Wildcat Strikes: The Affirmative Duty of the Parent Union to Intervene

  • Sheehy, Thomas Kevin
Publication date
January 1981
Publisher
FLASH: The Fordham Law Archive of Scholarship and History

Abstract

Most collective labor agreements contain a no-strike clause, a promise by the union that it will not authorize a strike in the bargaining unit for the life of the contract. Under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, parent unions, as parties to collective bargaining contracts, are subject to liability for damages in federal court for breach of no-strike agreements. A parent union, however, cannot be held liable to an employer for a work stoppage not authorized or ratified by it. Such unauthorized work stoppages are commonly referred to as wildcat strikes. Recently, the Supreme Court held in Carbon Fuel Co. v. United Mine Workers, that a no-strike clause implied no obligation on the part of the parent union to take a...

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