The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday dealt another setback to organized labor by making it easier for employers to sue over strikes that cause property destruction in a ruling siding with a concrete business in Washington state that sued the union representing its truck drivers after a work stoppage.
The 8-1 decision overturned a lower court's ruling that said the lawsuit filed by Glacier Northwest Inc, which sells and delivers ready-mix concrete, against a local affiliate of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters was preempted by a U.S. law called the National Labor Relations Act. Glacier Northwest is a unit of Japan-based Taiheiyo Cement Corp.
The Washington state Supreme Court in 2021 ruled that the company's claims were preempted by a statute called the National Labor Relations Act , saying the company's loss of concrete was incidental to a strike that could be considered arguably protected under federal labor law. Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, in a 27-page dissent, wrote that the ruling "is likely to cause considerable confusion among the lower courts" about how preemption under the National Labor Relations Act should apply in future cases and "risks erosion of the right to strike."
Noel Francisco, the lawyer who represented Glacier Northwest in the case decided on Thursday, said the ruling "vindicates the longstanding principle that federal law does not shield labor unions from tort liability when they intentionally destroy an employer's property."
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Opinion: The Supreme Court was enabling corruption well before the Clarence Thomas scandalJohn Roberts' court has undone campaign finance safeguards and overturned convictions of public officials for years, most recently that of a onetime aide to Andrew Cuomo.
Read more »
Supreme Court rejects lawsuit that sought to hold Reddit responsible for hosting child pornography | CNN PoliticsThe Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to take up a case from a victim of sex trafficking who sought to hold Reddit, an online platform, responsible for hosting images of child pornography on the website.
Read more »
It Took Alito Barely a Month to Violate the Supreme Court’s New Ethics RulesThe justices who commit the most ethics violations are also the least likely to follow voluntary ethics guidelines.
Read more »
COVID-19 pandemic doesn’t trigger property tax break, Colorado Supreme Court rulesThe justices found that the COVID-19 pandemic was not an “act of nature” that would allow property owners to seek re-assessment of their property values outside of the normal two-year property tax assessment cycle,
Read more »
Supreme Court just shriveled protection for wetlands, leaving many of these valuable ecosystems at risk | OpinionFor the last 45 years the EPA and the Corps have required discharge permits in wetlands “adjacent” to water bodies, even if a dune, levee or other barrier separated the two. The Sackett decision upends that approach.
Read more »
U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear bid to sue Reddit over child pornThe U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday declined to hear a bid by child pornography victims to overcome a legal shield for internet companies in a case involving a lawsuit accusing Reddit Inc of violating federal law by failing to rid the discussion website of this illegal content.
Read more »