Claiming that, under a collective bargaining agreement entered
into between his union and a railroad under the Railway Labor Act
of 1934, he was entitled to extra pay for each time he had
performed service for his employer on the tracks of another
railroad, a locomotive engineer retired from railroad service and
brought suit for such additional compensation against his former
employer in a Federal District Court.
Held: notwithstanding his retirement from service, the
National Railroad Adjustment Board had exclusive primary
jurisdiction over this dispute arising under a collective
bargaining agreement, and the District Court properly dismissed the
complaint. Pp.
360 U. S.
548-554.
258 F.2d 62 reversed, and cause remanded.
Mr. Justice FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
In April, 1955, Charles A. DePriest began an action in the
District Court for the District of New Jersey, claiming $27,000 in
additional compensation from the Pennsylvania Railroad. DePriest
had been employed as a locomotive engineer by the Railroad from
May, 1918, to March, 1955, at which time he resigned his employment
and applied for an annuity. He alleged that, under the terms of a
collective bargaining agreement between the Railroad
Page 360 U. S. 549
and Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, of which he was a
member, he was entitled to an extra day's pay for each of the
1,000-1,500 times he had been assigned to leave his switching
limits and perform service for his employer on tracks belonging to
the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Co. He relied on a provision of the
collective bargaining agreement which provided extra compensation
for engineers who were used beyond their switching limits under
specially defined circumstances. DePriest further alleged that his
claim had been rejected by his employer's representatives,
including the Railroad's chief operating officer for the region in
which he was employed. His retirement from service occurred
immediately after this alleged rejection. Jurisdiction was based on
diversity of citizenship. The District Court stayed the proceedings
awaiting the disposition of similar claims against the Pennsylvania
Railroad then pending before the First Division of the National
Railroad Adjustment Board,
DePriest v. Pennsylvania R.
Co., 145 F. Supp. 596. An appeal from this interlocutory
decision, not one granting or denying an injunction, was dismissed.
243 F.2d 485. In the interim, DePriest died, and was replaced by an
administrator. Following a rejection by the National Railroad
Adjustment Board of claims against the Pennsylvania Railroad
involving the same provisions of the collective bargaining
agreement, the District Court dismissed the complaint on the ground
that the Board's interpretations were final, and, as such, binding
on respondent, 155 F. Supp. 695. The Court of Appeals reversed, 258
F.2d 62, holding that the determination by the Board of claims to
which respondent was not a party was not binding on him, and that
the District Court had jurisdiction over the claim. We granted
certiorari, 358 U.S. 878,, since this decision raised an important
question in the administration of the Railway Labor Act of 1934.
That Act, 48 Stat. 1185, 45 U.S.C. § 151 et seq., established
a broad framework for the regulation
Page 360 U. S. 550
and adjustment of industrial controversies involving
railroads.
The Act establishes,
inter alia, the National Railroad
Adjustment Board with the following purposes and functions:
"The disputes between an employee or group of employees and a
carrier or carriers growing out of grievances or out of the
interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of
pay, rules, or working conditions, including cases pending and
unadjusted on the date of approval of this Act, shall be handled in
the usual manner up to and including the chief operating officer of
the carrier designated to handle such disputes; but, failing to
reach an adjustment in this manner, the disputes may be referred by
petition of the parties or by either party to the appropriate
division of the Adjustment Board with a full statement of the facts
and all supporting data bearing upon the disputes."
Railway Labor Act, § 3, First (i), 45 U.S.C. § 153,
First (1).
The clash of economic forces which led to the passage of this
Act, the history of its enactment, and the legislative policies
which it expresses and which guide judicial interpretation have
been too thoroughly and recently canvassed by this Court to need
repetition. [
Footnote 1] On the
basis of these guides to judicial construction, we have held that
the National Railroad Adjustment Board had exclusive primary
jurisdiction over disputes between unions and carriers based on the
provisions of a collective bargaining agreement.
Slocum v.
Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., 339 U.
S. 239. On the same day, we also decided
Order of
Page 360 U. S. 551
Railway Conductors of America v. Southern Ry. Co.,
339 U. S. 255,
holding that the principles of
Slocum were fully
applicable to a claim by a group of conductors that they were
entitled to extra compensation for certain "side trips" under the
terms of their agreement with the carrier. That case, like the case
now before us, involved claims for compensation which could only be
adjudicated by a determination of the relevant facts and
construction of the collective bargaining agreement. However, here,
as was not the case in
Order of Railway Conductors of
America, the claimant has retired from railroad service. The
immediate question is whether that factual difference makes a legal
difference.
The Act grants jurisdiction to the Board of "disputes between an
employee . . . and a carrier. . . ." It defines "employee" as
including:
". . . every person in the service of a carrier (subject to its
continuing authority to supervise and direct the manner of
rendition of his service) who performs any work defined as that of
an employee or subordinate official in the orders of the Interstate
Commerce Commission. . . ."
The National Railroad Adjustment Board was established as a
tribunal to settle disputes arising out of the relationship between
carrier and employee. All the considerations which led Congress to
entrust an expert administrative board with the interpretation of
collective bargaining agreements are equally applicable when, as
here, the employee has retired from service after initiating a
claim for compensation for work performed while on active duty. The
nature of the problem and the need for experience and expert
knowledge remain the same. The same collective bargaining agreement
must be construed with the same need for uniformity of
interpretation and orderly adjustment of differences. There is
Page 360 U. S. 552
nothing in the Act which requires that the employment
relationship subsist throughout the entire process of
administrative settlement. The purpose of the Act is fulfilled if
the claim itself arises out of the employment relationship which
Congress regulated. The Board itself has accepted this construction
and adjudicates the claims of retired employees. [
Footnote 2] This uniform administrative
interpretation is of great importance, reflecting as it does the
needs and fair expectations of the railroad industry for which
Congress has provided what might be termed a charter for its
internal government. Moreover, the discharged employee may
challenge the validity of his discharge before the Board, seeking
reinstatement and back pay.
See Union Pacific R. Co. v.
Price, 360 U. S. 601.
Thus, it is plain both from a reading of the Act in light of its
purpose and the needs of its administration and from the settled
administrative interpretation that the Board has jurisdiction over
respondent's claim for compensation.
Since the Board has jurisdiction, it must have exclusive primary
jurisdiction. All the considerations of legislative meaning and
policy which have compelled the conclusion that an active employee
must submit his claims to the Board, and may not resort to the
courts in the first instance, are the same when the employee has
retired and seeks compensation for work performed while he remained
on active service. A contrary conclusion would create a not
insubstantial class of preferred claimants. [
Footnote 3]
Page 360 U. S. 553
Retired employees would be allowed to bypass the Board specially
constituted for hearing railroad disputes whenever they deemed it
advantageous to do so, whereas all other employees would be
required to present their claims to the Board. This case forcefully
illustrates the difficulties of such a construction. Several active
workers have had claims similar to that of respondent rejected by
the Board. To allow respondent now to try his claim in the District
Court would only accentuate the danger of inequality of treatment
and its consequent discontent which it was the aim of the Railway
Labor Act to eliminate. We can take judicial notice of the fact
that provisions in railroad collective bargaining agreements are of
a specialized technical nature calling for specialized technical
knowledge in ascertaining their meaning and application. Wholly
apart from the adaptability of judges and juries to make such
determinations, varying jury verdicts would imbed into such
judgments varying constructions not subject to review to secure
uniformity. Not only would this engender diversity of proceedings,
but diversity through judicial construction and through the
construction of the Adjustment Board. Since nothing is a greater
spur to conflicts, and eventually conflicts resulting in strikes,
than different pay for the same work or unfair differentials, not
to respect the centralized determination of these questions through
the Adjustment Board would hamper, if not defeat, the central
purpose of the Railway Labor Act.
Our decision in
Moore v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
312 U. S. 630,
does not stand in the way of this. The decision in that case has
been given its proper, limited scope in
Slocum v. Delaware, L.
& W. R. Co., 339 U. S. 239.
Moore carved out from the controlling doctrine of primary
jurisdiction the unusual and special situation of wrongful
discharge where the aggrieved employee had been expelled from the
employment relationship. Moreover,
Page 360 U. S. 554
since the discharge had been accepted as final by the employee,
it is probable that the damages accrued primarily after the
employment relationship had terminated.
Our consistent regard for the importance of having disputes
between railroad employees and carriers settled by the
administrative Board which Congress established for that purpose
requires respondent to resort to the NRAB for adjudication of his
claim.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, in order that
the case may be returned to the District Court, with instructions
to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
See, e.g., Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Chicago River
& Indiana R. Co., 353 U. S. 30;
Slocum v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., 339 U.
S. 239;
Order of Railway Conductors of America v.
Pitney, 326 U. S. 561;
Elgin, J. & E. Ry. Co. v. Burley, 325 U.
S. 711.
[
Footnote 2]
E.g., National Railroad Adjustment Board, First
Division, Award No. 15406;
id., Awards Nos. 11888 (with
interpretation of this award contained in Volume 81 of awards),
12418, 16129.
[
Footnote 3]
In the year 1956-1957, there were 361,000 retired railroad
employees receiving benefits under the Railroad Retirement Act.
H.R.Doc. No. 278, 85th Cong., 2d Sess.
The inapplicability of
United States v. Interstate Commerce
Commission, 337 U. S. 426, to
the problem of this case, like its inapplicability to the problem
in
Union Pacific R. Co. v. Price, 360 U.
S. 601, is dealt with in the Court's opinion in that
case.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom The CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS concur, dissenting.
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals for two
reasons: I do not agree that the Railway Labor Act requires retired
railroad employees to submit their back-wage claims to the National
Railroad Adjustment Board; I believe that Act, as here construed to
grant railroads court trials of wage claims against them while
compelling the employees to submit their claims to the Board for
final determination, denies employees equal protection of the law
in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Cf. Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U. S. 497.
I
The Court holds that the Railway Labor Act gives the National
Railroad Adjustment Board exclusive jurisdiction of back-pay
disputes between retired railroad employees and their ex-employer
railroads. I cannot read the Labor Act that way. The controlling
provision, § 3, First (i), confers power on the Board to
adjust "disputes
Page 360 U. S. 555
between an employee or a group of employees and a carrier or
carriers. . . ." [
Footnote 2/1]
Seemingly to highlight the fact that the Act is to govern active
workers only, Congress defined "employee" as
"every person in the service of a carrier (subject to its
continuing authority to supervise and direct the manner of
rendition of his service) who performs any work defined as that of
an employee. . . . [
Footnote
2/2]"
The railway engineer who brought this suit was not an employee
within this definition. Prior to suit, he had resigned his job, and
had claimed an annuity under the Railroad Retirement Act of 1937,
which requires a worker making such a claim to relinquish all
rights to return to railroad service in the future. [
Footnote 2/3] Under these circumstances,
the retired employee could not be, and was not, "in the service" of
the railroad or "subject to its continuing authority to supervise .
. . the manner of rendition of his service." No other language in
the Act brings retired railroad employees within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Adjustment Board. I think the Court's holding
represents an altogether unjustifiable interpretative liberty.
There are perhaps few statutes providing less of an excuse for
departing from congressional language than the Railway Labor Act,
at least insofar as its coverage is concerned. It is but one step
in a series of congressional efforts to establish machinery for
peaceful settlement of quarrels between railroads and railroad
workers in order to avoid strikes and resulting interruption of
railroad service. The Act as a whole is a product of many years of
thought, study, conferences, discussions, and experiments. Many
witnesses, including representatives
Page 360 U. S. 556
of railroads and employees, have testified at many congressional
hearings. The hearings show a solicitous interest by both groups in
the language of the legislation. The Act touches sensitive subjects
of importance to industrial peace, and represented, as enacted, a
balance of interests reasonably satisfactory to all groups. As
such, the plain meaning of its language should not lightly be
disturbed.
The Court finds reasons outside the language of the Act,
however, for expanding the Board's jurisdiction beyond the
boundaries set by the definitions of Congress. These reasons, in my
judgment, do not support the expansion of the Act's coverage which
the Court makes. The Court argues that
"All the considerations which led Congress to entrust an expert
administrative board with the interpretation of collective
bargaining agreements are equally applicable when, as here, the
employee has retired from service after initiating a claim for
compensation for work performed while on active duty."
I am afraid this statement assumes a knowledge which the Court
does not and cannot have. Of course, some of the same
considerations apply. I agree, for example, that the same
collective bargaining agreement must be construed whether wages are
claimed by an ex-employee or by an active employee. This is equally
true, however, when an ex-employee sues for wrongful discharge
under a collective bargaining agreement. Yet we have not hesitated
on three separate occasions to say that such actions for wrongful
discharge can be adjudicated in the courts, and that the courts
themselves may construe the bargaining agreement.
Moore v.
Illinois Central R. Co., 312 U. S. 630;
Slocum v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., 339 U.
S. 239;
Transcontinental & Western Air, Inc. v.
Koppal, 345 U. S. 653.
Similarly, when the Board makes an award adverse to the railroad
and the employee is forced to go
Page 360 U. S. 557
to the courts to have the award enforced, courts have felt free
to interpret collective bargaining agreements differently from the
way the Board had. [
Footnote
2/4]
Moreover, I do not agree with the Court that the problems
involved in suits by ex-employees and active employees are
necessarily the same. One cannot know all the complex of
considerations which led Congress to adopt the Act. One can only
surmise its reasons for carefully limiting the Act's scope to
disputes between active railroad workers and their employers. It is
clear, however, that active employees work together from day to
day; their work frequently makes them live together in the same
neighborhood; they in fact constitute almost a separate family of
people, discussing their interests and affairs and airing among
themselves their complaints and grievances against the company. In
such an atmosphere, individual dissatisfactions tend to become
those of the group, breeding industrial disturbances and strikes.
We cannot know that this is true of retired employees, as the Court
seems to take for granted. Instead, the very opposite would seem a
much more likely assumption. Retired employees give up their daily
work contact with active workers, frequently even move a long way
off from their old working localities, and therefore their personal
grievances are not so likely to breed group dissatisfaction leading
to strikes. Consequently, it seems wrong to intimate that the
grievances retired workers may have over claims for back pay are as
likely to create strife productive of railroad strikes as the same
grievances would if entertained by active railroad workers.
Certainly the Court's questionable assumption to this effect
supplies a very slim basis for departing from the clear language of
the Act.
Page 360 U. S. 558
But if external considerations are to be used to interpret the
statute, I think that the "lop-sided" effect courts have given to
the Act's provisions for review of Board awards furnishes a very
weighty reason for excluding retired employees from the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Board. The Act provides that either a railroad
worker or an employee can invoke the compulsory jurisdiction of the
Adjustment Board. [
Footnote 2/5]
Section 3, First (m) states that "awards shall be final and binding
upon both parties to the dispute, except insofar as they shall
contain a money award." [
Footnote
2/6] As construed, this provision prohibits an employee from
seeking review of an adverse Board ruling in the courts. [
Footnote 2/7] And courts, determining that
a Board denial of an employee's money claim is not a "money award"
falling within the exception of § 3, First (m), have refused
workers a judicial trial of their money claims against the railway
after these have been rejected by the Board. [
Footnote 2/8] Today's decision in
Union Pacific R.
Co. v. Price, post, p.
360 U. S. 601,
appears to adopt this position. In contrast, however, a railroad
may obtain a trial substantially
de novo of any award
adverse to it. For, under § 3, First (p)
Page 360 U. S. 559
of the Act, if a carrier does not voluntarily comply with the
Board's award, including wage awards for money damages, a wage
earner can enforce the Board's order only by bringing, in a United
States District Court, a suit which
"shall proceed in all respects as other civil suits, except that
on the trial of such suit the findings and order of the division of
the Adjustment Board shall be prima facie evidence of the facts
therein stated. . . . [
Footnote
2/9]"
Construed this way, the Act creates a glaring inequality of
treatment between workers and railroads. After denial by the
Adjustment Board, workers can get no judicial trial of their
claims; railroads, however, can get precisely the same kind of
trial they would have were there no Adjustment Board, except that
the Board's findings constitute
prima facie evidence in
the case. For the reasons stated by MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS in his
dissent in
Price, I think the Railway Labor Act should be
construed to grant a railroad employee the same kind of
redetermination by judge and jury of a Board order denying him a
"money award" that the Act affords a railroad for a money award
against it. The Court rejected this view in
Price. The
unfairness of the discriminatory procedure there upheld seems
manifest to me. In my judgment, it is bound to incite the kind of
bitter resentment among railroad workers which will produce discord
and strikes interrupting the free flow of commerce and creating the
very evil Congress sought to avoid by this Act. These reasons seem
to me to provide compelling arguments against judicial expansion of
the Act to retired railroad
Page 360 U. S. 560
workers plainly not covered by its language. Since the Court
refuses to construe the Act to exclude such workers, however, I am
forced to reach and consider the constitutional contentions raised
by respondent.
II
Respondent argues that giving the Adjustment Board jurisdiction
to make a "final and binding" determination of his wage claim
deprives him of a jury trial in violation of the Seventh Amendment,
since wage disputes were "Suits at common law. . . ." [
Footnote 2/10] His contention is all the
more serious where, as here, he is compelled to submit his claim to
the Board and -- as I understand the Court's holding here and in
Price -- is never allowed to take it to the courts for
trial. In a comparable situation, Congress amended the reparation
provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act for the specific purpose
of avoiding constitutional difficulties by guaranteeing a railroad
a full jury trial of money claims against it. [
Footnote 2/11] Significantly, § 3, First (p)
of the Railway Labor Act, which provides the kind of court trial a
railway can get before an award
Page 360 U. S. 561
against it can be enforced, is copied substantially verbatim
from § 16(2) of the amended Commerce Act. [
Footnote 2/12] That section (§ 16(2)) had
been construed by this Court long before the Railway Labor Act was
passed so as to assure that it did not "abridge the right of trial
by jury, or take away any of its incidents."
Meeker v. Lehigh
Valley R. Co., 236 U. S. 412,
236 U. S. 430.
It is hard for me to believe that Congress enacted the Railway
Labor Act on the assumption that a railroad worker is any less
entitled to a jury trial under the Constitution than is a railroad.
And I would construe the Act on the basis that Congress believed
both are entitled to such a trial.
See Union Pacific R. Co. v.
Price, 360 U. S. 601
(dissenting opinion). Instead, the Court, in
Price,
rejects this construction, from which it must follow that
respondent here is deprived of a jury trial, although the railroad
can get one.
It would surely not be easy to uphold the constitutionality of a
procedure which takes away from both parties to a wage dispute
their ancient common law right
Page 360 U. S. 562
to a trial by court and jury. [
Footnote 2/13] It should be impossible to uphold it
when, as here, the procedure grants both parties an administrative
hearing and then gives one of them a second chance before a judge
and jury, while denying it to the other. Such an unequal procedure
cannot be a fair trial, since it gives one side a far better chance
to win than the other. Analogous practices in both criminal and
civil cases have been consistently struck down by this and many
other courts. [
Footnote 2/14] Yet
today the Court upholds this
Page 360 U. S. 563
procedure without so much as discussing it. It does this
although I can hardly think of a case where discrimination between
litigants is less justified. Indeed, the only "justification" that
has been attempted is that, at the time the Railway Labor Act was
passed, certain representatives of the Railroad Brotherhoods were
willing to forego their right to trial by judge and jury in
exchange for certain benefits the law allegedly gave them.
See
Union Pacific R. Co. v. Price, 360 U.
S. 601. Taken as a whole, I do not read the legislative
history of the law as supporting any such concession by the unions.
But even if it did, I would not be able to uphold the procedure
here involved. For, assuming that an individual can contract away
his constitutional right to an equal trial, and assuming
additionally the still more doubtful proposition that
representatives of an organization can, by contract, estop its
members from claiming equal treatment in the courts in cases or
controversies arising thereafter, I cannot agree that the
statements of some union leaders to Congress when it enacted this
law can be taken to have such an effect. A fair trial is too
valuable a safeguard of our liberty for us to allow it to be so
easily discarded. I would hold that respondent has a right to jury
trial equal to that accorded the railroad, and that his
constitutional contention is well taken.
For all these reasons I would affirm the judgment of the Court
of Appeals.
[
Footnote 2/1]
48 Stat. 1191, 45 U.S.C. § 153, First (i).
[
Footnote 2/2]
44 Stat. 577, as amended, 45 U.S.C. § 151 Fifth.
[
Footnote 2/3]
50 Stat. 309, as amended, 45 U.S.C. § 228b.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Brotherhood of Railway and S.S. Clarks, Freight Handlers,
Express and Station Employees v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
238 F.2d 181;
Dahlberg v. Pittsburgh & L.E. R. Co.,
138 F.2d 121.
[
Footnote 2/5]
We recently held, over the vigorous protest of the railroad
workers, that this jurisdiction is not only compulsory, but that a
union can be enjoined from striking while the Board's jurisdiction
is being exercised.
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Chicago
River & Indiana R. Co., 353 U. S. 30.
[
Footnote 2/6]
48 Stat. 1191, 45 U.S.C. § 153, First (m).
[
Footnote 2/7]
See, e.g., 360
U.S. 548fn2/8|>note 8,
infra. Courts have
intimated, however, that review of Board rulings adverse to the
employee is permissible to the extent of insuring that the employee
was not deprived of procedural rights protected by due process.
Ellerd v. Southern Pacific R. Co., 241 F.2d 541;
Barnett v. Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines, 245 F.2d
579.
[
Footnote 2/8]
E.g., Reynolds v. Denver & Rio Grande Western R.
Co., 174 F.2d 673;
Parker v. Illinois Central R. Co.,
108 F. Supp. 186;
Ramsey v. Chesapeake & O. R.
Co., 75 F. Supp.
740.
[
Footnote 2/9]
48 Stat. 1192, 45 U.S.C. § 153, First (p).
The comparable provision in the Interstate Commerce Act has been
construed to give very limited effect to the Board's findings in
such a suit.
Meeker v. Lehigh Valley R. Co., 236 U.
S. 412,
236 U. S. 430;
United States v. Interstate Commerce Commission,
337 U. S. 426,
337 U. S. 435.
See also Dahlberg v. Pittsburgh & L.E. R. Co., 138
F.2d 121.
[
Footnote 2/10]
"In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall
exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be
preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise
reexamined in any Court of the United States, than according to the
rules of the common law."
U.S.Const. Amend. VII.
[
Footnote 2/11]
See Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Clark, 207 F. 717;
Western New York & P. R. Co. v. Penn Refining Co.,
Limited, 137 F. 343, 349-350.
See also United States v.
Interstate Commerce Commission, 337 U.
S. 426,
337 U. S. 444,
337 U. S.
454-455 (dissenting opinion);
Councill v. Western
& A. R. Co., 1 I.C.C. 339, 344-345;
Heck v. East
Tennessee, V. & G. R. Co., 1 I.C.C. 495, 502. And in his
dissent in
Union Pacific R. Co. v. Price, 360 U.
S. 601,
360 U. S. 617,
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS calls attention to the fact that the provisions
of the Interstate Commerce Act have been construed, in
United
States v. Interstate Commerce Comm'n, 337 U.
S. 426, to provide for review of Commission reparation
orders by shippers, as well as by the railways.
[
Footnote 2/12]
Section 3, First (p) of the Railway Labor Act reads in part:
"Such suit in the District Court of the United States shall
proceed in all respects as other civil suits, except that, on the
trial of such suit, the findings and order of the division of the
Adjustment Board shall be prima facie evidence of the facts therein
stated. . . ."
48 Stat. 1192, 45 U.S.C. § 153, First (p).
Section 16(2) of the Interstate Commerce Act reads in part:
"Such suit in the district court of the United States shall
proceed in all respects like other civil suits for damages, except
that, on the trial of such suit, the findings and order of the
commission shall be prima facie evidence of the facts therein
stated."
34 Stat. 590, as amended, 49 U.S.C. § 16(2).
"Since both Acts [Interstate Commerce Act and Railway Labor Act]
came out of the same Congressional Committees, one finds, naturally
enough, that the provisions for enforcement and review of the
Adjustment Board's awards were based on those for reparation orders
by the Interstate Commerce Commission."
Elgin, J. & E. Ry. Co. v. Burley, 325 U.
S. 711,
325 U. S. 749,
325 U. S. 760
(dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 2/13]
See 3 Blackstone Commentaries (15th ed. 1809) 162; 2
id. at 442.
If an employee can be compelled to submit his wage claim to the
Adjustment Board for final determination, there would seem to be no
reason, despite the clear mandate of the Seventh Amendment, why he
could not also be compelled to submit common law tort claims for
negligent injury to an administrative or semi-administrative board.
Cf. Barnett v. Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines, 245
F.2d 579 (Board adjudication of contract action between railroad
and injured railroad worker who claimed that he had been given
contract of employment for life in settlement of prior negligent
injury suit held to preclude court suit by employee).
[
Footnote 2/14]
E.g., Burns v. Ohio, 358 U.S. 919 (state required to
allow indigent defendant to appeal
in forma pauperis from
criminal conviction where appeal as of right allowed other
defendants);
Griffin v. Illinois, 351 U. S.
12 (same);
Spartanburg v. Cudd, 132 S.C. 264,
128 S.E. 360 (right to jury redetermination of administrative award
in condemnation suit must be allowed municipality if permitted to
property owner);
Georgia Power Co. v. Brooks, 207 Ga. 406,
62 S.E.2d 183
(statute allowing one party to a condemnation valuation suit to
introduce evidence of "similar sales" while other party is not,
held invalid);
People v. Sholem, 238 Ill. 203, 87 N.E. 390
(appeal from administrative determination of valuation of an estate
for tax purposes must be allowed State if allowed other party);
Hecker v. Illinois Central R. Co., 231 Ill. 574, 83 N.E.
456 (statute providing for state supreme court review of facts
after trial court's findings reversed without grant of new trial by
intermediate appellate court, but denying such review if trial
court's findings upheld, found invalid).
It is not surprising, in view of this long history, that courts
and judges have questioned the constitutionality of compelling
railroad workers to submit disputes to the Adjustment Board while
denying them the same trial by jury which is allowed a railroad.
See Washington Terminal Co. v. Boswell, 75 U.S.App.D.C. 1,
11, 124 F.2d 235, 245,
affirmed by an equally divided
Court, 319 U.S. 732;
Barnett v. Pennsylvania-Reading
Seashore Lines, 245 F.2d 579, 581.
See also United States
v. Interstate Commerce Commission, 337 U.
S. 426,
337 U. S. 444,
337 U. S. 459
(dissenting opinion);
Elgin, J. & E. Ry. Co. v.
Burley, 325 U. S. 711,
325 U. S.
719.