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Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> M'Kernan v. United Operative Masons' Association of Scotland. (Ante, vol. x., p. 361.) [1874] ScotLR 11_219 (30 January 1874) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1874/11SLR0219.html Cite as: [1874] ScotLR 11_219, [1874] SLR 11_219 |
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In an action by a member of a trade union for payment of a sum of money due under the benefit provisions of the Association— Held, in terms of Act 34 and 35 Vict. c. 31, that although the purposes of the Association were no longer unlawful, the Court could not entertain an action for enforcing the said benefit provisions.
The summons in this case was raised at the instance of Patrick M'Kernan or M'Kerna or M'Kernon, mason, residing in Greenock, against the United Operative Masons Association of Scotland, and certain individuals, all members of the said Association, and forming for the time being the Central Committee of the said Association, or a majority and quorum thereof, and concluded for the sum of £80, which M'Kerna alleged was due to him by the laws of the Association in consequence of an injury which had caused the loss of his right eye whilst engaged in his occupation as a mason, he being a member of the said Association.
From the condescendence it appeared that the pursuer “is a member of the Greenock Lodge or Branch of the United Operative Masons Association of Scotland. The said Association comprises eighty-three lodges in all, and its affairs are made known through the medium of fortnightly returns published by the Central Committee, who are the executive council of the Association, and are in possession of the funds thereof. These returns are not accessible to the individual members of the various lodges, but only to the trustees of the working and sinking fund of the Association, and to the members of the Central Committee, the officebearers of the Association, and the secretaries of the various lodges. The defenders are the members of the said Central Committee. The pursuer, on or about 24th January 1862, was following his trade as a mason in the employment of Messrs Currie & Guthrie, builders and joiners in Greenock, and, while engaged in dressing a stone at Messrs M'Nab & Company's, now Messrs Steele & Company's, boiler-shed, Greenock, a spark or blow from his chisel struck the pursuer in the right eye, permanently deprived him of its use, and rendered him unfit for life to follow his trade as a mason. When the pursuer was thus injured he was a member of said Greenock Lodge or Branch of the said United Masons Association of Scotland, and had been a member of said lodge for more than twelve months prior to the date of the accident, and fully entitled to the benefit of the accident provision after-mentioned.” The provision referred to is as follows:—“Members disabled for life by any real accident received while following their employment as a mason (and also those specified in law 7, class i., may lay an application before the Society, according to law 7 of this class, and if a majority of those voting on the application consider him entitled he shall receive the sum of eighty pounds sterling.” The pursuer further stated that he had made application for payment of this sum of £80 in accordance with the rules of the Association, which nevertheless illegally refused to pay it.
The defenders denied liability. They stated that the pursuer's application had been considered by the Association and refused in accordance with the rules applicable to such cases. They further maintained that the Association, not being incorporated, had no persona standi in judicio.
This case came before the Lord Ordinary ( Ormidale) in October 1873, when his Lordship pronounced the following interlocutor:—
“ Edinburgh, 29 th October 1873.—The Lord Ordinary having heard counsel for the parties on the competency of the action as laid, finds the same to be incompetent, and therefore dismisses the action, and decerns: Finds the defenders entitled to expenses, allows an account thereof to be lodged,
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and remits it when lodged to the Auditor to tax and report. Note.—This is a second action brought by the pursuer to enforce the same claim, and laid upon the same grounds.
The former action was brought in the Sheriff-Court, where it was dismissed by the Sheriff as incompetent. Thereafter an appeal from the judgment of the Sheriff to this Court was also simpliciter dismissed. The decision of this Court is reported in vol. x. of the ‘Scottish Law Reporter,’ p. 361, and that report throws a good deal of light upon the case as it presents itself in the present action.
The only substantial difference betwixt the former and the present action is, that in the latter not only the Association but the Central Committee in place of the Local Greenock Lodge, have been called as defenders. In this way one of the grounds of incompetency which appears to have been considered well founded in the former action does not arise in the present. But, in the words of the Lord President in the former case, ‘The pursuer's right to receive the sums concluded for depends on—(1st) disablement; (2d) on his making application; and (3d) on a majority voting in his favour. Without the fulfilment of these conditions he cannot get his £80.’ After some further explanation the Lord President concluded by saying that he thought not only that the defenders were not answerable, but ‘further, a vote having been taken of the whole lodges, and a majority having voted against the claim, I think the jurisdiction of the Court is excluded.’
This last ground of judgment is applicable to the present as it was to the former action; for it is obvious from the pursuer's own statements in articles 14 and 15 of his condescendence that a vote has been taken on his claim and was adverse to him.
It is said, however, just as it was said in the former case, that the proceedings connected with the vote on his claim were irregular. But supposing that were so, the Lord Ordinary cannot see how that would render the action, laid as it is, competent in this Court. The alleged irregularities, if committed at all, must have been committed by some particular person or persons; but the wrongdoers, whoever they were, are not called as defenders; for the pursuer does not say that the present defenders were the wrong-doers. Nor does he conclude that he should have another and better opportunity of making good his claim in terms of the rules or laws of the Association upon which he founds.
And further, it is clear from the rule quoted by the pursuer in article 16 of his condescendence, and from his statement in that article, that it is by arbitration, and not by an action in this Court, his dispute with the Association falls to be determined. He says, no doubt, that he did make application in terms of the rules ‘to his lodge at Greenock to have the matter in dispute determined by arbitration; ‘but that the chairman of that lodge by his wrongous acts and conduct prevented an arbitration being gone into. But this action has not been brought to enforce an arbitration, nor has it been brought to obtain reparation from the chairman of the Greenock Lodge in respect of the wrong alleged to have been done by him. The Greenock Lodge and its chairman have not been made defenders at all.
For the reasons, and on the grounds now referred to, the Lord Ordinary considers the present equally incompetent as the former action, and he has accordingly dismissed it by an interlocutor expressed in the same terms. He has, however, in the present case seen no sufficient reason for refusing expenses to the defenders.”
The pursuer reclaimed and argued—This was a case of contract between the pursuer and the Association, by which the Association was to become liable to pay him a sum of money in case of his sustaining any real injury. He had sustained such injury, and he had therefore a good claim against the society for payment. No doubt the rules of the Association excluded any other jurisdiction, but only so long as the Association acted according to those rules, which was not the case here. This the pursuer wished to be allowed to prove: The clause of arbitration did not exclude the authority of the Court—( Caledonian Railway v. Wemysbury Railway, 10 Macph. 892). Neither is the plea of no persona standi in judicio, on the ground that the Association is not incorporated, well founded—( Manners v. Fairholme, 10 Macph. 502). No doubt some of the rules of the Association had reference to strikes, but there are also benefit provisions, and to the extent of these provisions this may be considered a friendly society; and by 32 and 33 Vict., cap. 61, societies with rules or agreements in restraint of trade are not, on that account merely, to be considered as established for an illegal purpose, or not to be friendly societies within the meaning of the 42d section of the Friendly Societies Act. What is restraint of trade is to a great extent a politico economical question, not a legal one.
Pleaded for the defenders—This is an Association in restraint of trade—in fact a trade union; and this is admitted in the preamble to the laws of the Association. The fact that there are certain beneficial provisions in regard to the members in the rules does not take it out of the category of Associations in restraint of trade. All that the Act of 1869 did was to remove the stigma of illegality from such Associations to the extent of enabling them to protect their funds from embezzlement. And though by the Act of 1871 trades unions are no longer to be considered illegal to the effect of rendering their agreement void, yet the 4th section expressly enacts that nothing in the Act is to enable any Court to entertain any legal proceedings instituted for, amongst other things, the breach of any engagement to provide benefits to its members. For the purposes of this action this Association is illegal, and cannot sustain action in a civil Court.
Moreover, by the rules, the decision of the Association in such questions as the present is to be final, and the jurisdiction of the Court is therefore excluded.
Pursuer's Authority— Manners v. Fairholme, 10 Macph. 520.
Defenders' Authorities— Hilton v. Everesley, 24 L.J., Q.B. 353; Hornby v. Close, 2 L.J., Q.B. 153; Farrar v. Close, L.J., Q.B. 602.
At advising—
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The plea is not one of pactum illicitum, but it is that this is by statute an action which we are not entitled to entertain.
Mr Balfour—I ask additional expenses.
Counsel for Pursuer— Brand and M'Kechnie. Agent— T. Lawson, W.S.
Counsel for Defenders— Watson and Balfour. Agents— Rhind & Lindsay, S.S.C.