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[325 U.S. 472, 473] Mr. Lee Pressman, of Washington, D.C., for petitioners.
Messrs. John W. Lapsley and James A. Simpson, both of Birmingham, Ala ., and John E. Adams, of Grove Hill, Ala., for respondents.
Mr. Chief Justice STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit, brought in the state courts of Alabama for a declaratory judgment adjudicating the constitutional validity of the Bradford Act, No. 298 Alabama Laws of 1943, p. 252 (Code 1940, Tit. 26, 376 et seq.), and for an injunction,
[325
U.S. 472, 474]
is a companion case to Alabama State Federation of Labor v. McAdory,
Petitioners are the Congress of Industrial Organizations, a national labor organization, and certain affiliated labor organizations, whose members are employed within the State, and certain of their officers. Petitioners brought the present suit in the State Circuit Court against respondents who are county officers charged with the duty of enforcing the Act, praying a declaratory judgment that the Act as a whole and particularly 7 and 16, among others, are unconstitutional under the Federal and State Constitutions, and are invalid because in conflict with the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.C.A. 151 et seq., and praying that an injunction issue.
After a trial upon evidence the Circuit Court adjudged certain sections of the Act, not here in issue, to be invalid in whole or in part. In other respects it held the Act constitutional and valid. It found that the evidence disclosed no effort on the part of respondents to enforce the provisions of the Act declared to be invalid and accordingly denied an injunction. On appeal the Supreme Court of Alabama affirmed, 20 So.2d 40, for the reasons stated in its opinion in the Alabama State Federation of Labor case.
We granted certiorari,
Upon an examination of the record in this case we find that it shows that petitioners or some of them have members who are employed in the State of Alabama in industries whose employees are subject to the National Labor Relations Act, and that they act in the State and are certified as bargaining representatives of such employees under the Act. But the extent to which they act in the State as bargaining representatives of employees in industries which are not subject to the National Labor Relations Act does not appear, and consequently the record affords no adequate basis for an adjudication of the extent to which for that reason the petitioners or some of them may be rightly subject to local regulation even though they also represent employees in other industries which are subject to the National Act.
The record does not show whether or not petitioners provide insurance benefits for their members. The State Supreme Court has construed 16 as inapplicable whenever it would otherwise 'interfere with or void any in- [325 U.S. 472, 476] surance contract now in existence and in force' and, as construed, has held it valid as applied to petitioners. On this state of the record we are unable to say to what extent 16 can be deemed applicable to members of any of petitioners because of existing insurance arrangements. For this and the other reasons, stated in our opinion in the Alabama State Federation of Labor case the record does not present a case calling for decision of the constitutional validity of 16 as applied to any existing union members.
Petitioners nevertheless assert that they intend to admit such supervisory employees as members in the future, and that the Supreme Court of Alabama in the Alabama State Federation of Labor case has held that such future 'executive, administrative, professional, or supervisory' employees are not excepted from the provisions of 16 by reason of their acquisition as such employees of insurance benefits. Although there is evidence in the record indicating that some of petitioners who have non- supervisory members admit to membership employees whom they designate as 'supervisory' in the words of the statute, and will continue to do so, there is also evidence that they do not admit supervisory employees who have the right to 'hire and fire.' The Supreme Court of Alabama did not in its opinion in this case or in the Alabama State Federation of Labor case define the statutory language 'executive, administrative, professional, or supervisory employee.' Thus on the basis of the record before us we do not know whether those employees which petitioners intend to admit to membership are such as are included in 16. We do not know that 16 will not be interpreted to embrace only those employees which have the authority to employ and discharge employees. And so it does not appear that the statute will be applied so as to raise the federal question which we are asked to decide.
[325
U.S. 472, 477]
Further the contention that 16 conflicts with the National Labor Relations Act, cf. Hill v. Florida,
We find no other factual differences calling for comment between the case presented by the record here and that presented in the Alabama State Federation of Labor case. Our decision here is therefore controlled by our decision in that case. The question raised as to the equal protection of the laws is too unsubstantial to merit review. The other issues, as presented by the record now before us, are, for reasons stated at length in our opinion in the Alabama State Federation of Labor case, inappropriate for decision [325 U.S. 472, 478] in a declaratory judgment proceeding. The writ of certiorari is accordingly dismissed.
Dismissed.
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Citation: 325 U.S. 472
No. 855
Decided: June 11, 1945
Court: United States Supreme Court
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