Valeo v. J. I. Case Co.
Decision Date | 05 February 1963 |
Citation | 119 N.W.2d 384,18 Wis.2d 578 |
Parties | , 52 L.R.R.M. (BNA) 2420, 46 Lab.Cas. P 50,743 Anthony VALEO, Appellant, v. J. I. CASE CO., Respondent. |
Court | Wisconsin Supreme Court |
Raskin & Zubrensky, Milwaukee, Max Raskin and Herbert S. Bratt, Milwaukee, of counsel, for appellant.
Robertson, Hoebreckx & Davis, Milwaukee, John G. Vergeront, Milwaukee of counsel, for respondent.
Entitlement to vacation pay is a matter of contract. 1
The basic problem in this case arises because the termination date in the collective bargaining agreement is February 29th and the eligibility date for determining vacation rights is June 1st. The agreement contains no provision which expressly solves the problem.
The agreement, by its terms, was capable of perpetual existence, but either party was free to terminate it as of the last day of February of 1960 or any subsequent year. If ever so terminated, the present problem was bound to arise. Would the employees who had performed service under the agreement for nine months since the preceding June 1st acquire and retain any valuable rights under the vacation provisions, or would such rights expire with the agreement? The parties might have included a provision expressly providing an answer, but they did not. It thus becomes necessary to provide an answer by construction.
Plaintiff claims that vacation rights vested in the employees as they performed enough days of service to qualify them for vacations under the formula in sec. 1 of Art. IX of the agreement, and that neither the termination of the agreement nor the ensuing strike extinguished those rights. The Company argues, in the first place, that no vacation rights ever accrued except on a June 1st falling within the life of the agreement. Hence, the agreement having been terminated before June 1, 1960, the employees acquired no vacation rights by virtue of services performed from June 1, 1959, to February 29, 1960, even though the agreement was in force during that period, and even though vacation rights would have been measured by such services had the agreement remained in force through June 1, 1960. In the second place the Company points out that the agreement requires the employee to take his vacation in order to receive vacation pay and argues that even if the employees did acquire rights to take vacations during the summer of 1960, they were not on vacation, but on strike, and were therefore not entitled to vacation pay.
Contractual vacation rights are additional compensation for service performed although subject to conditions tending to promote the employer's interest in continuity of service.
'* * * In the absence of something in the contract to the contrary, vacation pay is in the nature of additional compensation for services rendered. * * *' 2
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Vacation provisions rarely, if ever, permit the employee to collect a fraction of his vacation pay each time he receives wages. By their nature, they ordinarily require the fulfillment of various conditions tending to promote the employer's interest in continuity of employment. The agreement in this case provided that employees who quit, are discharged, or fail to return to work when recalled after layoff shall forfeit all rights to vacation pay, even though otherwise eligible. If vacation rights be thought of as accruing or vesting in employees as they perform services, such accrual is qualified at least to the extent that conditions of the type just mentioned, employee status on the eligibility date, and the like, must also be met.
As previously stated, the termination date referred to in the agreement before us occurs nine months after the preceding eligibility date (and three months before the succeeding eligibility date). It does not seem reasonable that the parties intended that enjoyment of potential vacation rights based on, and being additional compensation for, services rendered during three-quarters of a year should be extinguished if one of the parties chose to terminate the agreement at the end of February. Although it is true in the present case that termination was at the instance of the Union and in a sense chargeable to the employees whom the Union represented, termination could, so far as the agreement provided, have been effected by the Company. Again, it does not seem reasonable that the parties intended that loss of vacation rights should be a consequence of termination and not only a penalty or disadvantage to be faced by the Union in deciding to terminate the contract but also a bonanza or advantage which the Company could obtain by termination.
It seems to the majority of this court more compatible with the nature of vacation pay as compensation for work performed to hold, in the absence of provisions to the contrary in the agreement, that it accrued as services were performed under the agreement for the nine months prior to termination, such accrual being qualified only by the possibility of forfeiture of vacation rights under sec. 3 of Art. IX or failure to be in employee status as of June 1, 1960, but not being extinguished by the termination of the agreement. A similar result was reached by the supreme court of Mississippi, although in that case the termination of the agreement was effected by the employer and in addition the employer discontinued its business, thereby terminating the employment as well. 6
An appellate court in New Jersey reached the same conclusion in a situation even more closely similar to the one before us. The Union terminated the agreement as of April 30, 1951, and a strike ensued. The agreement provided for determination of eligibility for vacation as of June 1st and the court held that notwithstanding the termination of the agreement and the ensuing strike the employees were entitled to their vacation rights. The court said: 7
As also pointed out by the New Jersey court in the case above cited (92 A.2d at page 41), the relation of employer and employee existed on the eligibility date succeeding the termination of the agreement notwithstanding the fact that the employees were on strike. 8
The agreement provides that an employee 'must actually take his vacation in order to receive his vacation pay.' The company contends that even if its employees acquired vacation rights for 1960 they failed to take vacation and therefore under the agreement were not entitled to the pay.
The employees were absent from work for the entire period during which the agreement provides that the vacations should be assigned, from June 1st to September 15th. The majority of this court conclude that the purpose of the terms just quoted from the agreement was to prevent employees from working throughout the vacation period and drawing vacation pay in addition to wages without the consent of the...
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