered to order a subsequent carrier to pay the debt of a prior carrier; there
is no court decision under the Railway Labor Act granting enforcement against a
successor company; it did not acquire the assets, accounts recoverable cr payable
of the predecessor railroad; that the St. Johnsbury, etc. did not buy out a prior
company, only that it leased it from the State of Vermont, thereby adopting the
old name, thus, the Board lacks rower to order a subsequent carrier to pay damages;
and that, even if the Board has such power, it should not exercise it because
there has been no continuity of ownership.
Award Number 24631 Page 4
Docket Number MW-21496
2. Pinsley Interests (now M.P.S. Associates Inc.)
Pinsley was never aware of the claim on the property when it
owned the railroad. The new operator did not deny the claim when it was
presented, it said only that it was not liable to pay such claims, but did not
refer the claims to Pinsley; thus, Pinsley did not have an opportunity to argue
time limits in filing the claims and that, in any event, labor contracts do not
carry forward automatically.
3. Vermont Public Service Board
The only issue is whether the State (or the Vermont Public
Service Board) is a carrier. The State maintains it is not. In none of the
operating agreements did the State have any responsibility for operating the
railroad. It ras not signatory to any waiver agreement concerning vacations.-
4. Lamoille Valley Railroad Company
The substantial issue is whether a successor operator is liable
for the mature debts of the predecessor company and there is no federal case law
on point. However, the Lamoille Valley Railroad did not exist at the time of the
National Railroad Adjustment Board award on the vacation claims and although
there can be constructive satisfaction of the collective bargaining agreements
under the Galveston case (351 F2d 183 (1965). CA 5th Cir.), that decision does
not provide for automatic
continuation of
that agreement. As an equitable
consideration, at the time this party made a new agreement with the employees on
vacation pay, there was no reference to past vacation claims; thus, the Lamoille
Valley Railroad Company should not be held responsible. for those claims. The
Lamoille Valley Railroad Company also complained that it did not have an
opportunity to introduce new evidence under the Board's procedures on remand.
5. Wabash Valley Railroad Corporation
The Wabash Valley Railroad Corporation is not the legal successor
to the predecessor company. The claim is barred because the Vermont Northern
Railway, predecessor to the Wabash Valley Railroad Corporation, made a new
agreement with the Union on vacations, not including any old vacation claims. In
any event, the claims should be denied on grounds stated by the Board in its
initial determination of the vacation pay claims, based on equitable estoppel and
Zaches.
Award Number 24631 Page 6
Locket Number MW-21496
On the face of the claim, there was no apparent question as to the
carrier responsible for paying the claim, if valid. There was no obligation of
which this Board is aware to undertake discovery to determine corporate or
intercorporate relationships, or lease, or acquisitions, or mergers, or other
such arrangements, to determine which corporate entity was speaking for the
carrier which was running the railroad. It was, and it continues to be, this
Board's opinion that in the adjustment of minor disputes, which is the mission of
this Board under the Railway Labor Act, it is sufficient, unless there are
apparent contrary indications, to name the employer of the employees who have
filed the claim under an existing collective bargaining agreement and that it is
not the obligation of an Adjustment Board to sift through corporate relationships,
or sell and purchase agreements, to determine which carrier (of possibly several,
as it later developed in this dispute) shall pay the claim. We expect the
designated carrier to pay the claim, if determined to be valid. It is the duty
of the named carrier to give the Board notice of other potentially responsible
parties to anticipate interpleader or indemnity considerations - none of which
was done here. We do not consider therefore that there was any infirmity in the
Board's notice requirements about hearing the claim.
On May 19, 1977 this Board sustained the claims of named employees for
vacation pay for specified time and it ordered the St. Johnsbury and Lamoille
County Railroad (as owned by the State of Vermont) to pay those claims. Thus,
the claimants, the amounts due, and the carrier which was to pay those claims
were clear.
Any contest about which of the corporate entities is to pay the claim
is to be decided by the federal courts, whatever may be the cross-claims between
corporate interests.
C. Successor Railroad Required To Pay Claim
The Board holds to its view that the St. Johnsbury and Lamoille
County Railroad, at the time of the Board's award, is required to pay the vacation
claims under the collective bargaining agreement existing at the time.
The District Court has raised the question whether the collective
bargaining agreement between the St. Johnsbury and Lamoille Railroad, :>efore the
sale, and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes terminated, automatically,
upon the sale of the railroad to the State of Vermont. The Court refers to cases
under the National Labor Relations Act which indicate that there is such automatic
termination. Also, the court notes that there is no decisional law under the
Railway Labor Act on point.
Award Number 24631 Page 8
Docket Number MW-21496
Here, the Long Island Railroad, formerly under private ownership, was
acquired by New York State in 1966. Some 13 years later, the United Transportation
Union, representing the employees of the railroad, and the railroad, failed to
reach an agreement after conducting collective bargaining negotiations pursuant
to the Railway Labor Act. Also, mediation efforts failed to produce an agreement.
This condition triggered a required cooling off period under the Act, at the
expiration of which the Act permitted the union to resort to strike. Anticipating
that New York would challenge the applicability of the Railway Labor Act to the
Long Island Railroad, the union sued in Federal District Court, seeking a
declaratory judgment that the labor dispute was covered by that Act, and not the
Taylor Law, the New York law prohibiting strikes by public employees. The
railroad then filed suit in a New York state court seeking to enjoin an impending
strike by the union under the Taylor Law. Before the state court acted, the _
Federal District Court held that the railroad was subject to the Railway Labor
Act and that the Act, rather than the Taylor Law was applicable. The District
Court rejected the railroad's argument that application of the Railway Labor Act
to a state-owned railroad was
inconsistent with
National League of Cities v.
Usery, 426 U. S. 833, wherein it was held that Congress could not impose the
requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act on state and local governments. The
Curt of Appeals reversed, holding that the operation of the railroad was an
integral state governmental function, that the Railway Labor Act displaced "essential
governmental decisions" involving that function, and that the state's interests
in controlling the operation of the railroad outweighed the federal interests in
having the Federal Act applied.
The Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals and held In the Long
Island Railroad case, among other things, that application to a state-owned
railroad of Congress acknowledged authority to regulate labor relations in the
railroad industry does not so impair a state's ability to carry out its
constitutionally preserved sovereign function as to come in conflict with the
Tenth Amendment. Pp 4-12. Also, the decision in National League of Cities,
supra, was distinguished. Further, the court held that operation of a railroad
engaged in interstate commerce is clearly not an integral part of traditional
state activities generally immune from federal regulation; and that federal
regulation of state-owned railroads, whether freight or passenger, simply does
not impair a state's ability to function as a state.
The Supreme Court added that to allow individual states by acquiring
railroads -
Award Number 24631 Page 9
Docket Number MW-21496
"to circumvent the federal system of railroad
collective bargaining, or any of the other
elements of federal regulation of railroads,
would destroy the longstanding and comprehensive uniform scheme of federal regulation
of railroads and their labor relations
thought essential by Congress and would endanger
the efficient operation of the interstate rail
system. Moreover, a state acquiring a railroad does so knowing the railroad is subject
to such scheme of federal regulation". (Emphasis added)
This opinion was delivered by the Chief Justice for a unanimous court.
The decision of the Supreme Court in 1982 in the Long Island Railroad
case followed earlier similarly held views of the same court. Brotherhood of Ry.
s S. C., etc. v. Florida E. C. Ry. Company, 384 US 240, 245 (1966). There, theSupreme Court referred to the need to avoid "calamities' by the interruption of
rail service. It noted that the Railway Labor Act contains detailed procedures
that must be followed before any agreement is terminated. The Court emphasized
that those procedures must be strictly construed:
"...
any power to change or
revise the basic collective bargaining agreement must be closely confined and
supervised. These collective bargaining agreements are the products of years of
struggle and negotiation
...'
ibid at page 246.
It may be fairly inferred from these decisions not only that the State
of Vermont is a carrier within the meaning of the Railway Labor Act but that such
Act must be read and applied under its own authority, traditions, conventions,
practice and policy, as to such questions as continuity of the collective
bargaining agreement. As there was no Section 6 change to the collective bargaining
relationship in issue and the railroad was not abandoned, or anything similar,
there is substantial basis to conclude that the collective bargaining agreement
survived the sale of the railroad to the State of Vermont and that the employees
had
continuing rights
thereunder, including unpaid vacation benefits.
Not all the equities in this case favor the employees or their organization
(because of their calculated silence in proceedings before the Interstate Commerce
Commission when that agency was considering the predecessor owner's request for
authority to abandon the railroad and the concessions by other railroad employee
organizations to induce the Commission to permit operation of the railroad upon
the sale to the State of Vermont). But, the employees who have filed claims for
earned vacation pay are within their rights to be paid such claims and the party
to pay the claim is the railroad for whom the employees worked at the time the
claim was made which was the St. Johnsbury and Lamoille Valley Railroad, as owned
at the time by the State of Vermont. Such railroad, at the time of the claim,
had due notice and opportunity to defend its interests in proceedings before this
Board.
The Board, therefore, reaffirms prior Award Na. 21522
Award Number 24631 Page 10
Docket Number MW-21496
FINDINGS: The Third Division of the Adjustment Board, after giving the parties
to this dispute due notice of hearing thereon, and 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
That the Agreement was violated.
A
W
A R D
Board Award No. 21522 in Locket No. MW-21496, dated May 19, 1977, is
reaffirmed in accordance with the opinion.
NATIONAL RAILROAD ADJUSTMENT BOARD
By Order of Third Division
ATTEST:
Nancy er - Executive Secretary
Dated at Chicago, Illinois this 30th day of January, 1984