A group of railroad employees sued in a Georgia State Court to
enjoin enforcement of a union shop agreement entered into between a
group of railroads and labor unions of their employees under § 2,
Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act, which required all employees to
join the union and to pay initiation fees, assessments and dues in
order to keep their jobs. The complaint alleged that a substantial
part of the money each of these employes was thus compelled to pay
was used over his protest to finance the campaigns of political
candidates whom he opposed, and to promote the propagation of
political and economic doctrines, concepts, and ideologies with
which he disagreed. The trial court found that the allegations were
fully proved, and that, in these circumstances, the union shop
agreement violated the complaining employees' rights under the
First Amendment. It enjoined enforcement of the union shop
agreement and awarded some of the employees judgments for the money
they had been required to pay. The Supreme Court of Georgia
affirmed.
Held: The judgment is reversed, and the case is
remanded for further proceedings. Pp.
367 U. S.
742-775.
1. In
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson, 351 U.
S. 225, this Court held that enactment of the provision
of § 2, Eleventh, which authorizes union shop agreements between
interstate railroads and unions of their employees was a valid
exercise by Congress of its powers under the Commerce Clause and
did not, on its face, violate the First Amendment or the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, but it reserved decision on
the constitutional questions presented in this case by the actual
application of that section and the union shop agreements entered
into thereunder. Pp.
367 U. S.
746-749.
2. Though the record in this case adequately presents those
constitutional questions, it is not necessary for this Court to
decide the correctness of the constitutional determinations made by
the Georgia Courts, because § 2, Eleventh, denies authority to a
union,
Page 367 U. S. 741
over the employee's objection, to spend his money for political
causes which he opposes. Pp.
367 U. S.
749-770.
(a) A review of the legislative history of the Railway Labor Act
leads to the conclusion that the purpose of § 2, Eleventh, is to
force employees to share the costs of negotiating and administering
collective agreements and adjusting and settling disputes. Pp.
367 U.S. 750-764.
(b) Section 2, Eleventh, denies the unions the power, over an
employee's objection, to use his exacted funds to support political
causes which he opposes. Pp.
367 U. S.
765-770.
3. The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for
further proceedings, including the fashioning of a more appropriate
remedy. Pp.
367 U. S.
771-775.
(a) The union shop agreement itself is not unlawful, and the
employees here involved remain obligated, as a condition of
continued employment, to make the payments to their respective
unions called for by the agreement. P.
367 U. S.
771.
(b) The injunction restraining enforcement of the union shop
agreement is not a remedy appropriate to the violation of the Act's
restrictions on expenditures. Pp.
367 U. S.
771-772.
(c) A blanket injunction against all expenditures of funds for
the disputed purposes, even one conditioned on cessation of
improper expenditures, would not be a proper exercise of equitable
discretion. Pp.
367 U. S.
772-773.
(d) Any remedy should be granted only to employees who have made
known to the union officials that they do not desire their funds to
be used for political causes to which they object. P.
367 U. S.
774.
(e) The present action is not a true class action, since there
was no attempt to prove the existence of a class of workers who had
specifically objected to the exaction of dues for political
purposes. Therefore, only those who have identified themselves as
opposed to political uses of their funds are entitled to relief in
this action. P.
367 U. S.
774.
(f) One possible remedy would be an injunction against
expenditure for political causes opposed by each complaining
employee of a sum, from those moneys to be spent by the union for
political purposes, which is so much of the moneys exacted from him
as is the proportion of the union's total expenditures made for
such political activities to the union's total budget. Pp.
367 U. S.
774-775.
Page 367 U. S. 742
(g) Another possible remedy would be restitution to each
individual employee of that portion of his money which the union
expended, despite his notification, for the political causes to
which he advised the union he was opposed. P.
367 U. S.
775.
215 Ga. 27,
108 S.E.2d
796, judgment reversed and case remanded.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
A group of labor organizations, appellants here, and the
carriers comprising the Southern Railway System, entered into a
union shop agreement pursuant to the authority of § 2, Eleventh, of
the Railway Labor Act. [
Footnote
1] The agreement
Page 367 U. S. 743
requires each of the appellees, employees of the carriers, as a
condition of continued employment, to pay the appellant union
representing his particular class of craft the dues, initiation
fees and assessments uniformly
Page 367 U. S. 744
required as a condition of acquiring or retaining union
membership. The appellees, in behalf of themselves and of employees
similarly situated, brought this action in the Superior Court of
Bibb County, Georgia, alleging that the money each was thus
compelled to pay to hold his job was in substantial part used to
finance the campaigns of candidates for federal and state offices
whom he opposed, and to promote the propagation of political and
economic doctrines, concepts and ideologies with which he
disagreed. The Superior Court found that the allegations were fully
proved, [
Footnote 2] and
entered a judgment
Page 367 U. S. 745
and decree enjoining the enforcement of the union shop agreement
on the ground that § 2, Eleventh, violates the Federal Constitution
to the extent that it permits such use by the appellants of the
funds exacted from employees. [
Footnote 3] The Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed, 215
Page 367 U. S. 746
Ga. 27,
108 S.E.2d
796. [
Footnote 4] On appeal
to this Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1257(1), we noted probable
jurisdiction, 361 U.S. 807.
I
THE HANSON DECISION
We held in
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson,
351 U. S. 225,
that enactment of the provision of § 2, Eleventh, authorizing union
shop agreements between interstate railroads and unions of their
employees was a valid exercise by Congress of its powers under the
Commerce Clause, and did not violate the First Amendment or the Due
Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. It is argued that our
disposition of the First Amendment claims in
Hanson
disposes of appellees' constitutional claims in this case adversely
to their contentions. We disagree. As appears from its history,
that case decided only that § 2, Eleventh, in authorizing
collective agreements conditioning employees'
Page 367 U. S. 747
continued employment on payment of union dues, initiation fees
and assessments, did not, on its face, impinge upon protected
rights of association. The Nebraska Supreme Court, in
Hanson, upholding the employees' contention that the union
shop could not constitutionally be enforced against them, stated
that the union shop
"improperly burdens their right to work and infringes upon their
freedoms. This is particularly true as to the latter, because it is
apparent that some of these labor organizations advocate political
ideas, support political candidates, and advance national economic
concepts which may or may not be of an employee's choice."
Hanson v. Union Pac. R. Co., 160 Neb. 669, 697,
71 N.W.2d
526, 546. That statement was made in the context of the
argument that compelling an individual to become a member of an
organization with political aspects is an infringement of the
constitutional freedom of association, whatever may be the
constitutionality of compulsory financial support of group
activities outside the political process. The Nebraska court's
reference to the support of political ideas, candidates, and
economic concepts "which may or may not be of an employee's choice"
indicates that it was considering, at most, the question of
compelled membership in an organization with political facets. In
their brief in this Court, the appellees in
Hanson argued
that First Amendment rights would be infringed by the enforcement
of an agreement which would enable compulsorily collected funds to
be used for political purposes. But there was nothing concrete in
the record to show the extent to which the unions were actually
spending money for political purposes, and what these purposes
were; nothing to show the extent to which union funds collected
from members were being used to meet the costs of political
activity and the mechanism by which this was done; and nothing to
show that the employees there involved opposed the use of their
Page 367 U. S. 748
money for any particular political objective. [
Footnote 5] In contrast, the present record
contains detailed information on all these points, and specific
findings were made in the courts below as to all of them. When it
is recalled that the action in
Hanson was brought before
the union shop agreement became effective, and that the appellees
never thereafter showed that the unions were actually engaged in
furthering political causes with which they disagreed and that
their money would be used to support such activities, it becomes
obvious that this Court passed merely on the constitutional
validity of § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act on its face,
and not as applied to infringe the particularized constitutional
rights of any individual. On such a record, the Court could not
have done more consistently with the restraints that govern us in
the adjudication of constitutional questions and warn against their
premature decision. We therefore reserved decision of the
constitutional questions which the appellees present in this case.
We said:
"It is argued that compulsory membership will be used to impair
freedom of expression. But that problem is not presented by this
record. . . . [I]f the exaction of dues, initiation fees, or
assessments is used as a cover for forcing ideological conformity
or other action in contravention of the Fifth Amendment, this
Page 367 U. S. 749
judgment will not prejudice the decision in that case. For we
pass narrowly on § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act. We only
hold that the requirement for financial support of the collective
bargaining agency by all who receive the benefits of its work is
within the power of Congress under the Commerce Clause, and does
not violate either the First or the Fifth Amendments."
Id., p.
351 U. S. 238.
See also p.
351 U. S. 242
(concurring opinion). Thus, all that was held in
Hanson
was that § 2, Eleventh, was constitutional in its bare
authorization of union shop contracts requiring workers to give
"financial support" to unions legally authorized to act as their
collective bargaining agents. We sustained this requirement -- and
only this requirement -- embodied in the statutory authorization of
agreements under which "all employees shall become members of the
labor organization representing their craft or class." Clearly, we
passed neither upon forced association in any other aspect nor upon
the issue of the use of exacted money for political causes which
were opposed by the employment.
The record in this case is adequate squarely to present the
constitutional questions reserved in
Hanson. These are
questions of the utmost gravity. However, the restraints against
unnecessary constitutional decisions counsel against their
determination unless we must conclude that Congress, in authorizing
a union shop under § 2, Eleventh, also meant that the labor
organization receiving an employee's money should be free, despite
that employee's objection, to spend his money for political causes
which he opposes. Federal statutes are to be so construed as to
avoid serious doubt of their constitutionality.
"When the validity of an act of the Congress is drawn in
question, and even if a serious doubt of constitutionality is
raised, it is a cardinal principle that this Court will first
ascertain whether a construction of the statute is fairly possible
by which the question may be avoided."
Crowell
Page 367 U. S. 750
v. Benson, 285 U. S. 22,
285 U. S. 62.
Each named appellee in this action has made known to the union
representing his craft of class his dissent from the use of his
money for political causes which he opposes. We have therefore
examined the legislative history of § 2, Eleventh, in the context
of the development of unionism in the railroad industry under the
regulatory scheme created by the Railway Labor Act to determine
whether a construction is "fairly possible" which denies the
authority to a union, over the employee's objection, to spend his
money for political causes which he opposes. We conclude that such
a construction is not only "fairly possible," but entirely
reasonable, and we therefore find it unnecessary to decide the
correctness of the constitutional determinations made by the
Georgia courts.
II
THE RAIL UNIONS AND UNION SECURITY
The history of union security in the railway industry is marked
first, by a strong and longstanding tradition of voluntary
unionism on the part of the standard rail unions; [
Footnote 6]
second, by the
declaration in 1934 of a congressional policy of complete freedom
of choice of employees to join or not to join a union;
third, by the modification
Page 367 U. S. 751
of the firm legislative policy against compulsion, but only as a
specific response to the recognition of the expenses and burdens
incurred by the unions in the administration of the complex scheme
of the Railway Labor Act.
When the question of union security in the rail industry was
first given detailed consideration by Congress in 1934, [
Footnote 7] only one of the standard
unions had security provisions in any of its contracts. The
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen maintained a number of so-called
"percentage" contracts requiring that, in certain classes of
employees represented by the Brotherhood, a specified percentage of
employees had to belong to the union. These contracts applied only
to yard conductors, yard brakemen and switchmen, and covered no
more than 10,000 workers, about 1% of all rail employees.
See letter from Joseph B. Eastman, Federal Coordinator of
Transportation, to Chairman of the House Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce, June 7, 1934, H.R.Rep. No. 1944, 73d Cong.,
2d Sess., pp. 14-16; testimony of James A. Farquharson, legislative
representative of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, Hearings on
H.R. 7650, House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 73d
Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 94-105.
Page 367 U. S. 752
During congressional consideration of the 1934 legislation, the
rail unions attempted to persuade Congress not to preclude them
from negotiating security arrangements. By amendments to the
original proposal, they sought to assure that the provision which
became § 2, Fifth, should prevent the carriers from conditioning
employment on membership in a company union, but should exempt the
standard unions from its prohibitions. The Trainmen, the only union
which stood to lose existing contracts if the section was not
limited to company unions, especially urged such a limitation.
See statement of A. F. Whitney, president, S.Rep. No.
1065, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., pt. 2, p. 2;
see also 78
Cong.Rec. 12372, 12376.
The unions succeeded in having the House incorporate such a
limitation in the bill it passed.
See H.R.Rep. No. 1944,
73d Cong., 2d Sess. 2, 6; 78 Cong.Rec. 11710-11720. But the Senate
did not acquiesce. Eastman, a firm believer in complete freedom of
employees in their choice of representatives, strongly opposed the
limitation. He characterized it as
"vicious, because it strikes at the principle of freedom of
choice which the bill is designed to protect. The prohibited
practices acquire no virtue by being confined to so-called
'standard unions.' . . . Within recent years, the practice of tying
up men's jobs with labor union membership has crept into the
railroad industry, which theretofore was singularly clean in this
respect. The practice has been largely in connection with company
unions, but not entirely. If genuine freedom of choice is to be the
basis of labor relations under the Railway Labor Act, as it should
be, then the yellow-dog contract, and its corollary, the closed
shop, and the so-called 'percentage contract,' have no place in the
picture."
Hearings on S. 3266, Senate Committee on Interstate
Page 367 U. S. 753
Commerce, 73d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 157. [
Footnote 8] Eastman's views prevailed in the Senate,
and the House concurred in a final version of § 2, Fifth, providing
that
"[n]o carrier . . . shall require any person seeking employment
to sign any contract or agreement promising to join or not to join
a labor organization."
See 78 Cong.Rec. 12369-12376, 12382-12388, 12389-12398,
12400-12402, 12549-12555.
During World War II, the nonoperating unions made an
unsuccessful attempt to obtain union security, incidental to an
effort to secure a wage increase. Following the failure of
negotiations and mediation, a Presidential Emergency Board was
appointed. Two principal reasons were advanced by the unions. They
urged that, in view of their pledge not to strike for the duration
and their responsibilities to assure uninterrupted operation of the
railroads, they were justified in seeking to maintain their
positions by union security arrangements. They also maintained
that, since they secured benefits through collective bargaining for
all employees they represented, it was fair that the costs of their
operations be
Page 367 U. S. 754
shared by all workers. The Board recommended withdrawal of the
request, concluding that the union shop was plainly forbidden by
the Railway Labor Act and that, in any event, the unions had failed
to show it necessity or utility. Presidential Emergency Board,
appointed Feb. 20, 1943, Report of May 24, 1943; Supplemental
Report, May 29, 1943. The Report said:
"[T]he Board is convinced that the essential elements of the
union shop, as defined in the employees' request, are prohibited by
section 2 of the Railway Labor Act. The intent of Congress in this
respect is made evident with unusual clarity."
Supplemental Report,
supra, p. 29. [
Footnote 9] On the merits of the issue, the Board
expressly rejected the claim that union security was necessary to
protect the bargaining position of the unions:
"[T]he unions are not suffering from a falling off in members.
On the contrary, . . . membership has been growing, and at the
present time appears to be the largest in railroad history, with
less than 10 percent nonmembership among the employees here
represented."
Supplemental Report, p. 31.
"[T]he evidence presented with respect to danger from predatory
rivals seemed to the Board lacking in sufficiency, especially so in
the light of the evidence concerning membership growth."
Ibid.
"[N]o evidence was presented indicating that the unions stand in
jeopardy by reason of carrier opposition. A few railroads were
mentioned on which some of the unions do not represent a majority
of their craft or class, and do not have bargaining relationships
with the carrier. But the exhibits show that these unions are the
chosen representatives of the employees on the overwhelming
majority of the railroads,
Page 367 U. S. 755
and that recognition of the unions is general. The Board does
not find therefore that a sufficient case has been made for the
necessity of additional protection of union status on the
railroads."
Id., p. 32. The unions acceded to the Board's
recommendation.
The question of union security was reopened in 1950. [
Footnote 10] Congress then evaluated
the proposal for authorizing the union shop primarily in terms of
its relationship to the financing of the unions' participation in
the machinery created by the Railway Labor Act to achieve its
goals. The framework for fostering voluntary adjustments between
the carriers and their employees in the interest of the efficient
discharge by the carriers of their important functions with minimum
disruption from labor strife has no statutory parallel in other
industry. That machinery, the product of a long legislative
evolution, is more complex than that of any other industry. The
labor relations of interstate carriers have been a subject of
congressional
Page 367 U. S. 756
enactments since 1888. [
Footnote 11] For a time, after World War I, Congress
experimented with a form of compulsory arbitration. [
Footnote 12]
Page 367 U. S. 757
The experiment was unsuccessful. Congress has since that time
consistently adhered to a regulatory policy which places the
responsibility squarely upon the carriers and the unions mutually
to work out settlements of all aspects of the labor relationship.
That policy was embodied in the Railway Labor Act of 1926, 44 Stat.
577,
Page 367 U. S. 758
which remains the basic regulatory enactment. As the Senate
Report on the bill which became that law stated:
"The question was . . . presented whether the substitute [for
the Act of 1920] should consist of a compulsory system with
adequate means provided for its enforcement, or whether it was in
the public interest to create the machinery for amicable adjustment
of labor disputes agreed upon by the parties and to the success of
which both parties were committed. . . . The committee is of
opinion that it is in the public interest to permit a fair trial of
the method of amicable adjustment agreed upon by the parties,
rather than to attempt, under existing conditions, to use the
entire power of the Government to deal with these labor
disputes."
S.Rep. No. 606, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 4. The reference to
the plan "agreed upon by the parties" was to
"the fact that the Railway Labor Act of 1926 came on the statute
books through agreement between the railroads and the railroad
unions on the need for such legislation. It is accurate to say that
the railroads and the railroad unions, between them, wrote the
Railway Labor Act of 1926, and Congress formally enacted their
agreement."
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson, supra, p.
351 U. S. 240
(concurring opinion).
See generally Murphy, Agreement on
the Railroads -- The Joint Railway Conference of 1926, 11 Lab.L.J.
823.
"All through the [1926] Act is the theory that the agreement is
the vital thing in life." Statement of Donald R. Richberg, Hearings
on H.R. 7180, House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce,
69th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 15-16. The Act created affirmative legal
duties on the part of the carriers and their employees
"to exert every reasonable effort to make and maintain
agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, and working conditions,
and to settle all disputes, whether arising out of the application
of such agreements or otherwise. . . ."
§ 2, First.
See Texas & N.O. R. Co.
v. Brotherhood of
Page 367 U. S. 759
Railway & Steamship Clerks, 281 U.
S. 548. The Act also established a comprehensive
administrative apparatus for the adjustment of disputes, in
conferences between the parties, § 2, Second, Third and Fourth (now
Sixth), and if not so settled, in submissions to boards of
adjustment, § 3, or the National Mediation Board, § 4. And the
legislation expanded the already existing voluntary arbitration
machinery, §§ 7, 8, 9.
A primary purpose of the major revisions made in 1934 was to
strengthen the position of the labor organizations
vis-a-vis the carriers, to the end of furthering the
success of the basic congressional policy of self-adjustment of the
industry's labor problems between carrier organizations and
effective labor organizations. The unions claimed that the carriers
interfered with the employees' freedom of choice of representatives
by creating company unions, and otherwise attempting to undermine
the employees' participation in the process of collective
bargaining. Congress amended § 2, Third to reinforce the
prohibitions against interference with the choice of
representatives, and to permit the employees to select nonemployee
representatives. A new § 2, Fourth was added guaranteeing employees
the right to organize and bargain collectively, and Congress made
it the enforceable duty of the carriers "to treat with" the
representatives of the employees, § 2, Ninth.
See Virginian R.
Co. v. System Federation, 300 U. S. 515. It
was made explicit that the representative selected by a majority of
any class or craft of employees should be the exclusive bargaining
representative of all the employees of that craft or class.
"The minority members of a craft are thus deprived by the
statute of the right, which they would otherwise possess, to choose
a representative of their own, and its members cannot bargain
individually on behalf of themselves as to matters which are
properly the subject of collective bargaining."
Steele v.
Louisville
Page 367 U. S. 760
& N.R. Co., 323 U. S. 192,
323 U. S.
200.
"Congress has seen fit to clothe the bargaining representative
with powers comparable to those possessed by a legislative body
both to create and restrict the rights of those whom it represents.
. . ."
Id. at
323 U. S. 202.
In addition to thus strengthening the unions' status in relation to
both the carriers and the employees, the 1934 Act created the
National Railroad Adjustment Board and provided that the 18
employee representatives were to be chosen by the labor
organizations national in scope. § 3. This Board was given
jurisdiction to settle what are termed minor disputes in the
railroad industry, primarily grievances arising from the
application of collective bargaining agreements to particular
situations.
See Union Pacific R. Co. v. Price,
360 U. S. 601.
In sum, in prescribing collective bargaining as the method of
settling railway disputes, in conferring upon the unions the status
of exclusive representatives in the negotiation and administration
of collective agreements, and in giving them representation on the
statutory board to adjudicate grievances, Congress has given the
unions a clearly defined and delineated role to play in
effectuating the basic congressional policy of stabilizing labor
relations in the industry.
"It is fair to say that every stage in the evolution of this
railroad labor code was progressively infused with the purpose of
securing self-adjustment between the effectively organized
railroads and the equally effective railroad unions and, to that
end, of establishing facilities for such self-adjustment by the
railroad community of its own industrial controversies. . . . The
assumption, as well as the aim, of that Act [of 1934] is a process
of permanent conference and negotiation between the carriers, on
the one hand, and the employees through their unions, on the
other."
Elgin, J. & E. R. Co. v. Burley, 325 U.
S. 711,
325 U. S.
752-753 (dissenting opinion).
Performance of these functions entails the expenditure of
considerable funds. Moreover, this Court has
Page 367 U. S. 761
held that, under the statutory scheme, a union's status as
exclusive bargaining representative carries with it the duty fairly
and equitably to represent all employees of the craft or class,
union and nonunion.
Steele v. Louisville & N. R. Co.,
323 U. S. 192;
Tunstall v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen &
Enginemen, 323 U. S. 210. The
principal argument made by the unions in 1950 was based on their
role in this regulatory framework. They maintained that, because of
the expense of performing their duties in the congressional scheme,
fairness justified the spreading of the costs to all employees who
benefited. They thus advanced as their purpose the elimination of
the "free riders" -- those employees who obtained the benefits of
the unions' participation in the machinery of the Act without
financially supporting the unions.
George M. Harrison, spokesman for the Railway Labor Executives'
Association, stated the unions' case in this fashion:
"Activities of labor organizations resulting in the procurement
of employee benefits are costly, and the only source of funds with
which to carry on these activities is the dues received from
members of the organization. We believe that it is essentially
unfair for nonmembers to participate in the benefits of those
activities without contributing anything to the cost. This is
especially true when the collective bargaining representative is
one from whose existence and activities he derives most important
benefits, and one which is obligated by law to extend these
advantages to him."
"Furthermore, collective bargaining to the railroad industry is
more costly from a monetary standpoint than that carried on in any
other industry. The administrative machinery is more complete and
more complex. The mediation, arbitration, and Presidential
Emergency Board provisions of the act, while greatly in the public
interest, are very costly to the
Page 367 U. S. 762
unions. The handling of agreement disputes through the National
Railroad Adjustment Board also requires expense which is not known
to unions in outside industry."
Hearings on H.R. 7789, House Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Commerce, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 10.
This argument was decisive with Congress. The House Committee
Report traced the history of previous legislation in the industry
and pointed out the duty of the union acting as exclusive
bargaining representative to represent equally all members of the
class.
"Under the act, the collective bargaining representative is
required to represent the entire membership of the craft or class,
including nonunion members, fairly, equitably, and in good faith.
Benefits resulting from collective bargaining may not be withheld
from employees because they are not members of the union."
H.R.Rep. No. 2811, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 4. Observing that
about 75% or 80% of all railroad employees were believed to belong
to a union, the report continued:
"Nonunion members, nevertheless, share in the benefits derived
from collective agreements negotiated by the railway labor unions,
but bear no share of the cost of obtaining such benefits."
Ibid. [
Footnote
13]
Page 367 U. S. 763
These considerations overbore the arguments in favor of the
earlier policy of complete individual freedom of choice. As we said
in
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson, supra, at
351 U. S.
235,
"[t]o require, rather than to induce, the beneficiaries of trade
unionism to contribute to its costs may not be the wisest course.
But Congress might well believe that it would help insure the right
to work in and along the arteries of interstate commerce. No more
has been attempted here. . . . The financial support required
relates . . . to the work of the union in the realm of collective
bargaining. [
Footnote
14]"
The conclusion to which this history clearly
Page 367 U. S. 764
points is that § 2, Eleventh, contemplated compulsory unionism
to force employees to share the costs of negotiating and
administering collective agreements, and the costs of the
adjustment and settlement of disputes. [
Footnote 15] One looks in vain for any suggestion that
Congress also meant in § 2, Eleventh, to provide the unions with a
means for forcing employees, over their objection, to support
political causes which they oppose.
Page 367 U. S. 765
III
THE SAFEGUARDING OF RIGHTS OF DISSENT
To the contrary, Congress incorporated safeguards in the statute
to protect dissenters' interests. Congress became concerned during
the hearings and debates that the union shop might be used to
abridge freedom of speech and beliefs. The original proposal for
authorization of the union shop was qualified in only one respect.
It provided
"[t]hat no such agreement shall require such condition of
employment with respect to employees to whom membership is not
available upon the same terms and conditions as are generally
applicable to any other member. . . ."
This was primarily designed to prevent discharge of employees
for nonmembership where the union did not admit the employee to
membership on racial grounds.
See House Hearings, p. 68;
Senate Hearings, pp. 22-25. But it was strenuously protested that
the proposal provided no protection for an employee who disagreed
with union policies or leadership. It was argued, for example,
that
"the right of free speech is at stake. . . . A man could feel
that he was no longer able freely to express himself, because he
could be dismissed on account of criticism of the union. . . ."
House Hearings, p. 115;
see also Senate Hearings, pp.
167-169, 320. Objections of this kind led the rail unions to
propose an addition to the proviso to § 2, Eleventh, to prevent
loss of job for lack of union membership
"with respect to employees to whom membership was denied or
terminated for any reason other than the failure of the employee to
tender the periodic dues, fees, and assessments uniformly required
as a condition of acquiring or retaining membership."
House Hearings, p. 247. Mr. Harrison presented this text, and
stated,
"It is submitted that this bill with the amendment as suggested
in this statement
Page 367 U. S. 766
remedies the alleged abuses of compulsory union membership as
claimed by the opposing witnesses, yet makes possible the
elimination of the 'free rider' and the sharing of the burden of
maintenance by all of the beneficiaries of union activity."
House Hearings, p. 253. Mr. Harrison also sought to reassure
Committee members as to the possible implications of other language
of the proposed bill; he explained that "fees" meant "initiation
fees," and "assessments" was intended primarily to cover the
situation of a union which had only nominal dues, so that its
members paid
"an assessment to finance the activities of the general
negotiating committee; . . . it will vary month by month, based on
the expenses and work of that committee."
P. 257. Or, he explained, an assessment might cover convention
expenses.
"So we had to use the word 'assessment' in addition to dues and
fees because some of the unions collect a nominal amount of dues
and an assessment month after month to finance part of the
activities, although, in total, it perhaps is no different than the
dues paid in the first instance which comprehended all of those
expenses."
P. 258. In reporting the bill, the Senate Committee expressly
noted the protective proviso, S.Rep.No. 2262, 81st Cong., 2d Sess.,
pp. 3-4, and affixed the Senate additional limitations. The words
"not including fines and penalties" were added to make it clear
that termination of union membership for their nonpayment would not
be grounds for discharge. It was also made explicit that "fees"
meant "initiation fees."
See 96 Cong.Rec. 16267-16268.
A congressional concern over possible impingements on the
interests of individual dissenters from union policies is therefore
discernible. It is true that opponents of the union shop urged that
Congress should not allow it without explicitly regulating the
amount of dues which might be exacted or prescribing the uses
for
Page 367 U. S. 767
which the dues might be expended. [
Footnote 16] We may assume that Congress was also fully
conversant with the long history of intensive involvement of the
railroad unions in political activities. But it does not follow
that § 2, Eleventh, places no restriction on the use of an
employee's money, over his objection, to support political causes
he opposes merely because Congress did not enact a comprehensive
regulatory scheme governing expenditures. For it is abundantly
clear that Congress did not completely abandon the policy of full
freedom of choice embodied in the 1934 Act, but rather made inroads
on it for the limited purpose of eliminating the problems created
by the "free rider." That policy survives in § 2, Eleventh, in the
safeguards intended to protect freedom of dissent. Congress was
aware of the conflicting interests involved in the question of the
union shop and sought to achieve their accommodation. As was said
by the Presidential Emergency Board which recommended the making of
the union shop agreement involved in this case:
"It is not as though Congress had believed it was merely
removing some abstract legal barrier and not passing on the merits.
It was made fully aware that it was deciding these critical issues
of individual right versus collective interests which have been
stressed in this proceeding."
"Indeed, Congress gave very concrete evidence that it carefully
considered the claims of the individual to be free of arbitrary or
unreasonable restrictions resulting from compulsory unionism. It
did not give a blanket approval to union shop agreements. Instead,
it enacted a precise and carefully
Page 367 U. S. 768
drawn limitation on the kind of union shop agreements which
might be made. The obvious purpose of this careful prescription was
to strike a balance between the interests pressed by the unions and
the considerations which the Carriers have urged. By providing that
a worker should not be discharged if he was denied or if he lost
his union membership for any reason other than nonpayment of dues,
initiation fees or assessments, Congress definitely indicated that
it had weighed carefully and given effect to the policy of the
arguments against the union shop."
Report of Presidential Emergency Board No. 98, appointed
pursuant to Exec. Order No. 10306, Nov. 15, 1951, p. 6.
We respect this congressional purpose when we construe § 2,
Eleventh, as not vesting the unions with unlimited power to spend
exacted money. We are not called upon to delineate the precise
limits of that power in this case. We have before us only the
question whether the power is restricted to the extent of denying
the unions the rights, over the employee's objection, to use his
money to support political causes which he opposes. Its use to
support candidates for public office, and advance political
programs, is not a use which helps defray the expenses of the
negotiation or administration of collective agreements, or the
expenses entailed in the adjustment of grievances and disputes. In
other words, it is a use which falls clearly outside the reasons
advanced by the unions and accepted by Congress why authority to
make union shop agreements was justified. On the other hand, it is
equally clear that it is a use to support activities within the
area of dissenters' interests which Congress enacted the proviso to
protect. We give § 2, Eleventh, the construction which achieves
both congressional purposes when we hold, as we do, that § 2,
Eleventh, is to be construed to deny the unions, over an
Page 367 U. S. 769
employee's objection, the power to use his exacted funds to
support political causes which he opposes. [
Footnote 17]
We express no view as to other union expenditures objected to by
an employee and not made to meet the costs of negotiation and
administration of collective agreements, or the adjustment and
settlement of grievances and disputes. We do not understand, in
view of the findings of the Georgia courts and the question decided
by the Georgia Supreme Court, that there is before us the matter of
expenditures for activities in the area between the costs which led
directly to the complaint as to "free riders" and the expenditures
to support
Page 367 U. S. 770
union political activities. [
Footnote 18] We are satisfied, however, that § 2,
Eleventh, is to be interpreted to deny the unions the power claimed
in this case. The appellant unions, in insisting that § 2,
Eleventh, contemplates their use of exacted funds to support
political causes objected to by the employee, would have us hold
that Congress sanctioned an expansion of historical practices in
the political area by the rail unions. This we decline to do. Both
by tradition and, from 1934 to 1951, by force of law, the rail
unions did not rely upon the compulsion of union security
agreements to exact money to support the political activities in
which they engage. Our construction therefore involves no
curtailment of the traditional political activities of the railroad
unions. It means only that those unions must not support those
activities, against the expressed wishes of a dissenting employee,
with his exacted money. [
Footnote 19]
Page 367 U. S. 771
IV
THE APPROPRIATE REMEDY
Under our view of the statute, however, the decision of the
court below was erroneous, and cannot stand. The appellees who have
participated in this action have, in the course of it, made known
to their respective unions their objection to the use of their
money for the support of political causes. In that circumstance,
the respective unions were without power to use payments thereafter
tendered by them for such political causes. However, the union shop
agreement itself is not unlawful.
Railway Employees' Dept. v.
Hanson, supra. The appellees therefore remain obliged, as a
condition of continued employment, to make the payments to their
respective unions called for by the agreement. Their right of
action stems not from constitutional limitations on Congress' power
to authorize the union shop, but from § 2, Eleventh, itself. In
other words, appellees' grievance stems from the spending of their
funds for purposes not authorized by the Act in the face of their
objection, not from the enforcement of the union shop agreement by
the mere collection of funds. If their money were used for purposes
contemplated by § 2, Eleventh, the appellees would have no
grievance at all. We think that an injunction restraining
enforcement of the union shop agreement is therefore plainly not a
remedy appropriate to the violation of the Act's restriction on
expenditures. Restraining the collection of all funds from the
appellees sweeps too broadly, since their objection is only to the
uses to which some of their money is put. Moreover, restraining
collection of the funds as the Georgia courts have done might well
interfere with the appellant unions' performance of those functions
and duties which the Railway Labor Act places upon them to attain
its goal of stability in the industry. Even though the lower court
decree is subject to modification
Page 367 U. S. 772
upon proof by the appellants of cessation of improper
expenditures, in the interim the prohibition is absolute against
the collection of all funds from anyone who can show that he is
opposed to the expenditure of any of his money for political
purposes which he disapproves. The complete shutoff of this source
of income defeats the congressional plan to have all employees
benefited share costs "in the realm of collective bargaining,"
Hanson, at p.
351 U. S. 235,
and threatens the basic congressional policy of the Railway Labor
Act for self-adjustments between effective carrier organizations
and effective labor organizations. [
Footnote 20]
Since the case must therefore be remanded to the court below for
consideration of a proper remedy, we think that it is appropriate
to suggest the limits within which remedial discretion may be
exercised consistently with the Railway Labor Act and other
relevant public policies. As indicated, an injunction against
enforcement of the union shop itself through the collection of
funds is unwarranted. We also think that a blanket injunction
against all expenditures of funds for the disputed purposes, even
one conditioned on cessation of improper expenditures, would not be
a proper exercise of equitable discretion. Nor would it be proper
to issue an interim or temporary blanket injunction of this
character pending a final adjudication. The Norris-LaGuardia Act,
47 Stat. 70, 29 U.S.C. §§ 101-115, expresses a basic policy against
the injunction of activities of labor unions. We have held that the
Act does not deprive the federal courts of jurisdiction to enjoin
compliance with various mandates of the Railway Labor Act.
Virginian R. Co. v. System Federation, 300 U.
S. 515;
Graham v. Brotherhood of
Locomotive
Page 367 U. S. 773
Firemen & Enginemen, 338 U.
S. 232. However, the policy of the Act suggests that the
courts should hesitate to fix upon the injunctive remedy for
breaches of duty owing under the labor laws unless that remedy
alone can effectively guard the plaintiff's right. In
Graham, this Court found an injunction necessary to
prevent the breach of the duty of fair representation, in order
that Congress might not seem to have held out to the petitioners
there "an illusory right for which it was denying them a remedy."
338 U.S. at p.
338 U. S. 240.
No such necessity for a blanket injunctive remedy because of the
absence of reasonable alternatives appears here. Moreover, the fact
that these expenditures are made for political activities is an
additional reason for reluctance to impose such an injunctive
remedy. Whatever may be the powers of Congress or the States to
forbid unions altogether to make various types of political
expenditures, as to which the express to opinion here, [
Footnote 21] many of the
expenditures involved in the present case are made for the purpose
of disseminating information as to candidates and programs and
publicizing the positions of the unions on them. As to such
expenditures, an injunction would work a restraint on the
expression of political ideas which might be offensive to the First
Amendment. For the majority also has an interest in stating its
views without being silenced by the dissenters. To attain the
appropriate reconciliation between majority and dissenting
interests in the area of political expression, we think the courts,
in administering the Act, should select remedies which protect both
interests to the maximum extent possible without undue impingement
of one on the other.
Page 367 U. S. 774
Among possible remedies which would appear appropriate to the
injury complained of, two may be enforced with a minimum of
administrative difficulty [
Footnote 22] and with little danger of encroachment on
the legitimate activities or necessary functions of the unions. Any
remedies, however, would properly be granted only to employees who
have made known to the union officials that they do not desire
their funds to be used for political causes to which they object.
The safeguards of § 2, Eleventh, were added for the protection of
dissenters' interest, but dissent is not to be presumed -- it must
affirmatively be made known to the union by the dissenting
employee. The union receiving money exacted from an employee under
a union shop agreement should not, in fairness, be subjected to
sanctions in favor of an employee who makes no complaint of the use
of his money for such activities. From these considerations, it
follows that the present action is not a true class action, for
there is no attempt to prove the existence of a class of workers
who had specifically objected to the exaction of dues for political
purposes.
See Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U. S.
32,
311 U. S. 44.
Thus, we think that only those who have identified themselves as
opposed to political uses of their funds are entitled to relief in
this action.
One remedy would be an injunction against expenditure for
political causes opposed by each complaining employee of a sum,
from those moneys to be spent by the
Page 367 U. S. 775
union for political purposes, which is so much of the moneys
exacted from him as is the proportion of the union's total
expenditures made for such political activities to the union's
total budget. The union should not be in a position to make up such
sum from money paid by a nondissenter, for this would shift a
disproportionate share of the costs of collective bargaining to the
dissenter and have the same effect of applying his money to support
such political activities. A second remedy would be restitution to
each individual employee of that portion of his money which the
union expended, despite his notification, for the political causes
to which he had advised the union he was opposed. There should be
no necessity, however, for the employee to trace his money up to
and including its expenditure; if the money goes into general funds
and no separate accounts of receipts and expenditures of the funds
of individual employees are maintained, the portion of his money
the employee would be entitled to recover would be in the same
proportion that the expenditures for political purposes which he
had advised the union he disapproved bore to the total union
budget.
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the court
below for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
64 Stat. 1238, 45 U.S.C. § 152, Eleventh. The section
provides:
"Eleventh. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter,
or of any other statute or law of the United States, or Territory
thereof, or of any State, any carrier or carriers as defined in
this chapter and a labor organization or labor organizations duly
designated and authorized to represent employees in accordance with
the requirements of this chapter shall be permitted --"
"(a) to make agreements, requiring, as a condition of continued
employment, that within sixty days following the beginning of such
employment, or the effective date of such agreements, whichever is
the later, all employees shall become members of the labor
organization representing their craft or class:
Provided,
That no such agreement shall require such condition of employment
with respect to employees to whom membership is not available upon
the same terms and conditions as are generally applicable to any
other member or with respect to employees to whom membership was
denied or terminated for any reason other than the failure of the
employee to tender the periodic dues, initiation fees, and
assessments (not including fines and penalties) uniformly required
as a condition of acquiring or retaining membership."
"(b) to make agreements providing for the deduction by such
carrier or carriers from the wages of its or their employees in a
craft or class and payment to the labor organization representing
the craft or class of such employees, of any periodic dues,
initiation fees, and assessments (not including fines and
penalties) uniformly required as a condition of acquiring or
retaining membership:
Provided, That no such agreement
shall be effective with respect to any individual employee until he
shall have furnished the employer with a written assignment to the
labor organization of such membership dues, initiation fees, and
assessments, which shall be revocable in writing after the
expiration of one year or upon the termination date of the
applicable collective agreement, whichever occurs sooner."
"(c) The requirement of membership in a labor organization in an
agreement made pursuant to subparagraph (a) of this paragraph shall
be satisfied, as to both a present or future employee in engine,
train, yard, or hostling service, that is, an employee engaged in
any of the services of capacities covered in the First Division of
paragraph (h) of section 153 of this title, defining the
jurisdictional scope of the First Division of the National Railroad
Adjustment Board, if said employee shall hold or acquire membership
in any one of the labor organizations, national in scope, organized
in accordance with this chapter and admitting to membership
employees of a craft or class in any of said services; and no
agreement made pursuant to subparagraph (b) of this paragraph shall
provide for deductions from his wages for periodic dues, initiation
fees, or assessments payable to any labor organization other than
that in which he holds membership:
Provided, however, That
as to an employee in any of said services on a particular carrier
at the effective date of any such agreement on a carrier, who is
not a member of any one of the labor organizations, national in
scope, organized in accordance with this chapter and admitting to
membership employees of a craft or class in any of said services,
such employee, as a condition of continuing his employment, may be
required to become a member of the organization representing the
craft in which he is employed on the effective date of the first
agreement applicable to him:
Provided, further, That
nothing herein or in any such agreement or agreements shall prevent
an employee from changing membership from one organization to
another organization admitting to membership employees of a craft
or class in any of said services."
"(d) Any provisions in paragraphs Fourth and Fifth of this
section in conflict herewith are to the extent of such conflict
amended."
[
Footnote 2]
The pertinent findings of the trial court are:
"(5) The funds so exacted from plaintiffs and the class they
represent by the labor union defendants have been, and are being,
used in substantial amounts by the latter to support the political
campaigns of candidates for the offices of President and Vice
President of the United States, and for the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States, opposed by plaintiffs and the
class they represent, and also to support by direct and indirect
financial contributions and expenditures the political campaigns of
candidates for State and local public offices, opposed by
plaintiffs and the class they represent. The said funds are so used
both by each of the labor union defendants separately and by all of
the labor union defendants collectively and in concert among
themselves and with other organizations not parties to this action
through associations, leagues, or committees formed for that
purpose."
"(6) Those funds have been and are being used in substantial
amounts to propagate political and economic doctrines, concepts and
ideologies and to promote legislative programs opposed by
plaintiffs and the class they represent. Those funds have also been
and are being used in substantial amounts to impose upon plaintiffs
and the class they represent, as well as upon the general public,
conformity to those doctrines, concepts, ideologies and
programs."
"(7) The exaction of moneys from plaintiffs and the class they
represent for the purposes and activities described above is not
reasonably necessary to collective bargaining or to maintaining the
existence and position of said union defendants as effective
bargaining agents or to inform the employees whom said defendants
represent of developments of mutual interest."
"(8) The exaction of said money from plaintiffs and the class
they represent, in the fashion set forth above by the labor union
defendants, is pursuant to the union shop agreements and in
accordance with the terms and conditions of those agreements."
[
Footnote 3]
The trial judge concluded:
"Said exaction and use of money, said union shop agreements and
Section 2 (eleventh) of the Railway Labor Act and their enforcement
violate the United States Constitution which in the First, Fifth,
Ninth and Tenth Amendments thereto guarantees to individuals
protection from such unwarranted invasion of their personal and
property rights, (including freedom of association, freedom of
thought, freedom of speech, freedom of press, freedom to work and
their political freedom and rights) under the cloak of federal
authority."
The judgment and decree provided that the appellants and the
carriers
"be and they hereby are perpetually enjoined from enforcing the
said union shop agreements . . . and from discharging petitioners,
or any member of the class they represent, for refusing to become
or remain members of, or pay periodic dues, fees, or assessments
to, any of the labor union defendants, provided, however, that said
defendants may at any time petition the court to dissolve said
injunction upon a showing that they no longer are engaging in the
improper and unlawful activities described above."
Judgment was also entered in favor of three of the named
appellees for the amounts of dues, initiation fees and assessments
paid by them.
[
Footnote 4]
The Supreme Court of Georgia viewed the constitutional question
presented for its decision as follows:
"The fundamental constitutional question is: does the contract
between the employers of the plaintiffs and the union defendants,
which compels these plaintiffs, if they continue to work for the
employers, to join the unions of their respective crafts, and pay
dues, fees, and assessments to the unions, where a part of the same
will be used to support political and economic programs and
candidates for public office, which the plaintiffs not only do not
approve, but oppose, violate their rights of freedom of speech and
deprive them of their property without due process of law under the
First and Fifth Amendments to the Federal Constitution?"
215 Ga. at 43-44, 108 S.E.2d at 807.
[
Footnote 5]
The record contained one union constitution, with a statement of
political objectives, and various other union constitutions
authorizing political education activity, lobbying before
legislative bodies, and publication of union views. There was an
indication that
Labor was furnished to members of some
unions. There was also material taken from the hearings on § 2,
Eleventh which included statements of management opponents of the
Act that union dues were used for political activities and
employees should not be forced to join unions if they did not like
the purposes for which their funds would be spent. And there were
statements by Rep. Hoffman of Michigan, during the debate on the
bill, warning union leaders not to levy "political assessments" and
use the Act to force their members to meet those assessments.
[
Footnote 6]
"[T]hese railroad labor organizations, in the past, have
refrained from advocating the union shop agreement, or any other
type of union security. It has always been our philosophy that the
strongest and most militant type of labor organization was the one
whose members were carefully selected and who joined conviction and
a desire to assist their fellows in promoting objects of labor
unionism. . . ."
Statement of Charles J. MacGowan, vice president of the
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Transcript of
Proceedings, Presidential Board, appointed Feb. 20, 1943, p. 5358.
See also Transcript of Proceedings, Presidential Emergency
Board No. 98, appointed pursuant to Exec. Order No. 10306, Nov. 15,
1951, pp. 835-845, Carriers' Exhibit W-28, U.S.Code Congressional
and Administrative Service, 1951, p. 1141. For an analysis of the
reasons for the long-time absence of pressure for union security
agreements in the railway industry,
see Toner, The Closed
Shop, pp. 93-114.
[
Footnote 7]
The principle of freedom of choice had been incorporated in two
earlier pieces of legislation governing railroads. The Bankruptcy
Act of March 3, 1933, 47 Stat. 1481, § 77(p) and (q), provides that
no judge, trustee, or receiver of a carrier should interfere with
employee organization, influence or coerce employees to join a
company union, or require employees to join or refrain from joining
a labor organization. The Emergency Railroad Transportation Act of
June 16, 1933, 48 Stat. 214, § 7(e), required all carriers to abide
by these provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. The latter provision was
temporary, with a maximum duration of two years.
See
testimony of Joseph B. Eastman, Federal Coordinator of
Transportation, House Hearings on H.R. 7650, 73d Cong., 2d Sess.,
pp. 22-23, and his official interpretation of this legislation, 7
Interstate Commerce Acts Ann., 1934 Supp., pp. 5972-5973.
[
Footnote 8]
Eastman further emphasized that only the Trainmen were
immediately affected by the broader prohibition he supported.
"I am confident that the only real support for the proposed
amendments is from a single organization. None of the other
standard organizations has anything to gain from such changes in
the bill."
Eastman letter,
supra, p. 16. For other expressions of
Eastman's views,
see House Hearings,
supra, pp.
28-29; Hearings on H.R. 9861, House Rules Committee, 73d Cong., 2d
Sess., pp. 22-24. That other rail unions were still committed at
this time to the principle of voluntarism, despite their support of
the Trainmen's position, is indicated by the statement of George H.
Harrison, representing the Railway Labor Executives'
Association:
"Now, I hope the committee will not get the thought from these
statements that the railroad labor unions -- that I speak for want
to force these men into our unions, because that is not our
purpose; . . ."
House Hearings on H.R. 7650, supra, p. 86.
[
Footnote 9]
The Board's view as to the illegality of a union shop was
supported by an opinion of the Attorney General, 40 Op.Atty.Gen.,
No. 59, p. 254 (Dec. 29, 1942).
[
Footnote 10]
At the time of the congressional deliberations which preceded
the enactment of the Labor Management Relations Act, 1947, the
Trainmen, through their president, A. F. Whitney, advocated the
closed shop, and urged the repeal of the provisions which
prohibited it. Hearings on Amendments to the National Labor
Relations Act, House Committee on Education and Labor, 80th Cong.,
1st Sess., pp. 1549-1552, 1561. However, the Railway Labor
Executives' Association opposed amendment of the 1934 Act. A. E.
Lyon, executive secretary of the Association, said:
"We want to make it very clear that we are proposing no
amendments to the Railway Labor Act. We believe that none is
necessary, and we are opposed to those which Mr. Whitney
suggested."
Hearings, p. 3722. Lyon added: "We are not asking you to amend
the Railway Labor Act and provide a closed shop as Mr. Whitney did.
We do not think it is necessary." P. 3724. In response to the
query, "By the services you have performed for your members, you
have attracted people voluntarily to join. Is that not correct?"
Lyon replied:
"I think that is true. And many of our union people believe they
would rather have members that belong because they want to, rather
than because they have to."
P. 3732.
[
Footnote 11]
The Act of 1888, 25 Stat. 501, authorized the creation of boards
of voluntary arbitration to settle controversies between carriers
and their employees which threatened to disrupt transportation. §
1. The Act also provided for a temporary presidential commission to
investigate the causes of a controversy and the best means of
adjusting it; the commission was to report the results of its
investigation to the President and Congress. § 6.
In 1898, Congress repealed the Act of 1888 and passed the Erdman
Act, 30 Stat. 424, providing that,
"whenever a controversy concerning wages, hours of labor, or
conditions of employment shall arise between a carrier subject to
this Act and the employees of such carrier, seriously interrupting
or threatening to interrupt the business of said carrier,"
the Chairman of the Interstate Commerce Commission and the
Commissioner of Labor should attempt to resolve the dispute, at the
request of either party, by conciliation and mediation. § 2. If
these methods failed, a board of voluntary arbitration could be set
up with representatives on it of the carrier and the "labor
organization to which the employees directly interested belong. . .
." § 3. Section 10 of the Act also made it criminal for an employer
to require an employee to promise not to become or remain a member
of a labor organization or to discriminate against an employee for
such membership, a provision which was held unconstitutional in
Adair v. United States, 208 U. S. 161.
The Erdman Act was superseded in 1913 by the passage of the
Newlands Act, 38 Stat. 103. It created a Board of Mediation and
Conciliation to which either party to a controversy could refer the
dispute and which could proffer its services even without request
if an interruption of traffic was imminent and seriously
jeopardized the public interest. The Board also was authorized to
give opinions as to the meaning or application of agreements
reached through mediation. § 2. The arbitration procedures set up
by the Erdman Act were further elaborated. §§ 3-8.
In 1916, Congress imposed the 8-hour day of the railroads, 39
Stat. 721. During the period of federal operation of the railroads
in World War I and afterwards, the Federal Government executed
agreements with many of the national labor organizations as
representatives of the railroad employees. Boards of adjustment
were also set up to handle disputes concerning the interpretation
and application of agreements.
See Hearings on S. 3295,
Subcommittee of Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, 81st
Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 216, 305. By the Transportation Act of 1920,
41 Stat. 456, Congress terminated federal control and established
an extensive new regulatory scheme.
See n 12,
infra. See
generally Hearings on S. 3463, Subcommittee of the Senate
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., pp.
124-131.
[
Footnote 12]
The Transportation Act of 1920 provided for a Railroad Labor
Board, with power to render a decision in disputes between carriers
and their employees over wages, grievances, rules, or working
conditions not resolved through conference and adjustment
procedures. § 307. In rendering a decision on wages or working
conditions, the Board had a duty to establish wages and conditions
which, in its opinion, were "just and reasonable." § 307(d). It was
held, however, that the decisions of the Board could not be
enforced by legal process.
See Pennsylvania R. Co. v. United
States Railroad Labor Board, 261 U. S. 72;
Pennsylvania R. System v. Pennsylvania R. Co.,
267 U. S. 203. By
1926, the Board had lost the confidence of both the unions and many
of the railroads. Commented the Senate Committee which considered
the Railway Labor Act of 1926:
"In view of the fact that the employees absolutely refuse to
appear before the labor board, and that many of the important
railroads are themselves opposed to it, that it has been held by
the Supreme Court to have no power to enforce its judgments, that
its authority is not recognized or respected by the employees and
by a number of important railroads, that the President has
suggested that it would be wise to seek a substitute for it, and
that the party platforms of both the Republican and Democratic
Parties in 1924 clearly indicated dissatisfaction with the
provisions of the transportation act relating to labor, the
committee concluded that the time had arrived when the labor board
should be abolished, and the provisions relating to labor in the
transportation act, 1920, should be repealed."
S.Rep.No.606, 69th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 3-4.
[
Footnote 13]
For reiteration by various union spokesmen of this purpose of
eliminating the problems created by the "free rider,"
see
Hearings on S. 3295,
supra, pp. 6, 32-33, 40, 66, 130,
236-237; Hearings on H.R. 7789,
supra, pp. 9, 19, 25-26,
29, 37-38, 49-50, 79, 81, 85, 87, 89, 228, 240-241, 250, 253, 255,
275. For other statements by members of Congress indicating their
acceptance of this justification for the legislation,
see
Senate Hearings,
supra, pp. 169-171; House Hearings,
supra, pp. 25, 87, 106, 110, 139; 96 Cong.Rec. 16279,
17050-17051, 17055, 17057, 17058.
Mr. Harrison expressly disclaimed that the union shop was sought
in order to strengthen the bargaining power of the unions. He
said:
"I do not think it would affect the power of bargaining one way
or the other. . . . If I get a majority of the employees to vote
for my union as the bargaining agent, I have got as much economic
power at that stage of development as I will ever have. The man
that is going to scab -- he will scab whether he is in or out of
the union, and it does not make any difference."
House Hearings,
supra, pp. 20-21.
Nor was any claim seriously advanced that the union shop was
necessary to hold or increase union membership. The prohibition
against union security in the 1934 Act had not interfered with the
growth of union membership or caused the unions to lose their
positions as exclusive bargaining agents.
See A.F. of L. v.
American Sash & Door Co., 335 U.
S. 538,
335 U. S.
548-549, note 4 (concurring opinion);
see also
Transcript of Proceedings, Presidential Emergency Board No. 98,
appointed pursuant to Exec. Order No. 10306, Nov. 15, 1951,
Carriers' Exhibits W-23, W-28, pp. 38-51.
[
Footnote 14]
The unions continued to urge the elimination of the problems
created by the "free rider" as the justification for the union shop
in the proceedings before the Presidential Emergency Board, which
recommended that the carriers make the agreements involved in this
case. Mr. Harrison said:
". . . the railroad unions' primary purpose in seeking and
obtaining the amendment to the Railway Labor Act in 1951 to permit
the checkoff for payment of dues, was to eliminate the 'free
rider,' the guy who drags his feet, a term which is applied by
unions to nonmembers who obtain, without cost to themselves, the
benefits of collective bargaining procured through the efforts of
the dues-paying members."
Transcript of Proceedings, Presidential Emergency Board No. 98,
appointed pursuant to Exec. Order No. 10306, Nov. 15, 1951, p. 150.
See also Transcript, pp. 40-44, 144-156, 182-183, 186-188,
202-203, 268, 283-286, 289, 545, 608-611, 1893, 1901, 2136,
2495-2497, 2795, 2839, 2930, 3014-3015, 3018-3019.
[
Footnote 15]
Section 2, Eleventh (c), which gives scope for intercraft
mobility in the rail industry, is consistent with the view that the
primary union and congressional concern was with the elimination of
the "free rider" who did not support his representative's
performance of its functions under the Act. The section provides
that an operating employee cannot be required to become a member of
his craft or class representative if
"said employee shall hold or acquire membership in any one of
the labor organizations, national in scope, organized in accordance
with this chapter and admitting to membership employees of a craft
or class in any of said services. . . ."
This Court held in
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Rychlik,
352 U. S. 480,
that the unions "national in scope" contemplated by this provision
are those which have already qualified as electors under § 3 of the
Act to participate in the National Railroad Adjustment Board. As
the court said in
Pigott v. Detroit, T. & I. R.
Co., 116 F.
Supp. 949, 955, note 11,
affirmed 221 F.2d 736:
"Each union participating in the agencies of the Act must itself
pay for the salaries and expenses of its officials who serve in
such agencies. This constitutes a considerable financial burden
which must be reflected in the dues charged the employees. Unless a
labor organization were obliged to participate in the judgment
board machinery before it could qualify for the union shop
exception, it would place the bargaining representative in an
unfair competitive position with respect to a rival union.
Employees would be tempted to desert the organization of a
bargaining representative which was assuming its responsibilities
under the Act in favor of another union which was not contributing
to its operation, and which could thereby offer cheaper dues. This
would defeat the very purpose of the union amendment, which is to
compel each employee to contribute his part to the bargaining
representative's activities on his behalf, including its
participation in the administrative machinery of the Act."
[
Footnote 16]
See Senate Hearings, pp. 173-174, 316-317; House
Hearings, pp. 160, 172-173.
See also 96 Cong.Rec.
17049-17050.
[
Footnote 17]
A distinction between the use of union funds for political
purposes and their expenditure for nonpolitical purposes is
implicit in other congressional enactments. Thus, the Treasury has
adopted this regulation under § 162 of the Internal Revenue Code of
1954, 26 U.S.C. § 162, to govern the deductibility for income tax
purposes of payments by union members to their union:
"Dues and other payments to an organization, such as a labor
union or a trade association, which otherwise meet the requirements
of the regulations under section 162, are deductible in full unless
a substantial part of the organization's activities consists of
[expenditures for lobbying purposes, for the promotion or defeat of
legislation, for political campaign purposes (including the support
of or opposition to any candidate for public office), or for
carrying on propaganda (including advertising) related to any of
the foregoing purposes]. . . . If a substantial part of the
activities of the organization consists of one or more of those
specified, deduction will be allowed only for such portion of such
dues and other payments as the taxpayer can clearly establish is
attributable to activities other than those so specified. The
determination as to whether such specified activities constitute a
substantial part of an organization's activities shall be based on
all the facts and circumstances. In no event shall special
assessments or similar payments (including an increase in dues)
made to any organization for any of such specified purposes be
deductible."
26 CFR § 1.162-15(c)(2);
see also Rev.Proc. 61-10,
1961-16 Int.Rev.Bull. 49, April 17, 1961.
Cf. Cammarano v.
United States, 358 U. S. 498.
[
Footnote 18]
For example, many of the national labor unions maintain death
benefit funds from the dues of individual members transmitted by
the locals.
[
Footnote 19]
In 1958, Senator Potter proposed an amendment to pending labor
legislation that would have given employees subject to a union shop
agreement the right to have their dues used only for collective
bargaining and related purposes and would have required the
Secretary of Labor, if he determined that the dues were not so
expended, to bring an action in behalf of the dissenter for the
recovery of all the money paid by the dissenter to the union during
the life of the agreement and for such other appropriate and
injunctive relief as the court deemed just and proper.
See
104 Cong.Rec. 11330. Senator Potter advanced this proposal to
implement principles which he believed to be already implicit in
the labor laws. He said,
"I know that, when Congress enacted legislation providing for
labor and management to enter into contracts for union shops, it
was intended, under the union shop principle, that labor would use
the dues for collective bargaining purposes."
104 Cong.Rec. 11215;
see also id., p. 11331. The
failure of the amendment to be adopted reflected disagreement in
the Senate over the scope of its coverage and doubts as to the
propriety of the breadth of the remedy.
See 104 Cong.Rec.
11214-11224, 11330-11347.
[
Footnote 20]
Compare Senator Kennedy's objection to the remedy for
recovery of all dues contemplated by the Potter Amendment. 104
Cong.Rec. 11346.
[
Footnote 21]
No contention was made below or here that any of the
expenditures involved in this case were made in violation of the
Federal Corrupt Practices Act, 18 U.S.C. § 610, or any state
corrupt practices legislation.
[
Footnote 22]
We note that the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act
of 1959, requires every labor organization subject to the federal
labor laws to file annually with the Secretary of Labor a financial
report as to certain specified disbursements and also "other
disbursements made by it including the purposes thereof. . . ." §
201(b)(6). Each union is also required to maintain records in
sufficient detail to supply the necessary basic information and
data from which the report may be verified. § 206. The information
required to be contained in such report must be available to all
union members. § 201(c).
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, concurring.
Some forced associations are inevitable in an industrial
society. One who of necessity rides busses and street cars does not
have the freedom that John Muir and Walt Whitman extolled. The very
existence of a factory brings into being human colonies. Public
housing in some areas may of necessity take the form of apartment
buildings which to some may be as repulsive as ant hills. Yet
people in teeming communities often have no other choice.
Page 367 U. S. 776
Legislatures have some leeway in dealing with the problems
created by these modern phenomena.
Collective bargaining is a remedy for some of the problems
created by modern factory conditions. The beneficiaries are all the
members of the laboring force. We therefore concluded in
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson, 351 U.
S. 225, that it was permissible for the legislature to
require all who gain from collective bargaining to contribute to
its cost. [
Footnote 2/1] That is
the narrow and precise holding of the
Hanson case, as MR.
JUSTICE BLACK shows.
Once an association with others is compelled by the facts of
life, special safeguards are necessary lest the spirit of the
First, Fourth, and Fifth Amendments be lost and we all succumb to
regimentation. I expressed this concern in
Public Utilities
Comm. v. Pollack, 343 U. S. 451,
343 U. S. 467
(dissenting opinion), where a "captive audience" was forced to
listen to special radio broadcasts. If an association is compelled,
the individual should not be forced to surrender any matters of
conscience, belief, or expression. He should be allowed to enter
the group with his own flag flying, whether it be religious,
political, or philosophical; nothing that the group does should
deprive him of the privilege of preserving and expressing his
agreement, disagreement, or dissent, whether it coincides with the
view of the group, or conflicts with it in minor or major ways; and
he should not be required to finance the promotion of causes with
which he disagrees.
In a debate on the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, later
adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on December
10, 1948, Mr. Malik of
Page 367 U. S. 777
Lebanon stated what I think is the controlling principle in
cases of the character now before us:
"The social group to which the individual belongs, may, like the
human person himself, be wrong or right; the person alone is the
judge. [
Footnote 2/2]"
This means that membership in a group cannot be conditioned on
the individual's acceptance of the group's philosophy. [
Footnote 2/3] Otherwise, First Amendment
rights are required to be exchanged for the group's attitude,
philosophy, or politics. I do not see how that is permissible under
the Constitution. Since neither Congress nor the state legislatures
can abridge those rights, they cannot grant the power to private
groups to abridge them. As I read the First Amendment, it forbids
any abridgment by government whether directly or indirectly.
The collection of dues for paying the costs of collective
bargaining of which each member is a beneficiary is one thing. If,
however, dues are used, or assessments are made, to promote or
oppose birth control, to repeal or increase the taxes on cosmetics,
to promote or oppose the admission of Red China into the United
Nations, and the like, then the group compels an individual to
support with his money causes beyond what gave rise to the need for
group action.
Page 367 U. S. 778
I think the same must be said when union dues or assessments are
used to elect a Governor, A Congressman, a Senator, or a President.
It may be said that the election of a Franklin D. Roosevelt, rather
than a Calvin Coolidge, might be the best possible way to serve the
cause of collective bargaining. But even such a selective use of
union funds for political purposes subordinates the individual's
First Amendment rights to the views of the majority. I do not see
how that can be done, even though the objector retains his rights
to campaign, to speak, to vote as he chooses. For when union funds
are used for that purpose, the individual is required to finance
political projects against which he may be in rebellion. [
Footnote 2/4] The furtherance of the common
cause leaves some leeway for the leadership of the group. As long
as they act to promote the cause which justified bringing the group
together, the individual cannot withdraw his financial support
merely because he disagrees with the group's strategy. If that were
allowed, we would be reversing the
Hanson case
sub
silentio. But, since the funds here in issue are used for
causes other than defraying the costs of collective bargaining, I
would affirm the judgment below with modifications. Although I
recognize the strength of the arguments advanced by my Brothers
BLACK and WHITTAKER against giving a "proportional" relief to
appellees in this case, there is the practical problem
Page 367 U. S. 779
of mustering five Justices for a judgment in this case.
Cf.
Screws v. United States, 325 U. S. 91,
325 U. S. 134.
So I have concluded
dubitante to agree to the one
suggested by MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, on the understanding that all
relief granted will be confined to the six protesting employees.
This suit, though called a "class" action, does not meet the
requirements, as the use or nonuse of any dues or assessments
depends on the choice of each individual, not the group.
See
Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U. S. 32,
311 U. S.
44.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The problem of employees who receive benefits of union
representation but who are unwilling to give financial support to
the union has received much attention from Congress (
see
S.Rep. No. 105, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 5-7; H.R.Rep. No. 510,
80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 42-43) and from the courts.
See
Radio Officers v. Labor Board, 347 U. S.
17.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Commission on Human Rights, Summary Record of the Fourteenth
Meeting, February 4, 1947, U.N.Doc. E/CN.4/SR.14, p. 4.
[
Footnote 2/3]
We noted in the
Hanson case, 351 U.S. at
351 U. S.
236-237, note 8, various restrictions placed by union
constitutions and by-laws on individual members. Some disqualified
persons from membership for their political views or associations.
Certainly government could not prescribe standards of that
character.
Some restrained members from certain kinds of speech or
activity. Certainly government could not impose these
restraints.
Some required the use of portions of union funds for purposes
other than collective bargaining. Plainly those conditions could
not be imposed by the state or federal government or enforced by
the judicial branch of government.
See Shelley v. Kraemer,
334 U. S. 1;
Barrows v. Jackson, 346 U. S. 249.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Hostility to such compulsion was expressed early in our history.
Madison, in his Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious
Assessments, wrote,
"Who does not see . . . that the same authority which can force
a citizen to contribute three pence only of his property for the
support of any one establishment, may force him to conform to any
other establishment in all cases whatsoever?"
II Writings of James Madison (Hunt ed. 1901), p. 186.
Jefferson, in his 1779 Bill for Religious Liberty, wrote "that
to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the
propagation of opinions which he disbelieves is sinful and
tyrannical."
See 12 Hening's Va.Stat. 85; Brant, Madison,
The Nationalist (1948), p. 354.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER, concurring in part and dissenting in
part.
Understanding the Court's opinion to hold -- put in my own words
-- that, in enacting § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act,
Congress intended to, and impliedly did, limit the use that railway
labor unions may make of dues, fees and assessments, collected from
those of its members who were or are required to become or remain
its members by force of union shop contracts negotiated as
permitted by that section, only to defray the costs of negotiating
and administering collective bargaining agreements -- including the
adjustment and settlement of disputes -- and that the
Hanson case, rightly construed, upholds no more than that,
I join Points I, II and III of the Court's opinion.
But I dissent from
367 U. S. In
respect to that point, it seems appropriate to make the following
observations. When many members pay the same amount of monthly dues
into the treasury of the union, which dispenses the fund for what
are, under the Court's opinion, both permitted and proscribed
activities, how can it be told whose dues paid for what? Let us
suppose a union with two members, each paying monthly dues of three
dollars, and that one does, but the other does not, object to his
dues' being expended for "proscribed
Page 367 U. S. 780
activity" -- whatever that phrase may mean. Of the dues for a
given month, the union expends four dollars for admittedly proper
activity, and two dollars for "proscribed activity," answering to
the objector that the two dollars spent for "proscribed activity"
were not from his, but from the other's, dues. Would not the result
be that the objector was thus required to pay not his one-half, but
three-fourths, of the union's legitimate expenses? Or has not the
objector nevertheless paid a ratable part of the cost of the
"proscribed activity"?
The Court suggests that a proper decree might require
"restitution" to the objector of that part of his dues that is
equal to the ratio of dues spent for "proscribed activity" to total
dues collected by the union. But even if the Court could draw a
clear line between what is and what is not "proscribed activity,"
the accounting and proof problems involved would make the remedy
most onerous and impractical. But when there is added to this a
full recognition of the practical impossibility of judicially
drawing the clear line mentioned and also of the fact that the
local unions which collect the dues promptly pay a part of them to
the national union which, in turn, also engages in "proscribed
activity," it becomes plain that the suggested restitution remedy
is impossible of practical performance.
It would seem to follow that the only practical remedy possible
is the one formulated by the Georgia court, and I would approve
it.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting.
This action was brought in a Georgia state court by six railroad
employees [
Footnote 3/1] in behalf
of themselves "and others similarly situated" against railroads
making up the
Page 367 U. S. 781
Southern Railway System, labor organizations representing
employees of that system in collective bargaining, and a number of
individuals, to enjoin enforcement and application to them of a
union shop agreement entered into between the railroads and the
labor organizations as authorized by § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway
Labor Act. [
Footnote 3/2] The
agreement's terms required all employees, in order to keep their
railroad jobs, to join the union and remain members, at least to
the extent of tendering periodic dues, initiation fees and
assessments, not including fines and penalties. [
Footnote 3/3] The complaint, as amended, charged
that the agreement was void because it conflicted with the laws and
Constitution of Georgia and the First, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth
Amendments to the Federal Constitution. Section 2, Eleventh
provides that such union shops are valid "[n]otwithstanding any
other . . . statute or law of the United States . . . or of any
State." Relying on our decision in
Railway Employees' Dept. v.
Hanson, 351 U. S. 225,
which upheld contracts made pursuant to that section, the Georgia
trial court dismissed the complaint as amended. The State Supreme
Court reversed and remanded the case for trial, distinguishing our
Hanson decision as follows:
"It is alleged that the union dues and other payments they will
be required to make to the union
Page 367 U. S. 782
will be used to 'support ideological and political doctrines and
candidates' which they are unwilling to support and in which they
do not believe, and that this will violate the First, Fifth and
Ninth Amendments of the Constitution. While
Railway Emp. Dept.
v. Hanson, 351 U. S. 225,
supra,
upheld the validity of a closed shop contract executed under § 2,
Eleventh, that opinion clearly indicates that that court would not
approve a requirement that one join the union if his contributions
thereto were used as this petition alleges. It is there said
(headnote 3c), 'Judgment is
reserved [italics in Georgia
Supreme Court opinion] as to the validity or enforceability of a
union or closed shop agreement if other conditions of union
membership are imposed or if the exaction of dues, initiation fees
or assessments is used as a cover for forcing ideological
conformity or other action in contravention of the First or the
Fifth Amendment.' We must render judgment now upon this precise
question. We do not believe one can constitutionally be compelled
to contribute money to support ideas, politics and candidates which
he opposes. . . . [
Footnote
3/4]"
On remand, testimony, admissions and stipulations showed without
dispute that union funds collected from dues, fees and assessments
were regularly used to support and oppose various political and
economic programs, candidates, parties and ideological causes, and
that the complaining employees were opposed to many of the
positions the unions took in these matters. The trial court made
lengthy findings, one crucial here being:
"Those funds have been and are being used in substantial amounts
to propagate political and
Page 367 U. S. 783
economic doctrines, concepts and ideologies and to promote
legislative programs opposed by plaintiffs and the class they
represent."
The trial court then found and declared § 2, Eleventh,
"unconstitutional to the extent that it permits, or is applied
to permit, the exaction of funds from plaintiffs and the class they
represent for the complained of purposes and activities set forth
above."
Compulsory membership under these circumstances was held to
abridge First Amendment freedoms of association, thought, speech,
press and political expression. [
Footnote 3/5] On the basis of this holding, the trial
court enjoined all the defendants
"from enforcing the said union shop agreements . . . and from
discharging petitioners, or any member of the class they represent,
for refusing to become or remain members of, or pay periodic dues,
fees, or assessments to, any of the labor union defendants,
provided, however, that said defendants may at any time petition
the court to dissolve said injunction upon a showing that they no
longer are engaging in the improper and unlawful activities
described above."
Again, the activities referred to were the use of union funds
collected from fees, dues and assessments to support candidates,
parties, or ideological, economic or political views contrary to
the wishes of the complaining employees. The trial court also
decreed that the three employees who had been compelled under
protest to pay dues, fees and assessments because of the union shop
agreement were entitled to have those payments returned.
The Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed, holding that
"[o]ne who is compelled to contribute the fruits of his
Page 367 U. S. 784
labor to support or promote political or economic programs or
support candidates for public office is just as much deprived of
his freedom of speech as if he were compelled to give his vocal
support to doctrines he opposes. [
Footnote 3/6]"
I fully agree with this holding of the Georgia Supreme Court,
and would affirm its judgment with certain modifications of the
relief granted.
I
Section 2, Eleventh of the Railway Labor Act authorizes unions
and railroads to make union shop agreements notwithstanding any
other provision of state or federal law. Such a contract simply
means that no person can keep a job with the contracting railroad
unless he becomes a member of and pays dues to the contracting
union. Neither § 2, Eleventh, nor any other part of the Act
contains any implication or even a hint that Congress wanted to
limit the purposes for which a contracting union's dues should or
could be spent. All the parties to this litigation have agreed from
its beginning, and still agree, that there is no such limitation in
the Act. The Court nevertheless, in order to avoid constitutional
questions, interprets the Act itself as barring use of dues for
political purposes. In doing this, I think, the Court is once more
"carrying the doctrine of avoiding constitutional questions to a
wholly unjustifiable extreme." [
Footnote 3/7] In fact, I think the Court is actually
rewriting § 2, Eleventh, to make it mean exactly what Congress
refused to make it mean. The very legislative history relied on by
the Court appears to me to prove that its interpretation of § 2,
Eleventh, is without justification. For that history shows that
Congress, with its eyes wide open, passed that section knowing that
its broad language would permit the use of union dues
Page 367 U. S. 785
to advocate causes, doctrines, laws, candidates and parties,
whether individual members objected or not. [
Footnote 3/8] Under such circumstances, I think Congress
has a right to a determination of the constitutionality of the
statute it passed, rather than to have the Court rewrite the
statute in the name of avoiding decision of constitutional
questions.
The end result of what the Court is doing is to distort this
statute so as to deprive unions of rights I think Congress tried to
give them and, at the same time, in the companion case of
Lathrop v. Donohue, decided today,
post, p.
367 U. S. 820,
leave itself free later to hold that integrated bar associations
can constitutionally exercise the powers now denied to labor unions
for fear of unconstitutionality. The constitutional question raised
alike in this case and in
Lathrop is bound to come back
here soon with a record so meticulously perfect that the Court
cannot escape deciding it. Should the Court then hold that lawyers
and workers can constitutionally be compelled to pay for the
support of views they are against, the result would be that the
labor unions would have lost their case this
Page 367 U. S. 786
year on a statutory-constitutional basis, while the integrated
bar would win its case next year or the year after on the ground
that the constitutional part of the basis for the holding against
the unions today was groundless. Yet no one has suggested that the
Court's statutory construction of § 2, Eleventh, could possibly be
supported without the crutch of its fear of unconstitutionality.
This is why I think the Court's avoidance of the constitutional
issue in both cases today is wholly unfair to the unions, as well
as to Congress. I must consider this case on the basis of my belief
as to the constitutionality of § 2, Eleventh, interpreted so as to
authorize compulsion of workers to pay dues to a union for use in
advocating causes and political candidates that the protesting
workers are against.
II
It is contended by the unions that precisely the same First
Amendment question presented here was considered and decided in
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson, 351 U.
S. 225. I agree that it clearly was not. Section 2,
Eleventh was challenged there before it became effective, and the
main grounds of attack, as our opinion noted, were that the union
shop agreement would deprive employees of their freedom of
association under the First Amendment and of their property rights
under the Fifth. There were not in the
Hanson case, as
there are here, allegations, proof and findings that union funds
regularly were being used to support political parties, candidates
and economic and ideological causes to which the complaining
employees were hostile. Our opinion in
Hanson carefully
pointed to the fact that only general "[w]ide-ranged problems" were
tendered under the First Amendment, and that imposition of
"assessments . . . not germane to collective bargaining" would
present "a different problem." The Court went on further to
emphasize
Page 367 U. S. 787
that if, at another time,
"the exaction of dues, initiation fees, or assessments is used
as a cover for forcing ideological conformity or other action in
contravention of the First Amendment, this judgment will not
prejudice the decision in that case. . . . We only hold that the
requirement for financial support of the collective bargaining
agency by all who receive the benefits of its work is within the
power of Congress under the Commerce Clause and does not violate
either the First or the Fifth Amendments. [
Footnote 3/9]"
Thus, the
Hanson case held only that workers could be
required to pay their part of the cost of actual bargaining carried
on by a union selected as bargaining agent under authority of
Congress, just as Congress doubtless could have required workers to
pay the cost of such bargaining had it chosen to have the
bargaining carried on by the Secretary of Labor or any other
appropriately selected bargaining agent. The
Hanson case
did not hold that railroad workers could be compelled by law to
forego their constitutionally protected freedom of association by
participating as union "members" against their will. That case
cannot, therefore, properly be read to rest on a principle which
would permit government -- in furtherance of some public interest,
be that interest actual or imaginary -- to compel membership in
Rotary Clubs, fraternal organizations, religious groups, chambers
of commerce, bar associations, labor unions, or any other private
organizations Government may decide it wants to subsidize, support
or control. In a word, the
Hanson case did not hold that
the existence of union shop contracts could be used as an excuse to
force workers to associate with people they do not want to
associate with, or to pay their money to support causes they
detest.
Page 367 U. S. 788
III
The First Amendment provides:
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress
of grievances."
Probably no one would suggest that Congress could, without
violating this Amendment, pass a law taxing workers, or any persons
for that matter (even lawyers), to create a fund to be used in
helping certain political parties or groups favored by the
Government to elect their candidates or promote their controversial
causes. Compelling a man by law to pay his money to elect
candidates or advocate laws or doctrines he is against differs only
in degree, if at all, from compelling him by law to speak for a
candidate, a party, or a cause he is against. The very reason for
the First Amendment is to make the people of this country free to
think, speak, write and worship as they wish, not as the Government
commands.
There is, of course, no constitutional reason why a union or
other private group may not spend its funds for political or
ideological causes if its members voluntarily join it and can
voluntarily get out of it. [
Footnote
3/10] Labor unions made up of voluntary members free to get in
or out of the unions when they please have played important and
useful roles in politics and economic affairs. [
Footnote 3/11] How to spend its money is a
question for each voluntary group to decide for itself in the
absence of some valid law forbidding
Page 367 U. S. 789
activities for which the money is spent. [
Footnote 3/12] But a different situation arises when a
federal law steps in and authorizes such a group to carry on
activities at the expense of persons who do not choose to be
members of the group, as well as those who do. Such a law, even
though validly passed by Congress, cannot be used in a way that
abridges the specifically defined freedoms of the First Amendment.
And whether there is such abridgment depends not only on how the
law is written, but also on how it works. [
Footnote 3/13]
There can be no doubt that the federally sanctioned union shop
contract here, as it actually works, takes a part of the earnings
of some men and turns it over to others, who spend a substantial
part of the funds so received in efforts to thwart the political,
economic and ideological hopes of those whose money has been forced
from them under authority of law. This injects federal compulsion
into the political and ideological processes, a result which I have
supposed everyone would agree the First Amendment was particularly
intended to prevent. And it makes no difference if, as is urged,
political and legislative activities are helpful adjuncts of
collective bargaining. Doubtless employers could make the same
Page 367 U. S. 790
arguments in favor of compulsory contributions to an association
of employers for use in political and economic programs calculated
to help collective bargaining on their side. But the argument is
equally unappealing whoever makes it. The stark fact is that this
Act of Congress is being used as a means to exact money from these
employees to help get votes to win elections for parties and
candidates and to support doctrines they are against. If this is
constitutional, the First Amendment is not the charter of political
and religious liberty its sponsors believed it to be. James
Madison, who wrote the Amendment, said in arguing for religious
liberty that
"the same authority which can force a citizen to contribute
three pence only of his property for the support of any one
establishment, may force him to conform to any other establishment
in all cases whatsoever. [
Footnote
3/14]"
And Thomas Jefferson said that
"to compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the
propagation of opinions which he disbelieves is sinful and
tyrannical. [
Footnote 3/15]"
These views of Madison and Jefferson authentically represent the
philosophy embodied in the safeguards of the First Amendment. That
Amendment leaves the Federal Government no power whatever to compel
one man to expend his energy, his time or his money to advance the
fortunes of candidates he would like to see defeated or to urge
ideologies and causes he believes would be hurtful to the
country.
The Court holds that § 2, Eleventh, denies "unions, over an
employee's objection, the power to use his exacted funds to support
political causes which he opposes." While I do not so construe § 2,
Eleventh, I want to make clear that I believe the First Amendment
bars use of dues extorted from an employee by law for the promotion
of causes, doctrines and laws that unions generally favor to
Page 367 U. S. 791
help the unions, as well as any other political purposes. I
think workers have as much right to their own views about matters
affecting unions as they have to views about other matters in the
fields of politics and economics. Indeed, some of their most
strongly held views are apt to be precisely on the subject of
unions, just as questions of law reform, court procedure, selection
of judges and other aspects of the "administration of justice" give
rise to some of the deepest and most irreconcilable differences
among lawyers. In my view, § 2, Eleventh, can constitutionally
authorize no more than to make a worker pay dues to a union for the
sole purpose of defraying the cost of acting as his bargaining
agent. Our Government has no more power to compel individuals to
support union programs or union publications than it has to compel
the support of political programs, employer programs or church
programs. And the First Amendment, fairly construed, deprives the
Government of all power to make any person pay out one single penny
against his will to be used in any way to advocate doctrines or
views he is against, whether economic, scientific, political,
religious or any other. [
Footnote
3/16]
I would therefore hold that § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor
Act, in authorizing application of the union shop contract to the
named protesting employees who are appellees here, violates the
freedom of speech guarantee of the First Amendment.
IV
The remedy:
The Georgia court enjoined the unions and the railroads from
certain future activities under the contract, and also required
repayment of dues paid by three employees who had protested use of
union funds to support
Page 367 U. S. 792
candidates or advocate views the protesting employees were
against.
I am not so sure as the Court that the injunction bars
"the collection of all funds from anyone who can show that he is
opposed to the expenditure of any of his money for political
purposes which he disapproves."
So construed, the injunction would take away the First Amendment
right of employees to contribute their money voluntarily to a
collective fund to be used to support and oppose candidates and
causes even though individual contributors might disagree with
particular choices of the group. So far as it may be ambiguous in
this respect, I think the injunction should be modified to make
sure that it does not interfere with the valuable rights of
citizens to make their individual voices heard through voluntary
collective action.
For much the same basic reasons, I think the injunction is too
broad, in that it runs not only in favor of the six protesting
employees, but also in favor of the "class they represent." No one
of that "class" is shown to have protested at all. The State
Supreme Court nevertheless rejected the unions' contention that the
so-called class was so indefinite, and its members so lacking in
common, identifiable interests and mental attitudes, that a decree
purporting to bind all of them, the railroads, the individual
defendants and the unions, would not comport with the due process
requirements of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. For reasons to
be stated, I agree with this contention of the unions, and
consequently would hold that the judgment here cannot stand insofar
as it purports finally to adjudicate rights as between the party
defendants and railroad employees who were neither named party
plaintiffs nor intervenors in the suit.
The trial court defined the "class" as composed of
"all nonoperating employees of the railroad defendants affected
by, and opposed to, the . . . union shop agreements,
Page 367 U. S. 793
who also are opposed to the collection and use of periodic dues,
fees and assessments for support of ideological and political
doctrines and candidates and legislative programs. . . . [
Footnote 3/17]"
As applied to the facts here, this class, as defined, could
include employees not only from Georgia, but also from Florida,
Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Louisiana,
Illinois, Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, Mississippi, Kentucky
and the District of Columbia. Genuine class actions result in
binding judgments either for or against each member of the class.
[
Footnote 3/18] Obviously, to
make a judgment binding, the parties for or against whom it is to
operate must be identifiable when the judgment is rendered. That
would not be possible here, since the only employees included in
the class would be those who personally oppose the views they
allege the union is using their dues to promote. This would make
the "class" depend on the views entertained by each member, views
which may change from day to day or year to year. Under these
circumstances, when this decree was rendered, neither the court nor
the adverse parties nor anyone else could know with certainty to
what individuals the unions owed a duty under the decree. In
311 U. S. Lee, 311
U.S.
Page 367 U. S. 794
32,
311 U. S. 44,
this Court pointed out the insuperable obstacles in attempting to
treat as members of the same class parties to a contract such as
the one here, some of whom might prefer to have the contract
enforced and some of whom might not. Notice to persons whose rights
are to be adjudicated is too important an element of our system of
justice to permit a holding that this Georgia action has finally
determined the issues for all the unidentifiable members of this
"class" of plaintiffs spread territorially all the way from Florida
to Illinois and from the District of Columbia to Missouri. After
all, the class suit doctrine is only a narrow judicially created
exception to the rule that a case or controversy involves litigants
who have been duly notified and given an opportunity to be present
in court either in person or by counsel. [
Footnote 3/19] I would hold that there was no known
common interest among the members of the described class here which
justified this class action. From the very nature of the rights
asserted, which depended on the unknown, perhaps fluctuating mental
attitudes of employees, the rights of each employee were the basis
for separable claims, in which the relief for each might vary as it
did here as to the amount of damages awarded. Under these
circumstances the class judgment should not stand.
The decree, modified to eliminate its class aspect, does not
unconditionally forbid the application of the contract to all
people under all circumstances, as did the one we struck down in
the
Hanson case. The decree so modified would simply
forbid the use of the union shop contract to bar employment of the
six protesting employees so long as the unions do not discontinue
the practice of spending union funds to support any causes or
doctrines, political economic or other, over the expressed
objection of the six particular employees. Other employees who have
not
Page 367 U. S. 795
protested are, of course, in the entirely different position of
voluntary or acquiescing dues payers, which they have every right
to be, and since they have asked for no relief, the decree in this
case should not affect them. Thus, modified I think the relief
afforded by the decree is justified.
The decree requires the union to refund dues, fees and
assessments paid under protest by three of the complaining
employees, and exempts the six complaining employees from the
payment of any union dues, fees or assessments so long as funds so
received are used by the union to promote causes they are against.
The state court found that these payments had been and would be
made by these employees only because they had been compelled to
join the union to save their jobs, despite their objections to
paying the union so long as it used its funds for candidates,
parties and ideologies contrary to these employees' wishes. The
Court does not challenge this finding, but nevertheless holds that
relieving protesting workers of all payment of dues would somehow
interfere with the union's statutory duty to act as a bargaining
agent. In the first place, this would interfere with the union's
activities only to the extent that it bars compulsion of dues
payments from protesting workers to be used in some unknown part
for unconstitutional purposes, and I think it perfectly proper to
hold that such payments cannot be compelled. Furthermore, I think
the remedy suggested by the Court will work a far greater
interference with the union's bargaining activities because it will
impose much greater trial and accounting burdens on both unions and
workers. The Court's remedy is to give the wronged employees a
right to a refund limited either to "the proportion of the union's
total expenditures made for such political activities" or to the
"proportion . . . [of] expenditures for political purposes which he
had advised the union he disapproved." It may be that courts and
lawyers with
Page 367 U. S. 796
sufficient skill in accounting, algebra, geometry, trigonometry
and calculus will be able to extract the proper microscopic answer
from the voluminous and complex accounting records of the local,
national and international unions involved. It seems to me,
however, that, while the Court's remedy may prove very lucrative to
special masters, accountants and lawyers, this formula, with its
attendant trial burdens, promises little hope for financial
recompense to the individual workers whose First Amendment freedoms
have been flagrantly violated. Undoubtedly, at the conclusion of
this long exploration of accounting intricacies, many courts could
with plausibility dismiss the workers' claims as
de
minimis when measured only in dollars and cents.
I cannot agree to treat so lightly the value of a man's
constitutional right to be wholly free from any sort of
governmental compulsion in the expression of opinions. It should
not be forgotten that many men have left their native lands,
languished in prison, and even lost their lives rather than give
support to ideas they were conscientiously against. The three
workers who paid under protest here were forced under authority of
a federal statute to pay all current dues or lose their jobs. They
should get back all they paid with interest.
Unions composed of a voluntary membership, like all other
voluntary groups, should be free in this country to fight in the
public forum to advance their own causes, to promote their choice
of candidates and parties, and to work for the doctrines or the
laws they favor. But to the extent that Government steps in to
force people to help espouse the particular causes of a group, that
group -- whether composed of railroad workers or lawyers -- loses
its status as a voluntary group. The reason our Constitution
endowed individuals with freedom to think and speak and advocate
was to free people from the blighting effect of either a partial or
a complete governmental
Page 367 U. S. 797
monopoly of ideas. Labor unions have been peculiar beneficiaries
of that salutary constitutional principle, and lawyers, I think,
are charged with a peculiar responsibility to preserve and protect
this principle of constitutional freedom, even for themselves. A
violation of it, however small, is, in my judgment, prohibited by
the First Amendment, and should be stopped dead in its tracks on
its first appearance. With so vital a principle at stake, I cannot
agree to the imposition of parsimonious limitations on the kind of
decree the courts below can fashion in their efforts to afford
effective protection to these priceless constitutional rights.
I would affirm the judgment of the Georgia Supreme Court, with
the modifications I have suggested.
[
Footnote 3/1]
Although there were more complainants when the suit was brought,
there were only six when the trial was completed.
[
Footnote 3/2]
64 Stat. 1238, 45 U.S.C. § 152, Eleventh.
[
Footnote 3/3]
In accordance with the requirements of the statute, the
agreement provided, in language almost identical to that of the
statute, that no employee would be required to become or remain a
member of the union
"if such membership is not available to such employe upon the
same terms and conditions as are generally applicable to any other
member, or if the membership of such employe is denied or
terminated for any reason other than the failure of the employe to
tender the periodic dues, initiation fees, and assessments (not
including fines and penalties) uniformly required as a condition of
acquiring or retaining membership."
[
Footnote 3/4]
Looper v. Georgia Southern & F. R. Co., 213 Ga.
279, 284,
99 S.E.2d 101,
104-105.
[
Footnote 3/5]
The trial court also held that the section as enforced violated
the Fifth Ninth and Tenth Amendments. My view as to the First
Amendment makes it unnecessary for me to consider the claims under
the other Amendments.
[
Footnote 3/6]
215 Ga. 27, 46,
108 S.E.2d
796, 808.
[
Footnote 3/7]
Clay v. Sun Insurance Office, 363 U.
S. 207,
363 U. S. 213
(dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 3/8]
The specific problem of use of the compelled dues for political
purposes was raised during both the hearings and the floor debates.
Hearings on S. 3295, Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Labor
and Public Welfare, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 316-317; Hearings on
H.R. 7789, House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 81st
Cong., 2d Sess., p. 160; 96 Cong.Rec. 17049-17050.
Again, in 1958, when Senator Potter introduced his amendment to
limit the use of compelled dues to collective bargaining and
related purposes, he pointed out on the floor of the Senate
that
"the fact is that, under current practices in some of our labor
organizations, dissenters are being denied the freedom not to
support financially political or ideological or other activities
which they may oppose."
104 Cong.Rec. 11214. It could hardly be contended that the
debate on his proposal, which was defeated, indicated any generally
held belief that such use of compelled dues was already proscribed
under § 2, Eleventh, or any other existing statute.
See
104 Cong.Rec. 11214-11224, 11330-11347.
[
Footnote 3/9]
351 U.S. at
351 U. S. 235,
351 U. S. 236,
351 U. S. 238.
See also id., 351 U.S. at
351 U. S. 242
(concurring opinion).
[
Footnote 3/10]
See DeMille v. American Federation of Radio Artists,
Cal.App., 175 P.2d 851, 854,
affirmed, 31 Cal. 2d
139, 147-149, 187 P.2d 769, 775-776,
certiorari
denied, 333 U.S. 876.
[
Footnote 3/11]
United States v. CIO, 335 U. S. 106,
335 U. S. 144
(concurring opinion).
[
Footnote 3/12]
See, e.g., Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co.,
336 U. S. 490.
[
Footnote 3/13]
We held in the
Hanson case, with respect to this very
same § 2, Eleventh, that even though the statutory provision
authorizing union shops is only permissive, that provision, "which
expressly declares that state law is superseded," is "the source of
the power and authority by which any private rights are lost or
sacrificed," and therefore is "the governmental action on which the
Constitution operates." 351 U.S. at
351 U. S. 232.
Even though § 2, Eleventh, is permissive in form, Congress was
fully aware when enacting it that the almost certain result would
be the establishment of union shops throughout the railroad
industry. Witness after witness so testified during the hearings on
the bill, and this testimony was never seriously disputed.
See Hearings on S. 3295,
supra, 367
U.S. 740fn3/8|>note 8,
passim; Hearings on H.R.
7789,
supra, 367
U.S. 740fn3/8|>note 8,
passim.
[
Footnote 3/14]
1 Stokes, Church and State in the United States, 391 (1950).
[
Footnote 3/15]
Brant, James Madison: The Nationalist, 354 (1948).
[
Footnote 3/16]
Cf. Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U. S.
1,
330 U. S. 16.
[
Footnote 3/17]
The trial court went on to include in the class other employees
who opposed the use of union funds for any purposes
"other than the negotiation, maintenance and administration of
agreements concerning rates of pay, rules and working conditions,
or wages, hours, terms or other conditions of employment or the
handling of disputes relating to the above."
I read the two opinions of the Georgia Supreme Court, however,
as limiting its holding to the precise question of whether the
First Amendment is violated by the compulsory legal requirement
that employees pay dues and other fees which are partly used to
propagate political and ideological views obnoxious to the
employees. I consequently do not reach or consider the different
question lurking in this part of the trial court's definition of
class.
[
Footnote 3/18]
See, e.g., Supreme Tribe of Ben-Hur v. Cauble,
255 U. S. 356,
255 U. S. 367.
[
Footnote 3/19]
Cf. Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. at
311 U. S.
41-42.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN joins,
dissenting.
Appellant unions were the collective bargaining representatives
of the "nonoperating" employees of the Southern Railway. Appellees,
six individual railway employees, commenced this action in the
Superior Court of Bibb County, Georgia, seeking a declaration of
invalidity and an injunction to prevent enforcement of a union shop
agreement, made under the authority of § 2, Eleventh, of the
Railway Labor Act, as amended in 1951, on the ground that the
contract was in violation of Georgia law and rights secured by the
First, Fifth, Ninth, and Tenth Amendments of the United States
Constitution. The suit was brought as a class action on behalf
of
"all those employees or former employees of the railroad
defendants affected by and opposed to the union shop agreement who
are also opposed to the use of the periodic dues, fees and
assessments which they have been, are and will be required to pay
to support ideological and political doctrines and candidates and
legislative programs. . . ."
The monthly dues ranged from $2.25 to
Page 367 U. S. 798
$3. The petition alleged that the plaintiffs opposed and were
unwilling voluntarily to support the "ideological and political
doctrines and candidates" for which union dues and assessments were
collected under the union shop agreement and would be used "in
substantial part . . . to support."
The Georgia trial court's decision dismissing the complaint for
failure to state a cause of action was reversed by the Supreme
Court of Georgia.
Looper v. Georgia, Southern & Florida R.
Co., 213 Ga. 279,
99 S.E.2d 101.
Upon remand, the parties stipulated the above allegations and the
plaintiffs offered proof of the amount of union funds which went to
the legislative, political and educational departments of the
unions and the controlling organs of the AFL-CIO. The trial court
made,
inter alia, the following findings: the unions'
funds had been expended in "substantial amounts" to promote
political doctrines and legislative programs which the plaintiffs
opposed; these funds had been used in "substantial amounts to
impose upon plaintiffs . . . conformity to those doctrines"; such
use of funds was
"not reasonably necessary to collective bargaining or to
maintaining the existence and position of said union defendants as
effective bargaining agents."
The need of unions to engage in what are loosely described as
political activities as means of promoting -- if not to achieving
-- the purposes of their existence, the extent to which this
practice has become an essential part of the American labor
movement, and, more particularly, of railroad labor unions, the
relation of these means to the ends of collective bargaining, were
matters not canvassed at trial nor judicially noticed. Nor was it
claimed that the slightest barrier had been interposed against the
fullest exercise by the plaintiffs of their freedom of speech in
any form or in any forum. Since these matters were not canvassed,
no findings upon them were made.
Page 367 U. S. 799
The trial court permanently enjoined enforcement of the
agreement so long as the unions continued to engage "in the
improper and unlawful activities described." It declared § 2,
Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act unconstitutional insofar as it
permitted the exaction of dues utilized in promoting so-called
political activities from union members disapproving such
expenditures. The unions were also ordered to repay the dues and
assessments previously paid by the individual plaintiffs. The
Georgia Supreme Court affirmed this judgment, 215 Ga. 27,
108 S.E.2d
796, and, on appeal to this Court, under 28 U.S.C. § 1257(1),
probable jurisdiction was noted. 361 U.S. 807.
I completely defer to the guiding principle that this Court will
abstain from entertaining a serious constitutional question when a
statute may fairly be construed so as to avoid the issue, but am
unable to accept the restrictive interpretation that the Court
gives to § 2, Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act. After quoting the
relevant canon for constitutional adjudication from
United
States v. Jin Fuey Moy, 241 U. S. 394,
241 U. S. 401,
[
Footnote 4/1] Mr. Justice Cardozo,
for the whole Court, enunciated the complementary principle:
"But avoidance of a difficulty will not be pressed to the point
of disingenuous evasion. Here, the intention of the Congress is
revealed too distinctly to permit us to ignore it because of mere
misgivings as to power. The problem must be faced and
answered."
Moore Ice Cream Co. v. Rose, 289 U.
S. 373,
289 U. S.
379.
The Court-devised precept against avoidable conflict with
Congress through unnecessary constitutional adjudication
Page 367 U. S. 800
is not a requirement to distort an enactment in order to escape
such adjudication. Respect for the doctrine demands and only
permits that we extract an interpretation which shies off
constitutional controversy, provided such interpretation is
consonant with a fair reading of a statute.
And so the question before us is whether § 2, Eleventh, of the
Railway Labor Act can untorturingly be read to bar activities of
railway unions, which have bargained in accordance with federal law
for a union shop, whereby they are forbidden to spend union dues
for purposes that have uniformly and extensively been so long
pursued as to have become commonplace, settled, conventional trade
union practices. No consideration relevant to construction sustains
such a restrictive reading.
The statutory provision cannot be meaningfully construed except
against the background and presupposition of what is loosely called
political activity of American trade unions in general, and
railroad unions in particular -- activity indissolubly relating to
the immediate economic and social concerns that are the
raison
d'etre of unions. It would be pedantic heavily to document
this familiar truth of industrial history and commonplace of trade
union life. To write the history of the Brotherhoods, the United
Mine Workers, the Steel Workers, the Amalgamated Clothing Workers,
the International Ladies Garment Workers, the United Auto Workers,
and leave out their so-called political activities and expenditures
for them, would be sheer mutilation. Suffice it to recall a few
illustrative manifestations. The AFL, surely the conservative labor
group, sponsored as early as 1893 an extensive program of political
demands calling for compulsory education, an eight-hour day,
employer tort liability, and other social reforms. [
Footnote 4/2] The fiercely contested
Page 367 U. S. 801
Adamson Act of 1916, 39 Stat. 721,
see Wilson v. New,
243 U. S. 332, was
a direct result of railway union pressures exerted upon both the
Congress and the President. [
Footnote
4/3] More specifically, the weekly publication "Labor" -- an
expenditure under attack in this case -- has, since 1919, been the
organ of the railroad brotherhoods which finance it. Its files
through the years show its preoccupation with legislative measures
that touch the vitals of labor's interests, and with the men and
parties who effectuate them. This aspect -- call it the political
side -- is as organic, as inured a part of the philosophy and
practice of railway unions as their immediate bread-and-butter
concerns.
Viewed in this light, there is a total absence in the text, the
context, the history, and the purpose of the legislation under
review of any indication that Congress, in authorizing union shop
agreements, attributed to unions and restricted them to an
artificial, nonprevalent scope of activities in the expenditure of
their funds. An inference that Congress legislated regarding
expenditure control in contradiction to prevailing practices ought
to be better founded than on complete silence. The aim of the 1951
legislation, clearly stated in the congressional reports, was to
eliminate "free riders" in the industry [
Footnote 4/4] -- to make possible "the sharing of the
burden of maintenance by all of the beneficiaries of union
activity." [
Footnote 4/5] To
suggest that this language covertly meant to encompass any less
than the maintenance of those activities normally engaged in by
unions is to withdraw life from law, and to say that Congress dealt
with artificialities, and not with railway unions as they were and
as they functioned.
Page 367 U. S. 802
The hearings and debates lend not the slightest support to a
construction of the amendment which would restrict the uses to
which union funds had, at the time of the union shop amendment,
been conventionally put. To be sure, the legislative record does
not spell out the obvious. The absence of any showing of concern
about unions' expenditures in "political" areas -- especially when
the issue was briefly raised [
Footnote
4/6] -- only buttresses the conclusion that Congress intended
to leave unions free to do that which unions had been and were
doing. It is surely fanciful to conclude that this verbal vacuity
implies that Congress meant its amendment to be read as providing
that members of the union may restrict their dues solely for
financing the technical process of collective bargaining.
There were specific safeguards protective of minority rights.
These safeguards were directed solely toward the protection of
those who might otherwise find themselves barred from union
membership --
viz., Negroes and those who had been
long-time opponents of the unions. The only reference to free
speech in the record of the enactment was made by the President of
the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company during the hearings
before the House Subcommittee. His remarks were related to
restrictive provisions in some union constitutions which suppressed
the right of a dissatisfied member to voice his criticism upon pain
of expulsion. [
Footnote 4/7] No
such claim is remotely before us. [
Footnote 4/8] The sole reason for clarifying the proviso
to the amendment so that payment
Page 367 U. S. 803
of dues was explicitly declared to be the only legitimate
condition of union membership was the continuing fear of lack of
protection for unpopular minorities. There is no mention of
political expenditures in any of the references. From this
wasteland of material, it is strange to find not only that
"[a] congressional concern over possible impingements on the
interests of individual dissenters from union policies is therefore
discernible,"
but so discernible that a construction must be placed upon he
statute that neither its terms nor the accustomed habits of union
life remotely justify.
None of the parties in interest at any time suggested the
possibility that the statute be construed in the manner now
suggested. Neither the United States, the individual dissident
members, the railroad unions, the railroads, the AFL-CIO, the
Railway Labor Executives' Association, nor any other
amicus
curiae suggested that the statute could be emasculated in the
manner now proposed. Of course, we are not confined by the absence
of such a claim, but it is significant that a construction now
found to be reasonable never occurred to the litigants in the two
arguments here.
I cannot attribute to Congress that,
sub silentio, it
meant to bar railway unions under a union shop agreement from
expending their funds in their traditional manner. How easy it
would have been to give at least a hint that such was its purpose.
The claim that these expenditures infringe the appellees'
constitutional rights under the First Amendment must therefore be
faced.
In
Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson, 351 U.
S. 225, this Court had to pass on the validity of § 2,
Eleventh, of the Railway Labor Act, which provided that union shop
agreements entered into between a carrier and a duly designated
labor organization shall be valid notwithstanding any other
"statute or law of the United States, or
Page 367 U. S. 804
Territory thereof, or of any State." [
Footnote 4/9] We held that, in its exercise of the power
to regulate commerce, "the choice by the Congress of the union shop
as a stabilizing force [in industrial disputes] seems to us to be
an allowable one," and that the plaintiffs' claims under the First
and Fifth Amendments were without merit.
The record before the Court in
Hanson clearly indicated
that dues would be used to further what are normally described as
political and legislative ends. And it surely can be said that the
Court was not ignorant of a fact that everyone else knew. Union
constitutions were in evidence which authorized the use of union
funds for political magazines, for support of lobbying groups, and
for urging union members to vote for union-approved candidates.
[
Footnote 4/10] The contention
now raised by plaintiffs
Page 367 U. S. 805
was succinctly stated by the
Hanson plaintiffs in their
brief. [
Footnote 4/11] We
indicated that we were deciding the merits of the complaint on all
the allegations and proof before us.
"On the present record, there is no more an infringement or
impairment of First Amendment rights than there would be in the
case of a lawyer who, by state law, is required to be a member of
an integrated bar."
351 U.S. at
351 U. S.
238.
One would suppose that
Hanson's reasoning disposed of
the present suit. The Georgia Supreme Court, however, in reversing
the initial dismissal of the action by the lower court, relied upon
the following reservation in our opinion:
"if the exaction of dues, initiation fees, or assessments is
used as a cover for forcing ideological conformity or other action
in contravention of the First Amendment, this judgment will not
prejudice the decision in that case."
351 U.S. at
351 U. S. 238.
The use of union dues to promote relevant and effective means of
realizing the purposes for which unions exist does not constitute a
utilization of dues "as a cover for forcing ideological conformity"
in any fair reading of those words. It will come as startling and
fanciful news to the railroad unions and the whole labor movement
that, in using union funds for promoting and opposing legislative
measures of concern to their members, they were engaged in
undercover operations. "Cover" implies a disguise, some sham;
"forcing . . . conformity" means coercing avowal of a belief not
entertained. Plaintiffs here are in no way subjected to such
suppression of their true beliefs, or sponsorship of views they do
not hold. Nor are they forced to join a sham organization which
does not participate in collective bargaining functions, but only
serves as a conduit of funds for ideological propaganda. A totally
different problem than the one before the Court would be presented
by provisions of union constitutions which, in fact, prohibited
Page 367 U. S. 806
members from sponsoring views which the union opposed, [
Footnote 4/12] or which enabled officers
to sponsor views not representative of the union.
Nevertheless, we unanimously held that the plaintiffs in
Hanson had not been denied any right protected by the
First Amendment. Despite our holding, the gist of the complaint
here is that the expenditure of a portion of mandatory funds for
political objectives denies free speech -- the right to speak or to
remain silent -- to members who oppose, against the constituted
authority of union desires, this use of their union dues. No one's
desire or power to speak his mind is checked or curbed. The
individual member may express his views in any public or private
forum as freely as he could before the union collected his dues.
Federal taxes also may diminish the vigor with which a citizen can
give partisan support to a political belief, but, as yet, no one
would place such an impediment to making one's views effective
within the reach of constitutionally protected "free speech."
This is too fine-spun a claim for constitutional recognition.
The framers of the Bill of Rights lived in an era when overhanging
threats to conduct deemed "seditious" and
lettres de
cachet were current issues. Their concern was in protecting
the right of the individual freely to express himself -- especially
his political beliefs -- in a public forum, untrammeled by fear of
punishment or of governmental censure.
But were we to assume,
arguendo, that the plaintiffs
have alleged a valid constitutional objection if Congress had
specifically ordered the result, we must consider
Page 367 U. S. 807
the difference between such compulsion and the absence of
compulsion when Congress acts as platonically as it did, in a
wholly noncoercive way. Congress has not commanded that the
railroads shall employ only those workers who are members of
authorized unions. Congress has only given leave to a bargaining
representative, democratically elected by a majority of workers, to
enter into a particular contractual provision arrived at under the
give-and-take of duly safeguarded bargaining procedures. (The
statute forbids distortion of these procedures as, for instance,
through racial discrimination.
Steele v. Louisville &
Nashville R. Co., 323 U. S. 192.)
Congress itself emphasized this vital distinction between
authorization and compulsion. S.Rep. No. 2262, 81st Cong., 2d Sess.
2. And this Court, in
Hanson, noted that
"The union shop provision of the Railway Labor Act is only
permissive. Congress has not . . . required carriers and employees
to enter into union shop agreements."
351 U.S. at
351 U. S. 231.
When we speak of the Government "acting" in permitting the union
shop, the scope and force of what Congress has done must be heeded.
There is not a trace of compulsion involved -- no exercise of
restriction by Congress on the freedom of the carriers and the
unions. On the contrary, Congress expanded their freedom of action.
Congress lifted limitations upon free action by parties bargaining
at arm's length. [
Footnote
4/13]
Page 367 U. S. 808
The plaintiffs have not been deprived of the right to
participate in determining union policies or to assert their
respective weight in defining the purposes for which union dues may
be expended. Responsive to the actualities of our industrial
society, in which unions as such play the role that they do, the
law regards a union as a self-contained, legal personality
exercising rights and subject to responsibilities wholly distinct
from its individual members.
See United Mine Workers of America
v. Coronado Coal Co., 259 U. S. 344. It
is a commonplace of all organizations that a minority of a legally
recognized group may at times see an organization's funds used for
promotion of ideas opposed by the minority. The analogies are
numerous. On the largest scale, the Federal Government expends
revenue collected from individual taxpayers to propagandize ideas
which many taxpayers oppose. Or, as this Court noted in
Hanson, many state laws compel membership in the
integrated bar as a prerequisite to practicing law, [
Footnote 4/14] and the bar
association
Page 367 U. S. 809
uses its funds to urge legislation of which individual members
often disapprove. The present case is, as the Court in
Hanson asserted, indistinguishable from the issues raised
by those who find constitutional difficulties with the integrated
bar. [
Footnote 4/15] If our
statement in
Hanson carried any meaning, it was an
unqualified recognition that legislation providing for an
integrated bar, exercising familiar functions, is subject to no
infirmity derived from the First Amendment. Again, under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, Congress specifically authorized
the formation of "national securities associations," membership in
which is of practical necessity to many brokers and dealers.
[
Footnote 4/16] The Association
has urged the passage of
Page 367 U. S. 810
several legislative reforms [
Footnote 4/17] which one can confidently assume did not
represent the convictions of all members. To come closer to the
heart of the immediate matter, is the union's choice of when to
picket or to go out on strike unconstitutional? Picketing is still
deemed also a form of speech, [
Footnote 4/18] but surely the union's decision to
strike under its statutory aegis as a bargaining unit is not an
unconstitutional compulsion forced upon members who strongly oppose
a strike, as minorities not infrequently do. Indeed, legislative
reform intended to insure the fair representation of the minority
workers in internal union politics [
Footnote 4/19] would be redundant if, despite all
precautions, the union were constitutionally forbidden because of
minority opposition to spend money in accordance with the
majority's desires.
Page 367 U. S. 811
How unrealistic the views of plaintiffs are becomes manifest in
light of the purpose of the legislative scheme in authorizing the
union shop and the practical necessity for unions to participate in
what as a matter of analytical fragmentation may be called
political activities. The 1951 Amendment of the Railway Labor Act,
which enacted § 2, Eleventh, was passed in an effort to make more
equitable the sharing of costs of collective bargaining among all
the workers whom the bargaining agent represented. H.R.Rep. No.
2811, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 4; Hearings, House Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce on H.R. 7789, 81st Cong., 2d Sess.
10, 11, 29, 49-50; Hearings, Subcommittee of the Senate Committee
on Labor and Public Welfare on S. 3295, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 15-16.
130, 154, 170. Prior to the passage of this Amendment, there was no
way in which the union could compel nonunion members in the
bargaining unit to contribute to the expenses incurred in seeking
contractual provisions from the carrier that would redound to the
advantage of all its employees. The main reason why prior law had
forbidden union shops in the railroad industry is stated in the
Senate Report to the 1951 Amendment:
"The present prohibitions against all forms of union security
agreements and the check-off were made part of the Railway Labor
Act in 1934. They were enacted into law against the background of
employer use of these agreements as devices for establishing and
maintaining company unions, thus effectively depriving a
substantial number of employees of their right to bargain
collectively. It is estimated that, in 1934, there were over 700
agreements between the carriers and unions alleged to be company
unions. These agreements represented over 20 percent of the total
number of agreements in the industry. "
Page 367 U. S. 812
"It was because of this situation that labor organizations
agreed to the present statutory prohibitions against union security
agreements. An effort was made to limit the prohibition to company
unions. This, however, proved unsuccessful, and, in order to reach
the problem of company control over unions, labor organizations
accepted the more general prohibitions which also deprived the
national organizations of seeking union security agreements and
check-off provisions. . . ."
"Since the enactment of the 1934 amendments, company unions have
practically disappeared."
S.Rep.No. 2262, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 2-3.
See also
H.R.Rep. No. 2811, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 3.
Nothing was further from congressional purpose than to be
concerned with restrictions upon the right to speak. Its purpose
was to eliminate "free riders" in the bargaining unit. Inroads on
free speech were not remotely involved in the legislative process.
They were in nobody's mind. Congress legislated to correct what it
found to be abuses in the domain of promoting industrial peace.
This Court would stray beyond its powers were it to erect a
far-fetched claim, derived from some ultimate relation between an
obviously valid aim of legislation and an abstract conception of
freedom, into a constitutional right.
For us to hold that these defendant unions may not expend their
moneys for political and legislative purposes would be completely
to ignore the long history of union conduct and its pervasive
acceptance in our political life. American labor's initial role in
shaping legislation dates back 130 years. [
Footnote 4/20] With the coming of the AFL in 1886,
labor on a national scale was committed not to act as a
Page 367 U. S. 813
class party, but to maintain a program of political action in
furtherance of its industrial standards. [
Footnote 4/21] British trade unions were supporting
members of the House of Commons as early as 1867. [
Footnote 4/22] The Canadian Trades Congress in
1894 debated whether political action should be the main objective
of the labor force. [
Footnote
4/23] And in a recent Australian case, the High Court upheld
the right of a union to expel a member who refused to pay a
political levy. [
Footnote 4/24]
That Britain, Canada and Australia have no explicit First Amendment
is beside the point. For one thing, the freedoms safeguarded in
terms in the First Amendment are deeply rooted and respected in the
British tradition, and are part of legal presuppositions in Canada
and Australia. And in relation to our immediate concern, the
British Commonwealth experience establishes the pertinence of
political means for realizing basic trade-union interests.
The expenditures revealed by the AFL-CIO Executive Council
Reports emphasize that labor's participation in urging legislation
and candidacies is a major one. In the last three fiscal years, the
Committee on Political Education (COPE) expended a total of
$1,681,990.42; the AFL-CIO News cost $756,591.99; the Legislative
Department reported total expenses of $741,918.24. [
Footnote 4/25] Yet the Georgia trial
court has found that these funds were not reasonably related to the
unions' role as collective bargaining agents. One could scarcely
call this a finding of fact by which this Court is bound, or even
one
Page 367 U. S. 814
of law. It is a baseless dogmatic assertion that flies in the
face of fact. It rests on a mere listing of unions' expenditures
and an exhibit of labor publications. The passage of the Adamson
Act [
Footnote 4/26] in 1916,
establishing the eight-hour day for the railroad industry, affords
positive proof that labor may achieve its desired result through
legislation after bargaining techniques fail.
See Wilson v.
New, supra, at
243 U. S.
340-343. If higher wages and shorter hours are prime
ends of a union in bargaining collectively, these goals may often
be more effectively achieved by lobbying and the support of
sympathetic candidates. In 1960, there were at least eighteen
railway labor organizations registered as congressional lobby
groups. [
Footnote 4/27]
When one runs down the detailed list of national and
international problems on which the AFL-CIO speaks, it seems rather
naive for a court to conclude -- as did the trial court -- that the
union expenditures were
"not reasonably necessary to collective bargaining or to
maintaining the existence and position of said union defendants as
effective bargaining agents."
The notion that economic and political concerns are separable is
pre-Victorian. Presidents of the United States and Committees of
Congress invite views of labor on matters not immediately concerned
with wages, hours, and conditions of employment. [
Footnote 4/28] And this Court accepts briefs as
amici from the AFL-CIO on issues that cannot be called
industrial in any circumscribed sense. It is not true in life that
political protection is irrelevant to, and insulated from, economic
interests. It is not true for
Page 367 U. S. 815
industry of finance. [
Footnote
4/29] Neither is it true for labor. It disrespects the wise,
hardheaded men who were the authors of our Constitution and our
Bill of Rights to conclude that their scheme of government requires
what the facts of life reject. As Mr. Justice Rutledge stated:
"To say that labor unions as such have nothing of value to
contribute to that process [the electoral process] and no vital or
legitimate interest in it is to ignore the obvious facts of
political and economic life, and of their increasing
inter-relationship in modern society."
United States v. CIO, 335 U. S. 106,
335 U. S. 129,
335 U. S. 144
(concurring opinion joined in by Black, Douglas, and Murphy, JJ.).
Fifty years ago, this Court held that there was no connection
between outlawry of "yellow dog contracts" on interstate railroads
and interstate commerce, and therefore found unconstitutional
legislation directed against the evils of these agreements. Is it
any more consonant with the facts of life today than was this
holding in
Adair v. United States, 208 U.
S. 161, to say that the tax policies of the National
Government -- the scheme of rates and exemptions -- have no close
relation to the wages of workers; that legislative developments
like the Tennessee Valley Authority do not intimately touch the
lives of workers within their respective regions; that national
measures furthering health and education do not directly bear on
the lives of industrial workers; that candidates who support
Page 367 U. S. 816
these movements do not stand in different relation to labor's
narrowest economic interests than avowed opponents of these
measures? Is it respectful of the modes of thought of Madison and
Jefferson projected into our day to attribute to them the view that
the First Amendment must be construed to bar unions from
concluding, by due procedural steps, that civil rights legislation
conduces to their interest, thereby prohibiting union funds to be
expended to promote passage of such measures? [
Footnote 4/30]
Congress was not unaware that railroad unions might use these
mandatory contributions for furthering their economic interests
through political channels.
See 96 Cong.Rec. 17049-17050.
That such consequences from authorizing compulsory union membership
were to be foreseen had been indicated to committees of Congress
less than four years earlier, when the union shop provisions of the
Taft-Hartley Act were being debated. Hearings, Senate Committee on
Labor and Public Welfare on S. 55, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 726,
1452, 1455-1456, 1687, 2065, 2146, 2150; Hearings, House Committee
on Education and Labor on H.R. 8, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 350,
2260. The failure of the Railway Labor Act amendments to exempt the
member who did not choose to have his contributions put to such
uses may have reflected difficulties in drafting an exempting
clause.
See Hearings, Subcommittee of the Senate Committee
on Labor and Public Welfare on S. 3295, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., pp.
173-174. But, in 1958, the Senate voted down a proposal to enable
an
Page 367 U. S. 817
individual union member to recover any portion of his dues not
expended for "collective bargaining purposes." 104 Cong.Rec.
11330-11347.
Congress is, of course, free to enact legislation along lines
adopted in Great Britain, whereby dissenting members may contract
out of any levies to be used for political purposes. [
Footnote 4/31]
"At the point where the mutual advantage of association demands
too much individual disadvantage, a compromise must be struck. . .
. When that point has been reached -- where the intersection should
fall -- is plainly a question within the special province of the
legislature. . . . Even where the social undesirability of a law
may be convincingly urged, invalidation of the law by a court
debilitates popular democratic government. Most laws dealing with
economic and social problems are matters of trial and error. . . .
But even if a law is found wanting on trial, it is better that its
defects should be demonstrated and removed than that the law should
be aborted by judicial fiat. Such an assertion of judicial power
deflects responsibility from
Page 367 U. S. 818
those on whom in a democratic society it ultimately rests -- the
people."
American Federation of Labor v. American Sash & Door
Co., 335 U. S. 538,
335 U. S. 546,
335 U. S. 553
(concurring opinion).
In conclusion, then, we are asked by union members who oppose
these expenditures to protect their right to free speech --
although they are as free to speak as ever -- against governmental
action which has permitted a union elected by democratic process to
bargain for a union shop and to expend the funds thereby collected
for purposes which are controlled by internal union choice. To do
so would be to mutilate a scheme designed by Congress for the
purpose of equitably sharing the cost of securing the benefits of
union exertions; it would greatly embarrass if not frustrate
conventional labor activities which have become institutionalized
through time. To do so is to give constitutional sanction to
doctrinaire views and to grant a miniscule claim constitutional
recognition.
In
Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U. S.
1, the legislative power of a State to subsidize bus
service to parochial schools was sustained, although the Court
recognized that because of the subsidy some parents were
undoubtedly enabled to send their children to church schools who
otherwise would not. It makes little difference whether the
conclusion is phrased so that no establishment to religion was
found, or whether it be more forthrightly stated that the merely
incidental "establishment" was too insignificant. Figures of the
Department of Health, Education and Welfare show that the yearly
cost of transportation to nonpublic schools in Massachusetts totals
approximately $659,749; In Illinois, $1,807,740. [
Footnote 4/32] These are scarcely what would be
termed negligible expenditures. Some might consider the resulting
"establishment" more
Page 367 U. S. 819
substantial than the loss of free speech through the payment of
$3 per month for union dues, whereby a dissident member feels
identified in his own mind with the union's position.
The words of Mr. Justice Cardozo, used in a different context,
are applicable here:
"[C]ountless claims of right can be discovered to have their
source or their operative limits in the provisions of a federal
statute or in the Constitution itself with its circumambient
restrictions upon legislative power. To set bounds to the pursuit,
the courts have formulated the distinction between controversies
that are basic and those that are collateral, between disputes that
are necessary and those that are merely possible. We shall be lost
in a maze if we put that compass by."
Gully v. First National Bank, 299 U.
S. 109,
299 U. S.
118.
I would reverse and remand the case for dismissal in the Georgia
courts.
[
Footnote 4/1]
"A statute must be construed, if fairly possible, so as to avoid
not only the conclusion that it is unconstitutional, but also grave
doubts upon that score."
[
Footnote 4/2]
Taft, The A.F. of L. in the Time of Gompers, p. 71 (1957).
[
Footnote 4/3]
Perlman and Taft, History of Labor in the United States,
1896-1932, pp. 380-385.
[
Footnote 4/4]
S.Rep. No. 2262, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 2-3.
[
Footnote 4/5]
Remarks of Mr. Harrison, Hearings, House Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 253.
[
Footnote 4/6]
96 Cong.Rec. 17049-17050; Hearings, Subcommittee of the Senate
Committee on Labor and Public Welfare on S. 3295, 81st Cong., 2d
Sess., pp. 173-174.
[
Footnote 4/7]
Remarks of Mr. Smith, Hearings, House Committee on Interstate
and Foreign Commerce, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 115-116.
[
Footnote 4/8]
Compare Railway Employees' Dept. v. Hanson,
351 U. S. 225,
351 U. S.
236-237,
note 8
[
Footnote 4/9]
The pertinent portion of the section follows:
"Notwithstanding any other provisions of this chapter, or of any
other statute or law of the United States, or Territory thereof, or
of any State, any carrier or carriers as defined in this chapter
and a labor organization or labor organizations duly designated and
authorized to represent employees in accordance with the
requirements of this chapter shall be permitted --"
"(a) to make agreements, requiring, as a condition of continued
employment, that within sixty days following the beginning of such
employment, or the effective date of such agreements, whichever is
the later, all employees shall become members of the labor
organization representing their craft or class:
Provided,
That no such agreement shall require such condition of employment
with respect to employees to whom membership is not available upon
the same terms and conditions as are generally applicable to any
other member or with respect to employees to whom membership was
denied or terminated for any reason other than the failure of the
employee to tender h e periodic dues, initiation fees, and
assessments (not including fines and penalties) uniformly required
as a condition of acquiring or retaining membership."
64 Stat. 1238, 45 U.S.C. § 152.
[
Footnote 4/10]
See the provisions of the constitutions of the
Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees, the Brotherhood of
Railway Carmen of America, and the International Association of
Machinists before the Court in the
Hanson record, pp.
103-143.
[
Footnote 4/11]
Appellees' brief, pp. 16-17, 65.
[
Footnote 4/12]
"B. The Grand Lodge Constitution of the Brotherhood Railway
Carmen of America prohibits members from 'interfering with
legislative matters affecting national, state, territorial,
dominion or provincial legislation, adversely affecting the
interests of our members.' § 64."
351 U.S. at
351 U. S.
237.
[
Footnote 4/13]
To ignore this distinction would be to go far beyond the
severely criticized, indeed rather discredited, case of
United
States v. Butler, 297 U. S. 1, which
found coercive implications in the processing tax of the
Agricultural Adjustment Act. The dissenting views of Mr. Justice
Stone, concurred in by Brandeis and Cardozo, JJ., may surely be
said to have won the day:
"Although the farmer is placed under no legal compulsion to
reduce acreage, it is said that the mere offer of compensation for
so doing is a species of economic coercion which operates with the
same legal force and effect as though the curtailment were made
mandatory by act of Congress."
297 U.S. at
297 U. S. 81.
For an analysis of the 1951 Amendment leading to a narrow scope
of its constitutional implications,
see Wellington, The
Constitution, the Labor Union, and "Governmental Action," 70 Yale
L.J. 345, 352-360, 363-371.
[
Footnote 4/14]
The following States have integrated bars: Alabama (Ala.Code,
Tit. 46, § 30); Alaska (Alaska Laws Ann. §§ 35-2-77a to 35-2-77o);
Arizona (Ariz.Code Ann. § 32-302, A.R.S. § 32-201); California
(Cal.Bus. & Prof.Code § 6002); Florida (Fla.Stat.Ann., Vol. 31,
pp. 699-713 (court rule)); Idaho (Idaho Code & 3-408 to §
3-417); Kentucky (Ky.Rev.Stat. § 30.170); Louisiana (LSA-Rev.Stat.
37:211; Art. IV, Articles of Incorporation, La.State Bar Assn., 4
Dart, Annotations to La.Stat.1950, p. 29); Michigan (Mich.Stat.Ann.
§ 27-101, Comp. Laws 1948, § 691.51); Mississippi (Miss. Code, §
8696); Missouri (Mo.Supreme Court Rule 6, V.A.M.R., 352 Mo. xxix);
Nebraska (Neb.Supreme Court Rule IV,
In re Integration of
Nebraska State Bar Assn., 133 Neb. 283, 275 N.W. 265); Nevada
(Nev.Rev.Stat. 7.270-7.600); New Mexico (N.Mex.Stat.Ann. § 18-1-2
to § 18-1-24); North Carolina (N.C.Gen.Stat. § 84-16); North Dakota
(N.D.Rev.Code § 27-1202); Oklahoma (
In re Integration of the
Bar of Oklahoma, 185 Okl. 505,
95 P.2d 113,
amended by Okla.Supreme Court rules approved October 6, 1958,
Okl.Stat.Ann., 1960 Cum.Ann. Pocket Part, Tit. 5, c. 1, App. 1);
Oregon (Ore.Rev.Stat. §§ 9.010-9.210); South Dakota (S.D.Code §
32.1114); Texas (Vernon's Ann.Civ.Stat., Art. 320a-1, § 3); Utah
(Utah Code Ann. § 78-51-1 to § 78-51-25); Virginia (Va.Code §
54-49); Washington (Wash.Rev.Code § 2.48.020); West Virginia
(W.Va.Code Ann. 51-1-4a); Wisconsin (Wis.Stat. § 256.31, 5 Wis.2d
618, 627, 93 N.W.2d 601, 605); Wyoming (Wyo.Stat. § 5-22;
Wyo.Supreme Court Rules for State Bar, Rule 5).
[
Footnote 4/15]
So far as reported, all decisions have upheld the integrated bar
against constitutional attack.
Carpenter v. State Bar of
California, 211 Cal. 358, 295 P. 23;
Herron v. State Bar
of California, 24 Cal. 2d 53,
147 P.2d 543;
Petition of Florida State Bar Assn., 40 So.
2d 902;
In re Mundy, 202 La. 41, 11 So. 2d 398;
Ayres
v. Hadaway, 303 Mich. 589, 6 N.W.2d 905;
In re Scott,
53 Nev. 24, 292 P. 291;
In re Platz, 60 Nev. 296, 108 P.2d
858;
In re Gibson, 35 N.Mex. 550, 4 P.2d 643;
Kelley
v. State Bar of Oklahoma, 148 Okl. 282, 298 P. 623;
Lathrop v. Donohue, 10 Wis.2d 230, 102 N.W.2d 404,
affirmed, 367 U. S. 367 U.S.
820.
[
Footnote 4/16]
The Maloney Act of 1938 added § 15A to the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934. 52 Stat. 1070, 15 U.S.C. § 78o-3. In order to be
registered, a number of statutory standards must be met. The
statute specifically requires that an association's rules provide
for democratic representation of the membership, and that dues be
equitably allocated.
See § 15A(b)(5) and (6). Only one
association, the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.,
has ever applied for or been granted registration. NASD membership
comprises roughly three-quarters of all brokers and dealers
registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Loss,
Securities Regulation 766-67 (1951, Supp.1955). Sections 15A(i) and
(n) of the Act authorize the NASD to formulate rules which
stipulate that members shall refuse to deal with non-members with
immunity from the antitrust laws.
See S.Rep. No. 1455,
75th Cong., 3d Sess. 8-9 (1938); Loss,
op. cit., supra,
769-770. The Commission has stated that it is "virtually impossible
for a dealer who is not a member of the NASD to participate in a
distribution of important size."
National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc., 19 S.E.C. 424, 441.
[
Footnote 4/17]
In 1949, Senator Frear introduced a bill which would have
greatly expanded the applicability of the registration, proxy, and
insider trading provisions of the Securities Exchange Act to small
corporations. S. 2408, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. The NASD supported the
passage of the proposed legislation, and testified on its behalf
before the Senate subcommittee. Hearings Before Subcommittee of
Senate Committee on Banking and Currency on S. 2408, 81st Cong., 2d
Sess. 53-62 (1950); Loss,
op. cit., supra, 620, 621.
[
Footnote 4/18]
To this extent,
Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U. S.
88,
310 U. S.
101-106, has survived and was applied in
Chauffeurs
Union v. Newell, 356 U. S. 341.
[
Footnote 4/19]
See Cox, Internal Affairs of Labor Unions Under the
Labor Reform Act of 1959, 58 Mich.L.Rev. 819, 829-851.
[
Footnote 4/20]
1 Commons, History of Labor in the United States, 318-325
(1918).
[
Footnote 4/21]
Taft, The A.F. of L. in the Time of Gompers, 289-292 (1957);
Bakke and Kerr, Unions, Management and the Public, 215 (1948).
[
Footnote 4/22]
3 Cole, A Short History of the British Working Class Movement,
56 (2d ed. 1937).
[
Footnote 4/23]
Logan, Trade Unions in Canada, 59-60 (1948).
[
Footnote 4/24]
William v. Hursey, 33 A.L.J.R. 269 (1959).
[
Footnote 4/25]
These are the totals of the figures for 1957, 1958, and 1959
reported in Proceedings of the AFL-CIO Constitutional Convention,
Vol. II, pp. 17-19 (1959) and
id., pp. 17-19 (1957).
[
Footnote 4/26]
39 Stat. 721, 45 U.S.C. §§ 65-66.
[
Footnote 4/27]
Letters from Clerk of House of Representatives to Supreme Court
Librarian, May 5, 1960; May 10, 1961.
[
Footnote 4/28]
For a recent example,
see the statement of Stanley H.
Ruttenberg, Director of Research for the AFL-CIO, on pending tax
legislation before the House Ways and Means Committee, reported in
part in the New York Times, May 12, 1961, p. 14, col. 3.
[
Footnote 4/29]
A contested question in the corporate field is the legitimacy of
corporate charitable contributions. This presents a not dissimilar
problem whether the Government may authorize an organization to
expend money for a purpose outside the corporate business to which
an individual stockholder is opposed. A shareholder who joined
prior to the authorization and who therefore cannot be said to have
impliedly consented surely is as directly affected as is the member
of a union shop.
See A. P. Smith Mfg. Co. v. Barlow, 13
N.J. 145,
98 A.2d
581, which upheld against federal constitutional attack a state
statute which authorized New Jersey corporations to make
contributions to charity. The amounts involved were
substantial.
[
Footnote 4/30]
See Proceedings of the AFL-CIO Constitutional
Convention, Vol. II, pp. 183-192 (1959).
A recent leader of the London Times which reviewed the annual
report of the British Trade Unions Council noted that the document
concerned itself with "few . . . political subjects . . . which
have not their industrial sides." The London Times, Aug. 23, 1960,
p. 9, col. 2.
[
Footnote 4/31]
The course of legislation in Great Britain illustrates the
various methods open to Congress for exempting union members from
political levies. As a consequence of a restrictive interpretation
of the Trade Union Act of 1876, 39 & 40 Vict., c. 22, by the
House of Lords, in
Amalgamated Society of Ry. Servants v.
Osborne, [1910] A.C. 87, Parliament in 1913 passed legislation
which allowed a union member to exempt himself from political
contributions by giving specific notice. Trade Union Act of 1913, 2
& 3 Geo. V, c. 30. The fear instilled by the general strike in
1926 caused the Conservative Parliament to amend the "contracting
out" procedure by a "contracting in" scheme, the net effect of
which was to require that each individual give notice of his
consent to contribute before his dues could be used for political
purposes. Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act of 1927, 17 & 18
Geo. V, c. 22. When the Labor Party came to power, Parliament
returned to the 1913 method. Trade Disputes and Trade Unions Act of
1946, 9 & 10 Geo. VI, c. 52. The Conservative Party, when it
came back, retained the legislation of its opponents.
[
Footnote 4/32]
Statistics of State School Systems, 1955-1956: Organization,
Staff, Pupils, and Finances, c. 2, p. 70 (U.S. Department of
Health, Education, and Welfare, 1959).